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A number of eminent international scholars have come together in
this volume to address the question of morality in international
affairs and to explore some of the central, normative issues which
arise in the context of European integration. The essays examine
the general question of morality and address specific areas of
concern in the proposals for further integration..
Bill McSweeney addresses the central problem of international
relations - security - and constructs a novel framework for its
analysis. He argues for the unity of the interpersonal, societal
and international levels of human behaviour and outlines a concept
of security which more adequately reflects the complexity and
ambiguity of the topic. This book introduces an alternative way of
theorizing the international order, within which the idea of
security takes on a broader range of meaning, inviting a more
critical and interpretative approach to understanding the concept
and formulating security policy. The recent shift to sociology in
international relations theory has not as yet realized its critical
potential for the study of security. Drawing on contemporary trends
in social theory, Dr McSweeney argues that human agency and moral
choice are inherent features of the construction of the social and
thus international order, and hence of our conception of security
and security policy.
A number of eminent international scholars have come together in
this volume to address the question of morality in international
affairs and to explore some of the central, normative issues which
arise in the context of European integration. The essays examine
the general question of morality and address specific areas of
concern in the proposals for further integration..
The study of security has been dominated for four decades by a scientific perspective that has been under attack since the end of the Cold War. In this book, Bill McSweeney discusses the inadequacy of this approach and criticizes the most recent attempts to surmount it. Drawing on contemporary trends in sociology, he develops a theory of the international order within which the idea of security takes on a broader range of meaning, inviting a more interpretive approach to understanding the concept and formulating security policy.
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