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It has become widely accepted that the discipline of International
Relations (IR) is ironically not "international" at all. IR
scholars are part of a global discipline with a single, shared
object of study - the world, and yet theorizing gravitates around a
number of concepts that have been conceived solely in the United
States. The purpose of this book is to re-balance this "western
bias" by examining the ways in which IR has evolved and is
practiced around the world. The fifteen case studies offer fresh
insights into the political and socioeconomic environments that
characterize diverse geocultural sites and the ways in which these
traits inform and condition scholarly activity in International
Relations. By bringing together scholars living and working across
the globe Tickner and Waever provide the most comprehensive
analysis of IR ever published. It is essential reading for anyone
who is concerned about the history, development and future of
international relations.
This book scrutinizes how contemporary practices of security have
come to rely on many different translations of security, risk, and
danger. Institutions of national security policies are currently
undergoing radical conceptual and organisational changes, and this
book presents a novel approach for how to study and politically
address the new situation. Complex and uncertain threat
environments, such as terrorism, climate change, and the global
financial crisis, have paved the way for new forms of security
governance that have profoundly transformed the ways in which
threats are handled today. Crucially, there is a decentralisation
of the management of security, which is increasingly handled by a
broad set of societal actors that previously were not considered
powerful in the conduct of security affairs. This transformation of
security knowledge and management changes the meaning of
traditional concepts and practices, and calls for investigation
into the many meanings of security implied when contemporary
societies manage radical dangers, risks, and threats. It is
necessary to study both what these meanings are and how they
developed from the security practices of the past. Addressing this
knowledge gap, the book asks how different ideas about threats,
risk, and dangers meet in the current practices of security,
broadly understood, and with what political consequences. This book
will be of interest to students of critical security studies,
anthropology, risk studies, science and technology studies and
International Relations. The Open Access version of this book,
available at:
https://www.routledge.com/Translations-of-Security-A-Framework-for-the-Study-of-Unwanted-Futures/Berling-Gad-Petersen-Waever/p/book/9781032007090
has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non
Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license
This book looks at the worlding of the Global South in the process
of assembling conflict resolution expertise. Anna Leander, Ole
Waever and their contributors pursue this ambition by following the
experts, institutions, databases and creative expressions that are
assembled into conflict resolution expertise in the Global South.
Expertise shapes how conflicts in the Global South are understood
and consequently dealt with. Yet, expertise is always and
necessarily exclusive. The exclusivity of expertise refers both to
the fashionable, the sophisticated and what counts, and also to the
exclusion of some people or views. Assembled from a wealth of
competing knowledges expertise is always both knowledgeable and
ignorant. The ambition of the volume is to explore how this
exclusive expertise is assembled and in what ways it is therefore
knowledgeable and ignorant of knowledges in/of the Global South.
This work will be of significant interest to advanced students and
scholars of conflict resolution, peace research, mediation and
international relations and scholars of expertise.
Resolving International Conflict rethinks the dynamics of conflict
escalation and continuation by engaging with research from the wide
range of subfields in this area. The book suggests a new framework
for understanding conflict as a particular form of situation,
interaction and tension. It shows how conflicts are shaped by
varied dynamics relating to emotion, securitization, incentives,
digital technology and violence; even attempts at monitoring,
resolving or remembering conflicts may end up contributing to their
escalation or continuation. Split into two sections, the first part
focuses on the question of why and how conflicts escalate, while
the second part analyses the continuation of conflict. The book
features several case studies of conflict escalation and
continuation - in Bahrain, Israel-Palestine, South Sudan, Northern
Ireland and, most prominently, the case of the Syrian uprising and
subsequent civil war. Throughout the book, and, in particular, in
the conclusion, the consequences for conflict transformation are
discussed. This work will be of much interest to students of
conflict resolution, peace studies, war and conflict studies,
security studies and international relations, in general.
The four Nordic countries, Denmark, Finland, Sweden and Norway, have all held referenda on their relationship to the European Union in the 1990's. These referenda catalysed heated debates: should Finland and Sweden give up neutrality? Should Denmark follow the European Union's move towards higher degrees of integration? And, had there been enough change in Norway to reverse the rejection of European Community membership in 1972? These key questions about the future of European integration are addressed in this highly topical book by examining the crucial role played by national identity.
The four Nordic countries, Denmark, Finland, Sweden and Norway, have all held referenda on their relationship to the European Union in the 1990's. These referenda catalysed heated debates: should Finland and Sweden give up neutrality? Should Denmark follow the European Union's move towards higher degrees of integration? And, had there been enough change in Norway to reverse the rejection of European Community membership in 1972? These key questions about the future of European integration are addressed in this highly topical book by examining the crucial role played by national identity.
