Research and Markets, the largest resource for market research information in world providing essential market research reports, industry research, industry analysis, forecasts, market studies, company profiles and country reports.
Welcome - Register - Login - Help/FAQ - 0 items View Basket
Worlds Largest Market Research Resource - 1516374 Live Reports
Search Research and Markets
  Search
Enter keywords, a title or
a report id number below.





Advanced   
Company search
Register for free email updates of market research
Currency
  Select a currency for use throughout the site



Viewing report

Order by Fax
Ask a Question
Printer Friendly
PDF Brochure
Hard CopyAdd to Basket
Live Chat Live Help Software for Website

Bridging Aberystwyth and Copenhagen: (de)securitising emancipation. Edition No. 1

VDM Publishing House, July 2008, Pages: 60


  Description  
   Authors   
    
    
    
     
  Enquire before Buying   
  Send to a Friend   

In the 1980s and 1990s, traditional (military-centric, state-centric and objectivist) conceptions of security were challenged by a number of new approaches which stressed, inter alia, a widened security concept, non-military and non-state perspectives, and an emphasis on culture, identity, gender and discourse.

One of the more influential of these new approaches was the so called 'Welsh School' of Critical Security Studies, often associated with the writings of Ken Booth and his colleagues at the University of Wales at Aberystwyth, however, few serious efforts were made to further develop its central concept of 'security as emancipation' or identify the best way to ?do? Critical Security Studies as a practitioner or analyst.

In this study, Ola Sohlstrom presents an overview of the most central developments in security studies in the last 20 years and shows how the theory and politics of the Welsh School can be taken forward through a closer engagement with another influential post-traditionalist school of security studies, the so called Copenhagen School, and the social constructivist notion of 'securitisation'.



For enquiries please call us on:
  +353-1-415-1241 (GMT Office Hours)
  1-917-300-0470 (EST Office Hours)

   All rights reserved. © Copyright 2012 Research and Markets
   Terms and conditions Privacy Policy Publishers Employment Opportunities Site Map Link to us Webmaster Affiliate Network


Research and Markets RSS Feeds