"Diplomatic Interventions" argues that war is a social
construction. In so doing, it unsettles the definition of
intervention, as a coercive interference by one state in the
affairs of another, to examine the range of communicative or
'diplomatic' practices which through their presence modify the
experience of war. The tension between claims that war is pervasive
and that war is a social construct is analysed in relation to a
range of moral, legal, military, economic, cultural, and
therapeutic interventions. The concluding chapter highlights how
the book itself is a critical intervention that requires us look at
again from a new angle at international practice.
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