This book examines the development of the "grand design" and various subsequent attempts to develop a peaceful international order, and its implications for the current international peace architecture. Oliver P. Richmond argues that post-WWII liberal peace, which has aimed to balance liberty with regulation through law, democracy, human rights, and free trade, has recently given way to a retrogressive, technologically driven neoliberal peace, which is more oriented towards free trade, counter-terrorism and insurgency, surveillance, and state security. The Grand Design provides a sweeping look…mehr
This book examines the development of the "grand design" and various subsequent attempts to develop a peaceful international order, and its implications for the current international peace architecture. Oliver P. Richmond argues that post-WWII liberal peace, which has aimed to balance liberty with regulation through law, democracy, human rights, and free trade, has recently given way to a retrogressive, technologically driven neoliberal peace, which is more oriented towards free trade, counter-terrorism and insurgency, surveillance, and state security. The Grand Design provides a sweeping look at the troubled history of peacebuilding in order to consider what the next-stage, "post-liberal peace," might look like.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Oliver P. Richmond is a Research Professor in International Relations, Peace and Conflict Studies in the Department of Politics at the University of Manchester, UK. He is International Professor at Dublin City University, Ireland, Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Tubingen, Germany, and a Visiting Professor at the University of Coimbra, Portugal. His publications include Peace Formation and Political Order in Conflict Affected Societies and Failed Statebuilding. He is editor of the Palgrave book series, Rethinking Peace and Conflict Studies, and co-editor of the journal, Peacebuilding.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction: The Age of Intervention and the Emergence of a 20th Century International Peace Architecture * Part I: The Early Evolution of the International Peace Architecture * Chapter I: Some Background Observations, Theory, and Concepts * Chapter II: A Sketch of the International Peace Architecture * Chapter III: Stages One and Two in the Development of the International Peace Architecture * Chapter IV: Stage Two: The Rise of Liberal Constitutionalism and Liberal Internationalism * Chapter V: Stages Three and Four and the Expansion of Rights: The Critical Challenge to Stages One and Two * Part II: Derailment and Bifurcation * Chapter VI: The Transition from Stage Four to Stage Five of the International Peace Architecture * Chapter VII: The Derailment of the Transition to Stage Five * Chapter VIII: Stage Five and Neoliberal Statebuilding * Chapter IX: Stage Six: Updating Emancipatory Peace or Revisiting Geopolitics? * Chapter X: Implications for Different Elements of the Contemporary Peace Architecture * Conclusion: The Limits of the Old and New Possibilities
* Introduction: The Age of Intervention and the Emergence of a 20th Century International Peace Architecture * Part I: The Early Evolution of the International Peace Architecture * Chapter I: Some Background Observations, Theory, and Concepts * Chapter II: A Sketch of the International Peace Architecture * Chapter III: Stages One and Two in the Development of the International Peace Architecture * Chapter IV: Stage Two: The Rise of Liberal Constitutionalism and Liberal Internationalism * Chapter V: Stages Three and Four and the Expansion of Rights: The Critical Challenge to Stages One and Two * Part II: Derailment and Bifurcation * Chapter VI: The Transition from Stage Four to Stage Five of the International Peace Architecture * Chapter VII: The Derailment of the Transition to Stage Five * Chapter VIII: Stage Five and Neoliberal Statebuilding * Chapter IX: Stage Six: Updating Emancipatory Peace or Revisiting Geopolitics? * Chapter X: Implications for Different Elements of the Contemporary Peace Architecture * Conclusion: The Limits of the Old and New Possibilities
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