Available open access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.
Comparative practices are integral to global security politics. The balance of power politics, status competitions and global security governance would not be possible without them. Yet, they are rarely treated as the main object of study.
Exploring the varied uses of comparisons, this book addresses three key questions:
• How is comparative knowledge produced?
• How does it become politically relevant?
• How do comparative practices shape security politics?
This book takes a bold new step in uniting disparate streams of research to show how comparative practices order governance processes and modulate competitive dynamics in world politics.
Table of Content
Introduction: Practices All the Way Down? Comparisons in Global Security Politics – Thomas Müller, Mathias Albert and Kerrin Langer
PART I: Teasing Out Comparative Practices
2. The Construction of Status in Security Politics: Rules, Comparisons and Second-Guessing Collective Beliefs – Paul Beaumont
3. Defence Analysis and Military Data at the IISS: How to Count and When is a Tank Modern? – Bastian Giegerich and James Hackett
4. Seeing Deterrence and Defence: Visual Representations of Military Force Comparisons between NATO and the Warsaw Pact in the 1980s – Gabi Schlag
5. What Drives Status Comparisons? An Experimental Study of Status Attribution in the Field of Space Exploration – Paul Musgrave and Steven Ward
PART II: How Comparisons Constitute Governance Objects
6. Not Yet Comparable? Maritime Security Knowledge and the Messiness of Epistemic Infrastructures – Christian Bueger
7. Framing (State) Fragility: The Construction of Imaginary Global Spaces – Keith Krause
8. Mapping the Dark and Ornamenting the Order: Comparisons in Global Crime Governance – Anja P. Jakobi and Lena Herbst
9. The Cybersecurity Ecosystem and the Datafication of Threats and Capabilities – Madeleine Myatt and Thomas Müller
PART III: How Comparisons Reshape Competitive Dynamics
10. ‘The Old World Fought, the Modern World Counts’: Naval Armament Policies, Force Comparisons and International Status, 1889–1922 – Kerrin Langer
11. Force Comparison and Conventional Arms Control at the End of the East–West Conflict – Hans-Joachim Schmidt
12. ‘Winning the Technology Competition’: Narratives, Power Comparisons and the US–China AI Race – Nike Retzmann
13. Conclusion: Comparative Ordering in Security Politics and Beyond – Thomas Müller
About the author
Mathias Albert is Professor of Political Science at Bielefeld University.