Peter Lyon, "Europe and the Third World " in The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 386 (Nov. 1969), pp. 137-147.
2.
See G. Moussa Dib , The Arab Bloc in theUN (Amsterdam, 1956).
3.
G.H. Jansen, Afro-Asia and Non-Aligment (London: Faber and Faber, 1966) and J. D. B. Miller, The Politics of the Third World (Chatham House Essay, London, 1966).
4.
David Kimche, The Afro-Asian Movement: Ideology and Foreign Policy of the Third World (Jerusalem: Israel Universities Press, 1973), and see review of this book in this issue.
5.
See Bruce Larkin, China and Africa 1949-1970 (University of California Press , 1971). See also Alaba Ogunsanwo. China's Policy in Africa 1958-1971 (Cambridge U.P., 1974, published for the Centre for International Studies, LSE). The book is based on a Ph.D. thesis recently completed by its Nigerian author, in the International Relations department at the LSE.
6.
This subject still awaits authoritative treatment, but there are some suggestive essays by I. William Zartman, L. W. Bowman and a few others.
7.
See, especially, Pierre Hassner, " The Nation-States in the Nuclear Age," in Survey, April1968, pp. 3-27; and J.P. Nettl, " The State as a Conceptual Variable," World Politics, Vol. 20 (4), 1968.
8.
I have explained and elaborated this in " New States and International Order " in Alan James (ed.), The Bases of International Order (O.U.P., 1973), pp. 24-59.
9.
For brief background accounts see Strategic Survey1973 (The International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1974) and Walter Laqueur, Confrontation: The Middle East War and World Politics (London: Abacus Books, 1974).
10.
See a sprightly essay in scenario spawning by Dennis Austin in a publication on Southern Africa about to be published under the auspices ofGeorgetown UniversityCenter for International and Strategic Studies.
11.
Sir Alec Cairncross . "The World Commodity Boom and its Implications ," in London and CambridgeEconomic Bulletin , July 1974.