Disarming Intervention: A Critical History of Non-Lethality

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Critical Security Studies
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Peace and Conflict Studies
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780774828543
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Dec 2015
  • Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
  • Publication City/Country: Canada
  • Language: English
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Non-lethal weapons take many forms from rubber bullets to electroshock and long-range acoustic devices which their proponents argue are ethical, legal, and humane. Social scientists, historians, legal scholars, and activists have long challenged the use of non-lethal weapons in policing and war. Until now, little scholarly attention has been paid to the social, historical, and legal relations that animate the concept of non-lethality, nor is there a comprehensive account of how the concept has achieved social and political acceptance. Disarming Intervention tells the story of how the concept of non-lethality emerged in a series of nineteenth-century legal codes that governed the conduct of international hostilities, and how it continued to legitimate US-led armed conflicts as ethical, legal, and humane throughout the twentieth century. Seantel Anaïs unpacks these issues by tracing the social, historical, and legal legitimization of non-lethality in the United States and in armed interventions abroad. Disarming Intervention shows in detail how it came to be that an idea forever changed the relationship between contemporary weapons of armed conflict and wars constitutive objective to produce irreversible injury and death.

Seantel Anaïs is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Winnipeg.