This Handbook brings together 30 state-of-the-art essays covering the essential aspects of global security research and practice for the 21st century.
* Embraces a broad definition of security that extends beyond the threat of foreign military attack to cover new risks for violence
* Offers comprehensive coverage framed around key security concepts, risks, policy tools, and global security actors
* Discusses pressing contemporary issues including terrorism, disarmament, genocide, sustainability, international peacekeeping, state-building, natural disasters, energy and food security, climate change, and cyber warfare
* Includes insightful and accessible contributions from around the world aimed at a broad base of scholars, students, practitioners, and policymakers
قائمة المحتويات
Notes on Contributors ix
Introduction: Global Security Policy in the Twenty-First Century 1
Mary Kaldor and Iavor Rangelov
Part I Key Concepts 9
1 Global Security 11
Ken Booth
2 Security and Social Critique 31
David Mutimer
3 Gender and Security 51
Natasha Marhia
4 Security Policy and (Global) Risk(s) 68
Sabine Selchow
5 Human Security 85
Mary Kaldor
Part II Policy Arenas 103
6 Nuclear Disarmament and Nonproliferation 105
Maria Rost Rublee
7 Terrorism and Antiterrorism 126
Ekaterina Stepanova
8 Genocide and Large-Scale Human Rights Violations 145
Martin Shaw
9 Transnational Crime 160
John P. Sullivan
10 Natural Resources and Insecurity 175
Anouk S. Rigterink
11 The Web of Water Security 190
Mark Zeitoun
Part III Policy Tools 209
12 Civilian Protection 211
Sarah Sewall
13 Humanitarian Assistance 232
Henry Radice
14 The Evolution of International Peacekeeping 247
Renata Dwan
15 State-Building, Nation-Building, and Reconstruction 265
Vesna Bojicic-Dzelilovic, Denisa Kostovicova, and David Rampton
16 Strengthening Democratic Governance in the Security Sector: The Unfulfilled Promise of Security Sector Reform 282
Nicole Ball
17 Diplomacy and Mediation 300
Àlvaro de Soto
18 Global Security and International Law 320
Richard Falk
19 Transitional Justice 338
Iavor Rangelov and Ruti Teitel
Part IV Global Security Actors 353
20 Reframing the Use of Force: The European Union as a Security Actor 355
Mary Martin
21 China 371
May-Britt U. Stumbaum and Sun Xuefeng
22 India as a Global Security Actor 388
Jivanta Sch¨ ottli and Markus Pauli
23 Security Agenda in Russia: Academic Concepts, Political Discourses, and Institutional Practices 408
Andrey Makarychev
24 Contextualizing Global Security: The Case of Turkey 426
Asly C¸ alkyvik
25 The United States 446
Adam Quinn
26 Civil Society in Fragile Contexts 463
Willemijn Verkoren and Mathijs van Leeuwen
27 Protest and Politics: How Peace Movements Shape History 482
David Cortright
28 Corporate Actors 505
Shantanu Chakrabarti
Index 525
عن المؤلف
Mary Kaldor is Professor of Global Governance and
Director of the Civil Society and Human Security Research Unit at
the London School of Economics. She is the author of many books,
including New & Old Wars: Organized Violence in a Global
Era (2013) and The Ultimate Weapon is No Weapon: Human
Security and the Changing Rules of War and Peace (2010). She
was a founding member of European Nuclear Disarmament and of the
Helsinki Citizen’s Assembly.
Iavor Rangelov is Global Security Research Fellow at the
Civil Society and Human Security Research Unit at the London School
of Economics. He is co-chair of the London Transitional Justice
Network and author of Nationalism and the Rule of Law: Lessons
from the Balkans and Beyond (2014).