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El. knyga: Strategic Culture, Securitisation and the Use of Force: Post-9/11 Security Practices of Liberal Democracies

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This book investigates, and explains, the extent to which different liberal democracies have resorted to the use of force since the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The responses of democratic states throughout the world to the September 2001 terrorist attacks have varied greatly. This book analyses the various factors that had an impact on decisions on the use of force by governments of liberal democratic states. It seeks to explain differences in the security policies and practices of Australia, Canada, France, Germany and the UK regarding the war in Afghanistan, domestic counterterrorism measures and the Iraq War. To this end, the book combines the concepts of strategic culture and securitisation into a theoretical model that disentangles the individual structural and agential causes of the use of force by the state and sequentially analyses the impact of each causal component on the other. It argues that the norms of a strategic culture shape securitisation processes of different expressions, which then bring about distinct modes of the use of force in individual security policy decisions. While governments can also deviate from the constraints of a strategic culture, this is likely to encounter a strong reaction from large parts of the population which in turn can lead to a long-term change in strategic culture.

This book will be of much interest to students of strategic culture, securitisation, European politics, security studies and IR in general.
List of figures
ix
List of tables
x
Acknowledgements xii
List of abbreviations
xiii
Introduction 1(20)
PART I A comprehensive model of the use of force by the state
21(30)
1 Ontology and causation in international relations
23(10)
2 The theoretical model incorporating strategic culture and securitisation
33(11)
3 Operationalising the theoretical model
44(7)
PART II Comparing strategic cultures
51(52)
4 Formative moments, founding narratives and identity conceptions
53(25)
5 Comparative cross-country analysis
78(25)
PART III Comparing decision processes on the use of force
103(131)
6 Analysing British decision processes on the use of force
105(29)
7 Analysing German decision processes on the use of force
134(28)
8 Analysing French decisions on the use of force
162(19)
9 Analysing Australian decisions on the use of force
181(19)
10 Analysing Canadian decisions on the use of force
200(22)
11 Conclusion
222(12)
Appendix 234(10)
Index 244
Wilhlem Mirow has a PhD in International Relations, Center for Security Studies (CSS), Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich.