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Security and emancipation*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2009

Extract

Our work Is our words, but our words do not work any more. They have not worked for some time. We can obviously start with the misleading label—‘International Politics’—which is given to our subject. As a result of this problem, I have wanted to use increasing numbers of inverted commas; but most have never seen the light of day because copy-editors have regarded them as an over-indulgence. Even so, the very temptation of these little scratches indicates that words at the heart of the subject are i n trouble:

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 1991

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References

1 Jackson, R. H. and Rosenberg, C. G., ‘Why Africa's Weak States Persist: The Empirical and the Juridical in Statehood’, World Politics, 35 (1983), pp. 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2 As happened, for example, to ‘collective security’: see Claude, Inis J., Swords Into Ploughshares (London, 1966), p. 224.Google Scholar

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6 Nadine Gordimer took this quotation as the starting point for a novel on black-white relations in South Africa: see her July's People (London, 1981). I took it as the starting point for thinking about the present era in international politics: see New Thinking About Strategy and International Security (London, 1991).

7 This is the theme of Ornsteain, Robert and Ehrlich, Paul, New World, New Mind (London, 1989)Google Scholar.

8 New York Times, 7 September 1982, quoted in The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, February 1983, p. 3.

9 Quoted by William Safire, Safire's Political Dictionary (New York, 1978), p. 394.Google Scholar

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