Free US delivery on orders $35 or over

National, International, and Human Security

Protection against Violence

  • Textbook
National, International, and Human Security cover

National, International, and Human Security

Protection against Violence

  • Textbook
Quantity
In stock
$35.10
This title is available for exam copy requests

Description

This text provides a thorough overview of how states pursue security against violence, and how this pursuit paradoxically creates greater insecurity at the national, international, and individual levels. The traditional insistence that states are the primary and most important actors makes security, ultimately, elusive. This argument provides a compelling framework for students to understand the breadth and nuance of security at each level.
Case studies throughout the text bring life to the concepts. This fully revised third edition includes discussion of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, China and the Uyghurs, the Covid-19 pandemic, the January 6th Capitol insurrection, Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election; Mexico’s use of its military in internal security, the coup in Myanmar, Orbán’s Hungary, China and Taiwan, India and Pakistan, US-China competition, China’s Belt and Road Initiative, Russia’s Wagner Group, North Korea’s missile testing, refugees in Poland, and numerous other examples, large and small.
The third edition features:
Highlighted cases to illustrate new security threats across the globe, now listed at the start of each chapterBeginning-of-chapter Learning Objectives and End-of-chapter Discussion Questions that reinforce student learning and engagementThe unique framework arguing that security remains elusive because of the ethic insisting that states are the most important actors.

Table of Contents

Preface
Chapter 1. The Elusive Nature of Security
A First Case: China and the Uyghurs
Elusive Security: States First, People Last
What Does It Mean To Be Secure?
Defining Security
A Second Case: Australia and the Afghan Boat People
States First, International Obligations Second
National, International, and Human Security
Chapter 2. National Security
What is Security?
National Security: States, Not Nations
The Sovereign State
What Sovereignty Allows
Limits on Internal and External Security Practices
States Resurgent
Chapter 3. Internal Security
Defining Internal Security
Who is the State?
What is the Purpose of the State?
All States Tend Toward Maximalism When Threatened
Signs of Trouble
Chapter 4. The Unilateral Pursuit of External Security
The Security Dilemma
Defense and Deterrence
Preemptive Self-Defense
Preventive Force
Gray Zone and Hybrid Conflict
Preventive War
Chapter 5. International Security
International Security and Order
The Liberal International Security System
The Great Power Balance-of-Power International Security System
Competing Orders: The United States versus China
Chapter 6. Bilateral and Multilateral Security Arrangements
Security Arrangements Within the UN Security System
Liberal Security Arrangements
Imposed Security Arrangements
Transactional Security Arrangements
Chapter 7. The United Nations International Security System
Protecting International Peace and Security
The Security Council and Measures Short of Force
The Security Council and Collective Security Actions
General Assembly Emergency Meetings
United Nations Peacekeeping
UN-Approved Peace Enforcement Operations
UN-Regional Organization Hybrid Peace Operations
Chapter 8. Human Security
Defining Human Security
The Geneva Conventions
The Post-Cold War Human Security Agenda
Protecting People from Large-Scale Killing
Civilian Protection
The Future of Human Security
Chapter 9. Conclusion: Democracy, Resilience, and Imagination
About the Author

Product details

Published Apr 11 2023
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 3rd
Extent 240
ISBN 9798765175958
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Related Titles

Environment: Staging