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ID124773
Title ProperNew Middle East, new insecurities and the limits of liberation geography
LanguageENG
AuthorBurgess, J Peter ;  Constantinou, Costas M
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The recent uprisings in the Middle East have highlighted - once again and in dramatic fashion - the confluence of understandings of security, representations of danger and practices of legitimation that shape our variegated geopolitical landscape. The political landscape of the Middle East is changing, and with it many of the rote certainties about how things are done or ought to be done in and with the region. Local regimes of power can no longer justify to national constituencies and international audiences the necessity of autocratic rule, states of emergency and suspension of rights. 'The West' confronts the hypocrisies and moral discounts of its own foreign policy choices, including how its definition of regional security supported the kinds of regimes, policies and human rights violations that Western states traditionally define themselves against.
`In' analytical NoteSecurity Dialogue Vol. 44, No.5-6; Oct-Dec 2013: p.365-373
Journal SourceSecurity Dialogue Vol. 44, No.5-6; Oct-Dec 2013: p.365-373
Key WordsMiddle East ;  Limits of Liberation Georaphy ;  Political Landscape ;  Autocratic Rule ;  Human Rights