This book presents the state of the art of international relations
theory through an analysis of the work of 12 contemporary thinkers.
The authors break with the usual procedure in the field which
juxtaposes aspects of the work of contemporary theorists with
others, presenting them as part of a desembodied school of thought
or paradigm. A more individual focus can demonstrate instead, the
well-rounded character of some of the leading oeuvres and can thus
aim to offer a more representative view of the discipline. Each
chapter places the thinker in the landscape of the discipline, to
identify how they go about studying international relations, and to
discuss what others can learn from them.
Series Information: New International Relations
It has become widely accepted that the discipline of International
Relations (IR) is ironically not "international" at all. IR
scholars are part of a global discipline with a single, shared
object of study - the world, and yet theorizing gravitates around a
number of concepts that have been conceived solely in the United
States. The purpose of this book is to re-balance this "western
bias" by examining the ways in which IR has evolved and is
practiced around the world. The fifteen case studies offer fresh
insights into the political and socioeconomic environments that
characterize diverse geocultural sites and the ways in which these
traits inform and condition scholarly activity in International
Relations. By bringing together scholars living and working across
the globe Tickner and Waever provide the most comprehensive
analysis of IR ever published. It is essential reading for anyone
who is concerned about the history, development and future of
international relations.
Asserting that regional patterns of security are increasingly important in international politics, this study presents a detailed account of relations between global powers. It emphasizes their relationship with the regional security complexes which make up the contemporary international system. The book analyzes Africa, the Balkans, Eastern and Western Europe, East Asia, the Middle East, North America and South Asia, tracing the history of each region through the present.
This book looks at the worlding of the Global South in the process
of assembling conflict resolution expertise. Anna Leander, Ole
Waever and their contributors pursue this ambition by following the
experts, institutions, databases and creative expressions that are
assembled into conflict resolution expertise in the Global South.
Expertise shapes how conflicts in the Global South are understood
and consequently dealt with. Yet, expertise is always and
necessarily exclusive. The exclusivity of expertise refers both to
the fashionable, the sophisticated and what counts, and also to the
exclusion of some people or views. Assembled from a wealth of
competing knowledges expertise is always both knowledgeable and
ignorant. The ambition of the volume is to explore how this
exclusive expertise is assembled and in what ways it is therefore
knowledgeable and ignorant of knowledges in/of the Global South.
This work will be of significant interest to advanced students and
scholars of conflict resolution, peace research, mediation and
international relations and scholars of expertise.
This book brings together a group of leading scholars on
international relations to develop and apply the concept of
polarity on past and present international relations and discuss
its applicability and usefulness in the future. Despite a
comprehensive debate on a global power shift, often discussed in
terms of the decline of the United States, the crisis in the
liberal international order, and the rise of China, IRs main
concept of power, 'polarity', remains undertheorized and
understudied. The great powers and their importance for dynamics
and processes in the international system are central to current
debates on international order, but these debates too often suffer
from a combination of politicized empirical analysis and reliance
on old theoretical debates and conceptualizations, typically
originating in the Cold War security environment. In order to meet
these challenges, this book updates, conceptualizes, applies and
critically debates the concepts of unipolarity, bipolarity,
multipolarity and non-polarity in order to understand the current
world order.
Asserting that regional patterns of security are increasingly important in international politics, this study presents a detailed account of relations between global powers. It emphasizes their relationship with the regional security complexes which make up the contemporary international system. The book analyzes Africa, the Balkans, Eastern and Western Europe, East Asia, the Middle East, North America and South Asia, tracing the history of each region through the present.
Resolving International Conflict rethinks the dynamics of conflict
escalation and continuation by engaging with research from the wide
range of subfields in this area. The book suggests a new framework
for understanding conflict as a particular form of situation,
interaction and tension. It shows how conflicts are shaped by
varied dynamics relating to emotion, securitization, incentives,
digital technology and violence; even attempts at monitoring,
resolving or remembering conflicts may end up contributing to their
escalation or continuation. Split into two sections, the first part
focuses on the question of why and how conflicts escalate, while
the second part analyses the continuation of conflict. The book
features several case studies of conflict escalation and
continuation - in Bahrain, Israel-Palestine, South Sudan, Northern
Ireland and, most prominently, the case of the Syrian uprising and
subsequent civil war. Throughout the book, and, in particular, in
the conclusion, the consequences for conflict transformation are
discussed. This work will be of much interest to students of
conflict resolution, peace studies, war and conflict studies,
security studies and international relations, in general.
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