Fr. 153.00

NATO, Civilisation and Individuals - The Unconscious Dimension of International Security

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book critically engages with NATO's two main referent objects of security: civilisation and individuals. By rethinking the seemingly natural assumption of these two referent objects, it suggests the epistemological importance of an unconscious dimension to understand meaning formation and behaviour change in international security. 
The book provides a historicised and genealogical approach of the idea of civilisation that is at the core of the Alliance, in which human needs, narratives, and security arrangements are interconnected. It suggests that there is a Civilised Subject of Security at the core of modern Western security that has constantly produced civilised and secure subjects around the world, which explains NATO's emergence around a civilisational referent. The book then proceeds by considering the Individualisation of Security after the Cold War as another stage of the civilising process, based on NATO's military operations in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo and Afghanistan.

List of contents

1. Chapter 1/Introduction. Seeking alternative connections between civilisation and security.- 2. Chapter 2. IR's disciplinary connections with Western civilisation.- 3. Chapter 3. Individualising civilisation: the Civilised Subject of Security.- 4. Chapter 4. Standards of Civilisation: architecting security, order, and hierarchy.- 5. Chapter 5. NATO's deep origins (1939-1949): unbreaking the civilised habitus?.- 6. Chapter 6. NATO's Cold War evolution: civilisation from referent object to standard.- 7. Chapter 7. Post-Cold War NATO: new ways and reasons for coexistence.- 8. Chapter 8. The Individualisation of Security: a new architecture for international security.- 9. Chapter 9. The Individualisation of Security within NATO.- 10. Chapter 10. Conclusion.

About the author

Sarah da Mota is currently researching astropolitics and the impact of space exploration for IR, peace and security. She has co-authored Drones and the uninsurable security subjects (Third World Quarterly) and Visibility and Politics:an Arendtian reading of US drone policy (Nação e Defesa). 

Summary

This book critically engages with NATO’s two main referent objects of security: civilisation and individuals. By rethinking the seemingly natural assumption of these two referent objects, it suggests the epistemological importance of an unconscious dimension to understand meaning formation and behaviour change in international security. 
The book provides a historicised and genealogical approach of the idea of civilisation that is at the core of the Alliance, in which human needs, narratives, and security arrangements are interconnected. It suggests that there is a Civilised Subject of Security at the core of modern Western security that has constantly produced civilised and secure subjects around the world, which explains NATO’s emergence around a civilisational referent. The book then proceeds by considering the Individualisation of Security after the Cold War as another stage of the civilising process, based on NATO’s military operations in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo and Afghanistan.

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