Description
Product ID: | 9781108441391 |
Product Form: | Paperback / softback |
Country of Manufacture: | GB |
Title: | On Resilience |
Subtitle: | Genealogy, Logics, and World Politics |
Authors: | Author: Philippe Bourbeau |
Page Count: | 160 |
Subjects: | Comparative politics, Comparative politics, International relations, Public international law: international organizations and institutions, International relations, International organisations & institutions |
Description: | Select Guide Rating What does it mean to be resilient in an international context? This book provides a rich and unparalleled study of resilience as applied to world politics. For students, academics, specialists, and practitioners in the rapidly growing field of resilience, and more broadly security studies, migration, and political sociology. What does it mean to be resilient in a societal or in an international context? Where does resilience come from? From which discipline was it ''imported'' into international relations (IR)? If a particular government employs the meaning of resilience to its own benefit, should scholars reject the analytical purchase of the concept of resilience as a whole? Does a government have the monopoly of understanding how resilience is defined and applied? This book addresses these questions. Even though resilience in global politics is not new, a major shift is currently happening in how we understand and apply resilience in world politics. Resilience is indeed increasingly theorised, rather than simply employed as a noun; it has left the realm of vocabulary and entered the terrain of concept. This book demonstrates the multiple origins of resilience, traces the diverse expressions of resilience in IR to various historical markers, and propose a theory of resilience in world politics. |
Imprint Name: | Cambridge University Press |
Publisher Name: | Cambridge University Press |
Country of Publication: | GB |
Publishing Date: | 2021-04-08 |