36 research outputs found

    Children, civilianhood, and humanitarian securitization

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    In this paper, the influence of the construction of children as civilians over the processes of securitization in the US intervention in Somalia is examined. This is done through an analysis of the US print news media coverage of that event. The study employs two key theoretical frameworks: the first is the social understanding of civilianhood; and the second is the Copenhagen School’s theory of securitization. The work concludes that a failure to unpack the value of referent objects of security diminishes the insights that securitization theory can offer. The grammar of securitizing moves cannot be fully comprehended in instances of militarized humanitarian interventions, in particular, without this kind of analysis. Children as suffering civilians draw considerable attention from the world’s media and thus an investigation of their role in securitization can be highly informative

    Patriotism: a deflationary account

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    C1 - Journal Articles Referee

    Civilian Immunity in War

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    Michael Walzer's just war theory

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    C1 - Journal Articles Referee

    Patriotism: Worldly and Ethical

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    B1 - Research Book Chapter

    Civilian immunity in war

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    Patriotism and the Value of Citizenship

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