Theory of world security
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Theory of world security
(Cambridge studies in international relations, 105)
Cambridge University Press, 2007
- : pbk
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
What is real? What can we know? How might we act? This book sets out to answer these fundamental philosophical questions in a radical and original theory of security for our times. Arguing that the concept of security in world politics has long been imprisoned by conservative thinking, Ken Booth explores security as a precious instrumental value which gives individuals and groups the opportunity to pursue the invention of humanity rather than live determined and diminished lives. Booth suggests that human society globally is facing a set of converging historical crises. He looks to critical social theory and radical international theory to develop a comprehensive framework for understanding the historical challenges facing global business-as-usual and for planning to reconstruct a more cosmopolitan future. Theory of World Security is a challenge both to well-established ways of thinking about security and alternative approaches within critical security studies.
Table of Contents
- Part I. Context: 1. Present imperfect: future tense
- 2. Thinking theory critically
- Part II. Theory: 3. Security, emancipation, community
- 4. Deepening, broadening, reconstructing
- 5. Being, knowing, doing
- 6. The world, the world
- Part III. Dimensions: 7. Business-as-usual
- 8. Who will own the twenty-first century?
- Part IV. Futures: 9. The new twenty years' crisis
- 10. A long hot century.
by "Nielsen BookData"