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KAY, SEAN (8) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   119770


America's Sputnik moments / Kay, Sean   Journal Article
Kay, Sean Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Key Words America  NASA  Barack Obama  Sputnik 
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2
ID:   145903


Global security in the twenty - first century: the quest for power and the search for peace / Kay, Sean 2015  Book
Kay, Sean Book
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Edition 3rd ed.
Publication Lanham, Rowman and Littlefield, 2015.
Description viii, 417p.pbk
Standard Number 9781442248021
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
058712355.033/KAY 058712MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   052550


Globalization, power, and security / Kay, Sean March 2004  Journal Article
Kay, Sean Journal Article
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Publication March 2004.
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4
ID:   047370


Limiting institutions: challenge of Eurasian security governance / Sperling, James (ed); Kay, Sean (ed); Papacosma, Victor (ed) 2003  Book
Kay, Sean Book
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Publication Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2003.
Description xiv, 290p.
Standard Number 0719066050
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
047092355.033047/SPE 047092MainOn ShelfGeneral 
5
ID:   076977


NATO and counter-insurgency: strategic liability or tactical asset / Kay, Sean; Khan, Sahar   Journal Article
Kay, Sean Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
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6
ID:   058966


NATO, the Kosovo war and neoliberal theory / Kay, Sean Aug 2004  Journal Article
Kay, Sean Journal Article
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Publication Aug 2004.
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7
ID:   114821


Ontological security and peace-building in northern Ireland / Kay, Sean   Journal Article
Kay, Sean Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Ontological security, which focuses on the security of oneself, one's identity, and group affiliations, best informs the nature of sectarian conflict and conflict resolutions in contemporary Northern Ireland. This article seeks to move the debates over the role of ontological security concepts in international relations by applying a mainly theoretical discussion to testable case studies. While high-end, official peacemaking can be explained by rational actor models, constraints on peace-building remain ontologically driven. This explains the dichotomy between the dramatic reduction of violence since 'the Troubles' and the existential anxieties that persist despite the peace process. In parts of Northern Ireland politics and security are ontologically defined. Choices that might not seem rational in the sense of value maximizing are better understood via this framework. Northern Ireland shows a clear correlation between ontological security frameworks and post-peace process developments. Ontological security also shows the possibilities and limits for exporting formally rational, state-centred models of peacemaking, and reminds us that the urban geographer might be as important a security actor as the diplomat or military representative.
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8
ID:   061771


What went wrong with NATO / Kay, Sean Apr 2005  Journal Article
Kay, Sean Journal Article
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Publication Apr 2005.
Summary/Abstract This article provides a perspective on strategic trends in the NATO alliance and the broader transatlantic relationship. It evaluates the extent of NATO's successes and failures over the last 15 years in the areas of the Balkans, NATO enlargement, and the international campaign against terrorism. The central conclusion is that, while NATO's members have significant technical reforms available that could help to reinvigorate the institution, none is likely to come to fruition without a major change in strategic concepts on both sides of the Atlantic.
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