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This book explores how and why police reform became an
international phenomenon in the era of statebuilding that followed
the end of the Cold War. Police reform has become an indispensible
element in the spread of liberal democracy. Policing is
distinguished by its ability to combine reasonable and forcible
methods to preserve and spread liberal values. The book examines
the reason police reform was introduced as a method of building
consensus in Latin America and the Balkans and documents the
development of its use in Africa, the Middle East and the Caucasus
region. It illustrates how police power binds the liberal value of
freedom to the security needs of post-conflict regions and
discusses its force as a strategy to bring law and order to a
global security domain. Drawing on a multi-disciplinary approach to
the subject, the book delves deeply into policing as a method to
bring coherence to global security. It traces the presence of
coherent police strategies in contemporary international relations
through studies of the United Nations, the European Union and the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. By contrasting
police reform with security sector reform, the book explores how
liberal peace is imagined by the international NGO sector, state
aid agencies and international organizations. This book will be of
much interest to students of statebuilding, post-conflict
reconstruction, critical security studies, development studies and
IR in general.
This handbook offers a critical and substantial analysis of
maritime security and documents the most pressing strategic,
economic, socio-cultural and legal questions surrounding it.
Written by leading international experts, this comprehensive volume
presents a wide variety of theoretical positions on maritime
security, detailing its achievements and outlining outstanding
issues faced by those in the field. The book includes studies which
cover the entire spectrum of activity along which maritime security
is developing, including, piracy, cyber security, energy security,
terrorism, narco-subs and illegal fishing. Demonstrating the
transformative character and potential of the topic, the book is
divided into two parts. The first part exhibits a range of
perspectives and new approaches to maritime security, and the
second explores emerging developments in the practice of security
at sea, as well as regional studies written by local maritime
security experts. Taken together, these contributions provide a
compelling account of the evolving maritime security environment,
casting fresh light on theoretical and empirical aspects. The book
will be of much interest to practitioners and students of maritime
security, naval studies, security studies, maritime history, and
International Relations in general.
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