Post-Westphalian global security : the strategic implications of applying nonviolent consent theory to the global war on terror
Citation:
Jason W. Daverth, 'Post-Westphalian global security : the strategic implications of applying nonviolent consent theory to the global war on terror', [thesis], Irish School of Ecumenics, 2009, pp 349Download Item:
Daverth TCD THESIS 9269 Post Westphalian global.pdf (PDF) 247.8Mb
Abstract:
In characterising 9/11 as a transformative moment in global security, IR realists have failed to contextualise such threats within the larger trends of global populism. The rising technological and temporal-spatial diminishment of globalisation has afforded militarised non-state networks (MNSNs), such as al-Qaeda, increasingly efficient means and modalities through which to exert influence. Yet it is important to note that rather than aberrations, such networks are the logical extrapolation of a broader global trajectory of eroding state-centric norms.
Author: Daverth, Jason W.
Advisor:
Atack, IainQualification name:
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)Publisher:
Irish School of EcumenicsNote:
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Ecumenics, Ph.D., Ph.D. Trinity College DublinLicences: