
The New Order of War
Bob Brecher(Editor)
Rodopi (Publisher)
Published in March 2010
Book
Paperback/Softback
272 pages
978-90-420-2941-5 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check different version
Description
Far from heralding a time of unprecedented peace, the end of "actually existing communism" served to usher in new conflicts, new wars and new reasons for war. That much goes without saying. What is controversial, however, is how we might understand and respond to these new wars. This book offers a new approach. Its distinctive and multidisciplinary range of perspectives, offering quite different views, is based on the conviction that if we are to begin to get to grips with this central feature of our 21st Century lives, we have to go beyond an unhelpful moralism on the one hand and a defeatist appeal to "human nature" on the other.
Bob Brecher is Director of the Centre for Applied Philosophy, Politics & Ethics (CAPPE) at the University of Brighton, UK. He is author of Torture and The Ticking Bomb (Wiley 2007), Getting What You Want? (Routledge 1997), editor of several volumes and has published numerous articles in moral and applied philosophy, liberalism and higher education.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Leiden
Netherlands
Publishing group
Brill
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
381 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-420-2941-5 (9789042029415)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Bob Brecher is Director of the Centre for Applied Philosophy, Politics & Ethics (CAPPE) at the University of Brighton, UK. He is author of Torture and The Ticking Bomb (Wiley 2007), Getting What You Want? (Routledge 1997), editor of several volumes and has published numerous articles in moral and applied philosophy, liberalism and higher education.
Content
Table of Contents
Bob Brecher: Introduction: The New Order of War
Tarik Kochi: Questioning Just War Thinking: A Critique of Walzer
Bob Brecher: Torture and the 'Ticking Bomb': Fantasy and the So-Called War on Terror
Janicke Stramer: The Language of War: George W. Bush's Discursive Practices in Securitising the Western Value System in the 'War on Terror'
Avery Plaw: Is the War on Terror Real? Should it Be?
Arjen Vermeer: The Laws of War in Outer Space: Some Legal Implications for Jus ad Bellum and Jus in Bello of the Militarisation and Weaponisation of Outer Space
Stephenie Young: Yugonostalgia and the Post-National Narrative
David Boulting: Veterans, Vietcong and Others: Enemies and Empathies In Larry Heinemann's Paco's Story
Jason T. McEntee: The Immediacy of Narrated Combat: Operation Iraqi Freedom as Public Spectacle
Elke Rosochaki: Ethical Crossings in War Writing: Michael Ondaatje's Anil's Ghost and the Sri Lankan Civil War
Julia Boll: The Unlisted Character: Representing War on Stage
Gary Baines: Confessing Complicity and Embracing Victimhood: Negotiating the Meaning of the Border War in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Kiran Sarma: A Psychosocial Perspective on Support for Terrorism in the Wake of Attacks
Seth B. Scott: Non-Lethal Warfare
Helen Fox: Teaching Non-Violence
Notes on Contributors