Hybridisation of Political Order and Contemporary Revisionism

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area studies
Baltic States
Category=JPS
Central Asian States
CIS Region
Civil Society
cyberspace influence
domestic politics impact on global order
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Eurasian Economic Union
Germany's Russia Policy
High Readiness Joint Task Force
Illiberal Politicians
International Humanitarian Law
International Law
International Political Order
international relations theory
NATO Accession
NATO Headquarter
NATO Response Force
NATO Russia Council
NATO's Eastern Flank
NATO's Strategic
NATO’s Eastern Flank
Nord Stream
Political Shelter
Public International Law
regional power dynamics
security studies
social media manipulation
Societal Security
Strategic Adaptation
Strategic Narratives
UN
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032303536
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 27 May 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume argues that contemporary political and security revisionism should not be considered a homogenous attack against the international order but rather a bag of tailor-made strategies to exploit opportunities found in various, highly localised contexts.

Scholars with backgrounds in Security Studies, Area Studies, International Relations and Political Theory are brought to examine revisionist tendencies in Central Eastern Europe, Post-Soviet Space, China and the Transatlantic Space. In doing so, they try to remedy the existing disciplinary separatism, or ‘policing’, which has obfuscated any theorisation of the connections between international and domestic politics for many decades. Part of the analytical focus is on novel phenomena, especially the utilization of cyberspace and new social media and technological innovation. One of the conclusions of this volume is that the rise in contemporary revisionism shows the oft-forgotten importance of the first image of international politics: political leaders, in other words, do indeed matter. The fact that they matter is only reinforced when they represent regional or even great powers, and especially revisionist regimes and states with the propensity to produce complex effects.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the journal Europe-Asia Studies.

Nik Hynek is Professor specialising in Security Studies at Metropolitan University, Prague, Czech Republic, and in the Department of Security Studies in Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic. He leads the inter-scientific Charles University Research Centre of Excellence dedicated to the topic of ‘Human-Machine Nexus and the Implications for the International Order’. His forthcoming monograph is titled Militarizing Artificial Intelligence: Theory, Technology and Regulation (with Anzhelika Solovyeva, Routledge 2022).

Vít Střítecký is Associate Professor of Security Studies and Head of the Department of Security Studies at Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic. He is a founding member of Periculum, Charles University Centre of Excellence, where he develops interdisciplinary research focusing on machine learning deployment in social context and related regulatory policies. His most recent publications appeared in ACM Computing Surveys and Futures.