ISBN-13: 9780415460422 / Angielski / Twarda / 2009 / 218 str.
ISBN-13: 9780415460422 / Angielski / Twarda / 2009 / 218 str.
This collection of essays seeks to explore the future of US security politics in light of the fiasco of the Iraq War, the failure to protect populations after Hurricane Katrina, and growing geopolitical anxieties.
This collection of essays examines the ethico-political and strategic dilemmas that the United States confronts after the Bush years. America faces a world that has been made increasingly vulnerable by its own foreign policy and military ventures after 9/11. Indeed, in the first decade of the new millennium, not only has the desire for US geopolitical mastery resulted in an unnecessary war, but awareness has intensified of non-traditional geopolitical risks that could result in future insecurities.
The chapters in this volume explore three primary areas. First, they seek to interrogate the responses to 9/11 that resulted in an attempt at geopolitical mastery, hegemony, and control on the part of the United States. Second, the essays examine how the US response to 9/11 led to attempts to secure and control populations inside and outside the United States, resulting in events/situations that quickly started to escape American control, such as Abu Ghraib and Katrina. The final section of the book critically investigates developing linkages between contemporary regimes of state control and some of these recently recognized threats or risks. The conduct of everyday life is increasingly conditioned by state-mobilized discourses of security that usher in a geopolitical future characterized by the deployment of new insecurities, new state anxieties, and inevitable measures of biopolitical control and governance.
This edited volume will be of much interest to students of critical security studies, US foreign policy, critical geopolitics and IR theory.