NATO’s Security Discourse after the Cold War

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A01=Andreas Behnke
Author_Andreas Behnke
Category=JPA
Category=JPSN
Cee Country
Cee State
CFE
CFE Treaty
collective identity formation
concept
critical security studies
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international relations theory
liberal security critique
Mediterranean Dialogue
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NATO Enlargement
NATO identity construction analysis
NATO Re-presents
NATO Territory
NATO's Aim
NATO's Area
NATO's Council
NATO's Decision
NATO's Discourse
NATO's Effort
NATO's Future
NATO's Heads
NATO's Member State
NATO's Policy
NATO's post-Cold War
NATO's Re-presentation
NATO's Response
NATO's Role
NATO's Security
natos
nomatic
post-Soviet geopolitics
spatial security concepts
state
strategic
Strategic Concept
WMD Proliferation

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415584531
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jul 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book analyses the way in which the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) defines the West after the end of the Cold War and the demise of its constitutive ‘Other’, the Soviet Union.

The book offers a theoretical critique of liberal approaches to security, and focuses on NATO’s construction of four geo-cultural spaces that are the sites of particular dangers or threats, which cause these spaces to be defined as the ‘enemy’ of the West. While this forges a collective Western identity, effectively achieved in the 1990s, the book also includes an analysis of NATO’s involvement in the War on Terror – an involvement in which the Alliance fails to define a coherent West, thereby undermining the very source of its long-standing political cohesion. Contributing to theoretical development within Critical Security Studies, Behnke draws on a variety of approaches to provide an analytical framework that examines the political as well as philosophical problems associated with NATO’s performance of security and identity, concluding that in the modern era of globalized, non-territorialized threats and dangers, NATO’s traditional spatial understanding of security is no longer effective given the new dynamics of Western security.

NATO’s Security Discourse after the Cold War will be of great interest to students and researchers of International Relations, Critical Security Studies and International Organizations.

Andreas Behnke is a lecturer at the University of Reading, UK.

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