Secular Morality and International Security Secular Morality and International Security

Secular Morality and International Security

American and British Decisions about War

    • 49,99 €
    • 49,99 €

Publisher Description

“[Fanis] demonstrates an impressive ability to travel nimbly between abstract theoretical concepts and a messy reality. In each one of the case study chapters, her analysis is rich, thoughtful, and imaginative.”

—Ido Oren, University of Florida

Combining insights from cultural studies, gender studies, and social history, Maria Fanis shows the critical importance of national identity in decisions about war and peace. She challenges conventional approaches by demonstrating that domestic ethical codes influence perceptions of threat from abroad. With an in-depth study of U.S.-British relations in the first half of the nineteenth century, and with an application to the recent War in Iraq, she ties changes in U.S. and British national interest to shifts in these nations’ domestic codes of morality.

Fanis’s findings have important implications for contemporary international relations theory. Apart from its relevance to current events, her work also makes a contribution to the literatures on foreign policy—specifically American and British foreign policies—and the causes of war.

GENRE
Politics & Current Affairs
RELEASED
2011
22 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
240
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Michigan Press
SIZE
1.1
MB