@article{fb19002f0ca24e0e8bd9ca60d1cebc5d,
title = "Soviet reform and the end of the Cold War: Explaining large-scale historical change",
author = "Daniel Deudney and Ikenberry, {G. John}",
note = "Funding Information: * The authors would like to acknowledge helpful comments and suggestions by Michael Doyle, Randell Forsberg, Joseph Grieco, John A. Hall, Atul Kohli, Richard Matthew, Andrew Moravcsik, James Rosenau, Jack Snyder, Richard Ullman, and seminar participants at Columbia University and Princeton University. Research for this paper was supported by the Center of International Studies, the Peter B. Lewis Fund, and the Center for Energy and Environmental Studies, Princeton University. 1 For overviews of Soviet foreign policy change under Gorbachev, see Mathew Evangelista, 'The New Soviet Approach to Security', World Policy Journal, 3, 1 (1986), pp. 561-99, Robert Legvold, 'The Revolution in Soviet Foreign Policy', Foreign Affairs American and the World, 68 (1988/89), and Brace Parrott, 'Soviet National Security Under Gorbachev', Problems of Communism, 37 (1988), pp. 1-36.",
year = "1991",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1017/S0260210500112136",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "17",
pages = "225--250",
journal = "Review of International Studies",
issn = "0260-2105",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "3",
}