ABSTRACT

The terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001 marked a turning point in international politics, representing a new type of threat that could not easily be anticipated or prevented through state-based structures of security alone. Opening up interdisciplinary conversations between strategic, economic, ethical and legal approaches to global terrorism, this edited book recognises a fundamental issue: while major crises initially tend to reinforce old thinking and behavioural patterns, they also allow societies to challenge and overcome entrenched habits, thereby creating the foundations for a new and perhaps more peaceful future.

This volume addresses the issues that are at stake in this dual process of political closure, and therefore rethinks how states can respond to terrorist threats. The contributors range from leading conceptual theorists to policy-oriented analysts, from senior academics to junior researchers. The book explores how terrorism has had a profound impact on how security is being understood and implemented, and uses a range of hitherto neglected sources of insight, such as those between political, economic, legal and ethical factors, to examine the nature and meaning of security in a rapidly changing world.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|48 pages

Security and terrorism

chapter 3|13 pages

‘War on terror’/‘war on women’

Critical feminist perspectives

part II|68 pages

Ethics, emotions and law in the war on terror

chapter 6|13 pages

New thinking in the just war tradition

Theorizing the war on terror

chapter 7|17 pages

Pre-empting terror

part III|67 pages

Fighting terror

chapter 8|18 pages

Failures, rogues and terrorists

125States of exception and the North/South divide

chapter 9|14 pages

US bioterrorism policy

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion