Sirleaf
Race and National Security
Sirleaf
Race and National Security
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Race and National Security is a timely volume that challenges our assumptions on national security by illuminating White supremacy's role and the exclusion of subordinated groups. By using an abolitionist framework, this book offers national and global examples of how threats to historically marginalized groups are in fact threats to national security.
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Race and National Security is a timely volume that challenges our assumptions on national security by illuminating White supremacy's role and the exclusion of subordinated groups. By using an abolitionist framework, this book offers national and global examples of how threats to historically marginalized groups are in fact threats to national security.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. September 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780197754641
- ISBN-10: 0197754643
- Artikelnr.: 67863912
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. September 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780197754641
- ISBN-10: 0197754643
- Artikelnr.: 67863912
Matiangai V.S. Sirleaf is the Nathan Patz Professor of Law at the University of Maryland School of Law. She holds a secondary appointment as a professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. Professor Sirleaf's work has been featured in leading law reviews, her scholarship appears in several textbooks and her commentary and reflections also appear in numerous online fora. Sirleaf serves as executive editor at Just Security and is a member of the board of editors for the American Journal of International Law. Sirleaf received her J.D. from Yale Law School, her M.A. from the University of Ghana Legon Center for International Affairs, and her B.A. from New York University College of Arts and Sciences. Professor Sirleaf has been awarded a number of prestigious grants, fellowships, and other honors.
* Preface
* List of Contributors
* Acknowledgments
* I. Introduction - Confronting the Color Line in National Security,
Matiangai Sirleaf
* II. Why Race and National Security?
* 1. Beyond Color-Blind National Security Law, James Gathii
* 2. "Viral Convergence": Interconnected Pandemics as Portal to Racial
Justice, Catherine Powell
* 3. National Security Law and the Originalist Myth, Aziz Rana
* III. Race and the Scope of National Security
* 4. Black Security and the Conundrum of Policing, Monica Bell
* 5. Carceral Secrecy and (In)Security, Andrea Armstrong
* 6. The Border Called My Skin, Jaya Ramji-Nogales
* IV. Race and the Boomerang Effect of National and Transnational
Security
* 7. Militarized Biometric Data Colonialism, Margaret Hu
* 8. Extending the Logic of Defund to America's Endless Wars, Asli Bâli
* 9. Extrajudicial Executions from the United States to Palestine,
Noura Erakat
* V. Comparative and International Perspectives on Race and National
Security
* 10. Racial Transitional Justice in the United States, Yuvraj Joshi
* 11. Black Guilt, White Guilt at the International Criminal Court,
Rachel López
* 12. The UN Cannot Rest on Past Laurels: The Time for Courageous
Leadership on Anti-Black Racism is Now, Adelle Blackett
* VI. Conclusion - Reforming, Transforming and Radically Imagining
National Security, Matiangai Sirleaf
* List of Contributors
* Acknowledgments
* I. Introduction - Confronting the Color Line in National Security,
Matiangai Sirleaf
* II. Why Race and National Security?
* 1. Beyond Color-Blind National Security Law, James Gathii
* 2. "Viral Convergence": Interconnected Pandemics as Portal to Racial
Justice, Catherine Powell
* 3. National Security Law and the Originalist Myth, Aziz Rana
* III. Race and the Scope of National Security
* 4. Black Security and the Conundrum of Policing, Monica Bell
* 5. Carceral Secrecy and (In)Security, Andrea Armstrong
* 6. The Border Called My Skin, Jaya Ramji-Nogales
* IV. Race and the Boomerang Effect of National and Transnational
Security
* 7. Militarized Biometric Data Colonialism, Margaret Hu
* 8. Extending the Logic of Defund to America's Endless Wars, Asli Bâli
* 9. Extrajudicial Executions from the United States to Palestine,
Noura Erakat
* V. Comparative and International Perspectives on Race and National
Security
* 10. Racial Transitional Justice in the United States, Yuvraj Joshi
* 11. Black Guilt, White Guilt at the International Criminal Court,
Rachel López
* 12. The UN Cannot Rest on Past Laurels: The Time for Courageous
Leadership on Anti-Black Racism is Now, Adelle Blackett
* VI. Conclusion - Reforming, Transforming and Radically Imagining
National Security, Matiangai Sirleaf
* Preface
* List of Contributors
* Acknowledgments
* I. Introduction - Confronting the Color Line in National Security,
Matiangai Sirleaf
* II. Why Race and National Security?
* 1. Beyond Color-Blind National Security Law, James Gathii
* 2. "Viral Convergence": Interconnected Pandemics as Portal to Racial
Justice, Catherine Powell
* 3. National Security Law and the Originalist Myth, Aziz Rana
* III. Race and the Scope of National Security
* 4. Black Security and the Conundrum of Policing, Monica Bell
* 5. Carceral Secrecy and (In)Security, Andrea Armstrong
* 6. The Border Called My Skin, Jaya Ramji-Nogales
* IV. Race and the Boomerang Effect of National and Transnational
Security
* 7. Militarized Biometric Data Colonialism, Margaret Hu
* 8. Extending the Logic of Defund to America's Endless Wars, Asli Bâli
* 9. Extrajudicial Executions from the United States to Palestine,
Noura Erakat
* V. Comparative and International Perspectives on Race and National
Security
* 10. Racial Transitional Justice in the United States, Yuvraj Joshi
* 11. Black Guilt, White Guilt at the International Criminal Court,
Rachel López
* 12. The UN Cannot Rest on Past Laurels: The Time for Courageous
Leadership on Anti-Black Racism is Now, Adelle Blackett
* VI. Conclusion - Reforming, Transforming and Radically Imagining
National Security, Matiangai Sirleaf
* List of Contributors
* Acknowledgments
* I. Introduction - Confronting the Color Line in National Security,
Matiangai Sirleaf
* II. Why Race and National Security?
* 1. Beyond Color-Blind National Security Law, James Gathii
* 2. "Viral Convergence": Interconnected Pandemics as Portal to Racial
Justice, Catherine Powell
* 3. National Security Law and the Originalist Myth, Aziz Rana
* III. Race and the Scope of National Security
* 4. Black Security and the Conundrum of Policing, Monica Bell
* 5. Carceral Secrecy and (In)Security, Andrea Armstrong
* 6. The Border Called My Skin, Jaya Ramji-Nogales
* IV. Race and the Boomerang Effect of National and Transnational
Security
* 7. Militarized Biometric Data Colonialism, Margaret Hu
* 8. Extending the Logic of Defund to America's Endless Wars, Asli Bâli
* 9. Extrajudicial Executions from the United States to Palestine,
Noura Erakat
* V. Comparative and International Perspectives on Race and National
Security
* 10. Racial Transitional Justice in the United States, Yuvraj Joshi
* 11. Black Guilt, White Guilt at the International Criminal Court,
Rachel López
* 12. The UN Cannot Rest on Past Laurels: The Time for Courageous
Leadership on Anti-Black Racism is Now, Adelle Blackett
* VI. Conclusion - Reforming, Transforming and Radically Imagining
National Security, Matiangai Sirleaf