Simulating sovereignty : intervention, the state, and symbolic exchange

Bibliographic Information

Simulating sovereignty : intervention, the state, and symbolic exchange

Cynthia Weber

(Cambridge studies in international relations, 37)

Cambridge University Press, 1995

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

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Note

Bibliography: p. 138-144

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Simulating Sovereignty Cynthia Weber presents a critical analysis of the concept of sovereignty. Examining the justifications for intervention offered by the Concert of Europe, President Wilson's Administration, and the Reagan-Bush administrations, she combines critical international relations theory and foreign policy discourses about intervention to accomplish two important goals. First, rather than redefining state sovereignty, she radically deconstructs it by questioning the historical foundations of sovereign authority. Secondly, the book provides a critique of representation generally, and of the representation of the sovereign state in particular. This book is thus an original and important contribution to the understanding of sovereignty, the state and intervention in international relations theory.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Writing the state
  • 2. Examining the sovereignty/intervention boundary
  • 3. Interpretive approaches
  • 4. Concert of Europe interventions in Spain and Naples
  • 5. Wilson administration actions in the Mexican and Bolshevik revolutions
  • 6. United States invasions of Grenada and Panama
  • 7. Symbolic exchange and the state.

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