Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

E-raamat: Value of Resilience: Securing life in the twenty-first century [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(Keele University, UK)
  • Formaat: 176 pages
  • Sari: Interventions
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Aug-2015
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315681924
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 166,18 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 237,40 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 176 pages
  • Sari: Interventions
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Aug-2015
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315681924

At the turn of the twenty-first century, resilience has become a ‘buzz-word’ within fields as diverse as network engineering, ecosystems management, child psychology and military training programmes. Uniting these fields is a common problematic—how to provide security within environments characterized by radical contingency? Resilience has emerged as a response to this problematic. At its most general level resilience is understood as the capacity to absorb, withstand and ‘bounce-back’ quickly and efficiently from a perturbation. It is considered to be both a natural property and a quality which can be improved within a broad array of complex systems including critical infrastructures, ecosystems, societies and economies through proper governance.

Utilizing empirical research to inform a biopolitical genealogy, this book represents one of the first systematic studies of resilience in the field of Security Studies. Rather than treating resilience as either a unified concept or technique of governance this book analyses resilience as an emergent security value. Utilizing a biopolitical analytic, this book demonstrates that the value of resilience has appreciated alongside transformations in the order of power/knowledge enacted by apparatus of security. Zebrowski argues that resilience was not lying in wait for the march of science to provide the conditions for its recognition. Nor was it concealed by the distortions of ideology which lifted with the culmination of the Cold War, that in fact there is nothing natural about resilience

By drawing attention to the complex historical processes and significant governmental efforts required to make resilience possible this book aims to open up a space through which the value of resilience may be more critically interrogated.It will be of interest to students and scholars of international relations, security studies and conflict resolution.

Acknowledgements xv
Introduction: the value of resilience 1(21)
The value(s) of security
4(3)
Genealogy and the critique of values
7(4)
Resilience and the biopolitics of security
11(3)
Chapter outline
14(8)
1 State of emergency
22(29)
War becomes vital: securing the essentials of life in the First World War
24(1)
Harnessing uncertainty; esprit de corps and moral forces
25(4)
A British machinery of emergency governance
29(2)
Essentials of life in the Emergency Powers Act (1920)
31(3)
Panic and the origins of British Civil Defence
34(5)
Operational research and the `scientification' of war
39(3)
Generalizing emergency: the Emergencies Committee
42(3)
Conclusion
45(6)
2 Protect and survive
51(26)
Freedom from fear: social insurance and the British welfare state
53(5)
Ensuring survival: post-war civil defence
58(2)
Imagining Armageddon: the Strath report
60(5)
Preparing for survival
65(5)
State of emergency: the Civil Contingencies Unit
70(3)
Conclusion
73(4)
3 The nature of resilience
77(17)
The nature of nature
79(3)
Transforming nature
82(2)
The nature of neoliberalism
84(4)
The birth of resilient populations
88(2)
Conclusion
90(4)
4 Securing emergence
94(28)
The contemporary threat environment
96(4)
Transformation: the Revolution in Military Affairs
100(4)
Optimizing network-centric warriors
104(3)
Emergent security
107(2)
Harnessing emergence: resilience and UK Civil Contingencies planning
109(6)
Conclusion
115(7)
5 The technological subject of resilience
122(25)
Resilient by design
124(4)
The subject of communications technology
128(6)
Exercising resilience
134(6)
Conclusion
140(7)
Conclusion: evaluating resilience 147(8)
Index 155
Chris Zebrowski is a lecturer in Politics and International Relations at Loughborough University, UK.