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SCOURGE OF WAR (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   173223


On the Century of Peacemaking at the 1919 Treaty of Versailles: Looking Back to Look Ahead / Desai, Bharat H; Desai, Jay B   Journal Article
Desai, Bharat H Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This study seeks to make a modest effort to look back at the marathon peacemaking ushered into by the Treaty of Versailles, during 1919–1922 periods, after Armistice was signed on 11 November 1918, bringing to an end the First World War. It has sought to place under scanner the said arduous process of peacemaking, resulting in an imposing corpus of five treaties comprising 1914 articles with Germany and its four other allies (Austria, Bulgaria, Hungary and Turkey). It presents an interesting role of the principal peacemakers therein along with the advent of the era of ‘organizing’ through the League of Nations and other entities such as International Labour Office and Permanent Court of International Justice. Now, at the distance of 101 years from the main event that heralded new milestones in international law and international relations, we have sought to make sense of it so as to deduce lessons to look ahead for our better world. Knowing well that alike human beings, any peacemaking cannot be flawless, it has been our endeavour to provide an objective understanding of the great peacemaking, its aftermath (1919–1939) and its relevance for the United Nations–led world order in the 21st century.
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2
ID:   086148


To save succeeding generations from the scourge of war: US, UN and the violence of security / Shepherd, Laura J   Journal Article
Shepherd, Laura J Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract This investigation explores the ways in which discourses of security functioned to allow military intervention in Iraq to become 'thinkable', and how these actions serve to reconfigure not only the identities of states - the US and Iraq - but also the characteristics of the international as a spatial and conceptual domain. In the weeks preceding the military intervention in Iraq, significant negotiations were conducted between the US government and the UN that were commented on extensively in press statements and other documents released by both parties. Drawing on UNSC Resolutions, public debates and academic analyses, in this article I analyse the relations between the US and the UN in the build-up to the Iraq war, making two related claims. First, I argue that each discourse is organised around a particular logic of security. By 'logics of security', I mean the ways in which various concepts are organised within specific discourses of security. That is, each competing conceptualisation of security has a distinct primary focus, referent object and perspective on the arrangement of the international system. The ways in which these claims are made, the assumptions that inform them, and the policy prescriptions that issue from them, are what I refer to as 'logics of security'. Second, I argue that the intervention in Iraq, a violence undertaken in the name of 'security', has functioned to reproduce the international as a spatial and conceptual domain according to the logic of a highly conventional narrative of sovereigneity, and, ultimately, of state identity.
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