This text develops new methodology for the study of international relations based on joy, informed by current thinking about physics and feminist theory. It comes out of a question about how our way of studying international relations from a feminist perspective would change if we start looking for what is working well, instead of what is wrong with the world.
This text develops new methodology for the study of international relations based on joy, informed by current thinking about physics and feminist theo...
This book offers a study of post-9/11 antiwar organisations in the United States and their role in domestic foreign policy debates. The moment of the 9/11 terrorist attacks has been much cited in political and cultural scholarship and much attention has been paid to the promotion of 'War on Terror' policies. The social mechanisms behind the circumscription and regulation of national ideals attracted critical analyses from scholars across disciplines; yet the prevalence of scholarly concern with the negative political devices of the Bush Administration at times seemed to risk reproducing the...
This book offers a study of post-9/11 antiwar organisations in the United States and their role in domestic foreign policy debates. The moment of the ...
This book explores women s militant activities in insurgent wars and seeks to understand what women do in wars.
In International Relations, inter-state conflict, anti-state armed insurgency and armed militancy are essentially seen as wars where collective violence (against civilians and security forces) is used to achieve political objectives. Extending the notion of war as politics of injury' to the armed militancy in Indian administered Kashmir and the Tamil armed insurgency in Sri Lanka, this book explores how women participate in militant wars, and how that politics not only shapes...
This book explores women s militant activities in insurgent wars and seeks to understand what women do in wars.
This book proposes the idea of fictional International Relations (IR) and engages with feminist IR by contextualising the case of a woman spy in Korea in the Cold War.
Fictional imagination and feminist IR encourage one to go beyond conventional or standard ways of thinking; it reshapes taken-for-granted interpretations and assumptions. This takes the view that a dominant narrative of events might be reconstructed as a different kind of story, once events are placed within a wider temporal approach. The case of the woman Korean secret agent- who reportedly bombed a South Korean plane...
This book proposes the idea of fictional International Relations (IR) and engages with feminist IR by contextualising the case of a woman spy in Ko...
The book examines how exercises of power and processes of security exercised in the Occupied Palestinian Territories have formed Palestinian women as subjects.
To understand how women experience occupation, this book examines the various ways in which the occupation is directed at making Palestinian women into subjects of power. The work argues that the exercises of power are focused on controlling and disciplining women's bodies. The objectives are to expose how the exclusions of women's daily-lived experiences of conflict in the occupied Palestinian territories obscures...
The book examines how exercises of power and processes of security exercised in the Occupied Palestinian Territories have formed Palestinian women ...
This book investigates competing modes of thought about gender security and aims to understand the policy implications of personal-political imaginations.
The work draws upon extensive research conducted by the author in Serbia to develop a comprehensive picture of how feminist and women's organising relates to the broader national and international contexts surrounding gender security. Through an innovative analytical framework of personal-political imaginations, the book explores the role that memories, perceptions and hopes about conflict and post-conflict have upon the logics of...
This book investigates competing modes of thought about gender security and aims to understand the policy implications of personal-political imagin...
This edited volume reconsiders the importance of the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki from a post-Cold War perspective.
It has been argued that during the Cold War era scholarship was limited by the anxiety that authors felt about the possibility of a global thermonuclear war, and the role their scholarship could play in obstructing such an event. The new scholarship of Nuclear Humanities approaches this history and its fallout with both more nuanced and integrative inquiries, paving the way towards a deeper integration of these seminal events beyond issues of policy and ethics....
This edited volume reconsiders the importance of the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki from a post-Cold War perspective.