This book examines the ways in which European democracies,
including former communist states, are dealing with the new demands
placed on their security policies since the cold war by
transforming their military structures, and the effects this is
having on the conceptualisation of soldiering.
In the new security environment, democratic states have called
upon their armed forces increasingly to fulfil unconventional tasks
partly civilian, partly humanitarian, and partly military in most
complex, multi-national missions. Not only have military structures
been transformed to make them fit for these new types of
deployments, but the new mission types highlight the necessity for
democracies to come to terms with a new image and ethos of
soldiering in defence of a transnational value community.
Combining a qualitative comparison of twelve countries with an
interdisciplinary methodology, this edited volume argues that the
ongoing transformations of international politics make it necessary
for democracies to address both internal and external factors as
they shape their own civil-military relations. The issues discussed
in this work are informed by Democratic Peace theory, which makes
it possible to investigate relations within the state at the same
time as analysing the international dimension. This approach gives
the book a systematic theoretical framework which distinguishes it
from the majority of existing literature on this subject.
This book will be of much interest to students of civil-military
relations, European politics, democratisation and post-communist
transitions, and IR in general.
General
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