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NON-STATE VIOLENCE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   089986


Enemy of humanity: the anti-piracy discourse in present-day anti-terrorism / Thorup, Mikkel   Journal Article
Thorup, Mikkel Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This article explores the anti-pirate discourse as a feature of the present war on terror and the more general connection between state and non-state violence. The anti-pirate discourse in ancient and early modern history is explored where piracy was one of the main threats coming from the private use of force. The anti-piracy reference is used in the present anti-terror discourse to open the way for a more militaristic approach to fighting terrorism centered around the concept of "enemy of humanity." Naming the enemy as someone outside the reach of reason and of conventional warfare brands the enemy as fanatically intent on destruction for destruction's sake and a state's intention to fight the "war" dirty as the only route to success.
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2
ID:   159186


Surrogate warfare: the art of war in the 21st century? / Krieg, Andreas; Rickli, Jean-Marc   Journal Article
Rickli, Jean-Marc Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Airpower, drones and cyber-weapons are employed by states in conjunction with local armed non-state actors in an effort to coercively intervene in the crises of the twenty-first century. While the externalization of the burden of warfare is a return to pre-modern war, it is the change in the underlying socio-political relations between the state and its military agent that is a novel phenomenon in surrogate warfare. This article demonstrates that in a post-Westphalian era characterized by non-state violence, globalized conflicts, a prioritization of risk management in a mediatized environment, the state has to explore new ways to remain relevant as the primary communal security provider. Thereby, the organization of violence has departed from the employment of the state’s soldier as the primary bearer of the burden of warfare to a mode of war where technological and human surrogates enable the state to manage the risks of post-modern conflict remotely. In this article, we conceptually explore surrogate warfare as a socio-political phenomenon within the context of globalized, privatized, securitized and mediatized war.
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