This work seeks to illuminate the various ways in which the management of imperial or hegemonic spaces contribute to the emergence of more coercive apparatuses of state control.
This work seeks to illuminate the various ways in which the management of imperial or hegemonic spaces contribute to the emergence of more coercive apparatuses of state control.
Alexander D. Barder is a political scientist at Florida International University in the Department of Politics and International Relations. Barder is the author (with François Debrix) of Beyond Biopolitics: Theory, Violence and Horror in World Politics (Routledge, 2011).
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Empire as International Hierarchy 1. International Relations Theory: Hierarchy and the Problem of Empire 2. Imperial Laboratories of Violence: A Genealogy of the Camp 3. Imperial Subjects at Home and The Rise of the Modern Surveillance State 4. American Hegemony and the Neoliberal Laboratory in the Americas 5. Conclusion Global War Comes Home
Introduction Empire as International Hierarchy 1. International Relations Theory: Hierarchy and the Problem of Empire 2. Imperial Laboratories of Violence: A Genealogy of the Camp 3. Imperial Subjects at Home and The Rise of the Modern Surveillance State 4. American Hegemony and the Neoliberal Laboratory in the Americas 5. Conclusion Global War Comes Home
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