Security without weapons : rethinking violence, nonviolent action, and civilian protection

Author(s)

    • Wallace, M. S.

Bibliographic Information

Security without weapons : rethinking violence, nonviolent action, and civilian protection

M.S. Wallace

(Interventions)

Routledge, 2017

  • : hbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Few questions of global politics are more pressing than how to respond to widespread violence against civilians. Despite the efforts of Responsibility to Protect (R2P) proponents to draw attention away from exclusively military responses, debates on humanitarian intervention and R2P's "Third Pillar" still tend to boil down to two unsatisfying options: stand by and "do nothing" or take military action to protect civilians - essentially using violence to stop violence. Accordingly - and given disagreement and uncertainty regarding moral claims, as well as the unpredictability of military effectiveness - this book asks: how can we counter violence ethically and effectively, taking action consistent with our particular moral commitments while also nurturing difference and enacting responsibility towards multiple others? After evaluating the pragmatic and ethical failings of military action, the book proposes nonviolent intervention as a third - unarmed, on-the-ground - option for protecting civilians during humanitarian crises. In the empirical section of the book, focusing on the discursive and psychological conditions enabling violence, Wallace analyses the mechanisms by which Nonviolent Peaceforce - an international NGO engaged in nonviolent intervention/ unarmed civilian peacekeeping (UCP) - was able to protect civilians and prevent violence, even if on a limited scale, in the broader context of Sri Lanka's war/counterinsurgency in 2008. Both philosophically innovative and practically useful to those working in the field, the book contributes to a range of literatures and debates: from just war theory and poststructuralist ethics to nonviolent action and conflict transformation, and from humanitarian intervention, R2P, and civilian protection to strategic theory and discursive and psychological theories of violence.

Table of Contents

Introduction Part I: Violence and nonviolence Chapter 1: Challenging the distinction between legitimate and illegitimate violence Chapter 2: Questioning the efficacy of violence Chapter 3: Enacting conviction and provisionality through nonviolent action: difference, responsibility to the other(s), and the nonviolent coercion or transformation of the opponent Part II: Understanding violence in Sri Lanka's civil war and counterinsurgency Chapter 4: Confronting wrongs, creating wrongs: official discourses and the legitimation of violence Chapter 5: Making sense of violence: media accounts and combatants' understandings Part III: Confronting violence in Sri Lanka's civil war and counterinsurgency Chapter 6: Assessing armed and unarmed strategies: toward a psycho-discursive theory of civilian protection and violence prevention Chapter 7: Rethinking protection: Nonviolent Peaceforce in Sri Lanka Conclusion

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