Geopolitics Reframed: Security and Identity in Europe\'s Eastern Enlargement (New Visions in Security)
معرفی کتاب «Geopolitics Reframed: Security and Identity in Europe\'s Eastern Enlargement (New Visions in Security)» نوشتهٔ Merje Kuus، منتشرشده توسط نشر Palgrave Macmillan US در سال 2007. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
Security and identity are the rhetorical pillars of European Union and NATO enlargement. Across Europe, that enlargement—not as a one-time event but as an ongoing process—is proclaimed to stabilize East-Central Europe and to create a Europe that is finally "whole and free". Europe's eastern enlargement is a profoundly geographic and geopolitical project, as it is based on territorial conceptions about the essence of places, the borders of cultures, and the locations of threat. It inextricably ties European security to the unresolved questions about the borders of Europe and Europeanness. Geopolitics Reframed asks how the bundling up of geopolitics and culture works, how it affects political debate, and how it is transformed in the course of Europe's eastern enlargement. The book provides the first in-depth analysis of security discourses in the states that acceded into the EU or NATO, or both, in 2004. Tracing the reframing of security and geopolitics from a military to a more diffuse cultural issue, Geopolitics Reframed illuminates the link between security rhetoric and identity politics. For scholars an practitioners of political geography, international relations, and contemporary Europe, it offers a fresh, subtle, and timely analysis of some of the key categories of political debate in today's Europe. Security and identity are the rhetorical pillars of European Union and NATO enlargement. Across Europe, enlargement--not as a one-time event but as an ongoing process--is proclaimed to stabilize East-Central Europe and to create a Europe that is finally "whole and free". Europe's eastern enlargement is a profoundly geographic and geopolitical project, as it is based on territorial conceptions about the essence of places, the borders of cultures, and the locations of threat. It inextricably ties European security to the unresolved questions about the borders of Europe and Europeanness. Geopolitics Reframed asks how the bundling up of geopolitics and culture works, how it affects political debate, and how it is transformed in the course of Europe's eastern enlargement. The book provides the first in-depth analysis of security discourses in the stages that acceded into the EU or NATO, or both, in 2004. Tracing the reframing of security and geopolitics from a military to a more diffuse cultural issue, Geopolitics Reframed illuminates the link between security rhetoric and identity politics. For scholars an practitioners of political geography, international relations, and contemporary Europe, it offers a fresh, subtle, and timely analysis of some of the key categories of political debate in today's Europe. Cover......Page 1 Contents......Page 8 List of Figures......Page 9 Preface......Page 10 Acknowledgments......Page 14 1 The Plasticity of Geopolitics......Page 16 2 Inscribing Europeanness, Erasing Eastness......Page 36 3 Civilizational Geopolitics......Page 54 4 Sovereignty for Security?......Page 78 5 Cultural Geopolitics and Cultured Geopoliticians......Page 98 6 The Ritual of Listening to Foreigners......Page 112 7 How Many Threats and How Many Europes?......Page 130 Notes......Page 138 Bibliography......Page 190 E......Page 220 N......Page 221 Z......Page 222 This book traces the shifting meanings of security and geopolitics in Central European states that acceded into the EU or NATO in 2004. The author examines assumptions that shaped these debates and influenced policy-making, combining fresh theoretical approaches from international relations and political geography with rich empirical material from Central Europe. This book provides the first in-depth analysis of security discourse in the region.
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