Acknowledgements Notes on Contributors 1. Introduction: 'New' Problems and 'Old' Solutions - Amy Eckert and Laura Sjoberg Part I: 'New' Issues in War-Making and War-Fighting 2. Popular Support and the War on Terror - Caron E. Gentry 3. Preventive Warfare - Yannis Stivachtis 4. Genocide: An Obligation to Fight? - Rebecca Glazier 5. Sovereignty and Intervention - Jennifer M. Ramos Part II: Apportioning Responsibility and Blame in the Era of 'New' War 6. Honorable Soldiers, Questionable Wars - Frances V. Harbour 7. Outsourcing War - Amy Eckert 8. The Problem of Patriotism - Cheyney Ryan Part III: 'New' Additions to the Security Agenda 9. Sanctions as War - Laura Sjoberg 10. Securitizing Pandemic Influenza - Christian Enemark 11. Natural Disasters - Lisa Burke Conclusion - Amy Eckert and Laura Sjoberg Notes Bibliography Index
Over the years, the 'Bush Doctrine' - that the security threats we face are entirely unprecedented - has echoed around the world. This book states that global security and stability is challenged not only by states and nuclear war, but by insurgency, disease, environmental degradation and military privatisation.
Amy E. Eckert is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Metropolitan State College of Denver. Her current research focuses on the growing privatization of war and just war theory. Her work has appeared in journals including International Studies Quarterly and the Journal of Global Ethics. She is President of the International Studies Association - West and a member of the executive board of the International Ethics section of the International Studies Association.
Many editted collections are old before their time. Not this
exciting collection, on security and conflict for the next age,
from Amy Ekert and Laura Sjoberg. This book is relevant and timely,
with up-to-date yet enduring insights, and it features some
well-written chapters by such prominent scholars as Cheyney Ryan
and Frances Harbour. It sports a terrific bibliography and promises
to be useful for anyone concerned about conflict in our time.
*Brian Orend, author of The Morality of War*
The editors bring the deep and rich traditions of political theory
and international ethics to confront cutting edge security
questions in a bold and far-reaching manner. The result is a set of
essays treating difficult issues like economic sanctions, the
privatization of war and other contemporary security concerns in a
fuller and fresh light.
*George Lopez, Joan B. Kroc Institute*
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