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E-raamat: (In)Security and the Production of International Relations: The Politics of Securitisation in Europe

(Center for Security Studies, ETH Zürich, Switzerland)
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This book provides a framework for analysing the interplay between securitisation and foreign affairs, reconnecting critical security studies with traditional IR concerns about interstate relations.

What happens to foreign policymaking when actors, things or processes are presented as threats? This book explains state behaviour on the basis of a reflexive framework of insecurity politics, and argues that governments act on the knowledge of international danger available in their societies, but that such knowledge is organised by markedly varying ideas of who threatens whom and how. The book develops this argument and illustrates it by means of various European case studies. Moving across European history and space, these case studies show how securitisation has projected evolving and often contested local ideas of the organisation of international insecurity, and how such knowledges of world politics have then conditioned foreign policymaking on their own terms.

With its focus on insecurity politics, the book provides new perspectives for the study of international security. Moving the discipline from systemic theorising to a theory of international systematisation, it shows how world politics is, in practice, often conceived in a different way than that assumed by IR theory. By the same token, by depicting national insecurity as a matter of political construction, the book also raises the challenging question of whether certain projections of insecurity may be considered more warranted than others.

This book will be of much interest to students of critical security studies, European politics, foreign policy and IR, in general.

Arvustused

[ Hagmann] ambitiously tries to link the construction of threat and danger to tangible changes in three European countries, international postures and policies, following in successive chapters French, German, and Swiss policy making from the immediate postwar era through the end of the Cold War, using parliamentary documents, leaders' statements, press reports, and academic debate. ... Recommended for graduate students and professional analysts in the European security field. --D. N. Nelson, Center for Arms Control & Nonproliferation, CHOICE recommended

Part I: Security as Systematization
1. Introduction
2. Endangering and
Ordering International Relations
3. Contesting and Conditioning International
Relations Part II: Genealogies of European Insecurity Politics
4. Frances
Troubled Post-war Years
5. Westbindung, Winning Paradigm in West Germany
6.
Neutral Switzerland and the non-recognition of direct danger
7. Gaullism as
World Order Perspective
8. The West German Ostpolitik Years
9. Switzerland
Embraces Collective Dangers
10. France and the re-construction of European
insecurities
11. Unified Germany in the post-Cold War era Part III:
(In-)security and the production of international relations
12. Conclusion
Jonas Hagmann is Senior Researcher at the Center for Security Studies, ETH Zürich, Switzerland, and has a PhD in International Relations from the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva.