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BRITISH SECURITY (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   116322


Mind the gap: divergent visions of national priorities and the international system within contemporary British government / Crowcroft, Robert; Hartley, Owen A   Journal Article
Crowcroft, Robert Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This article makes an original contribution to the ongoing debate about British security policy and strategy by investigating for the first time the conceptual 'gap' separating the Ministry of Defence (MoD) and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO). It argues that there exists a genuine contrast in how the MoD and FCO conceive of the international system itself and Britain's place within it. The article analyses the indigenous worldviews of the departments - the assumptions, thought-processes, and conceptual paradigms employed by the MoD and FCO. Given the current determination to increase 'joined-up' Government, this problem needs to be acknowledged and discussed.
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2
ID:   132098


Sea power is benign power: the international case for a maritime posture / Blagden, David   Journal Article
Blagden, David Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract While it is a truism that British security and prosperity have their foundation in maritime power, this has not translated into a conceptualisation of sea power that can be of practical use to policy-makers and practitioners. David Blagden applies two crucial concepts in security studies to the UK's contemporary situation and argues that a maritime grand strategy based on offshore balancing will serve the country well in the future.
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3
ID:   106591


When terrorism as strategy fails: dissident Irish republicans and the threat to British security / Edwards, Aaron   Journal Article
Edwards, Aaron Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The use of terrorism as a strategy for obtaining political goals by non-state actors persists in the international system, despite attempts by states to counter the phenomenon. This article explores the resurgent threat posed to British security by dissident Irish republicans in order to illustrate the limited utility of terrorism as a strategy in the current sociopolitical context. Therefore, it has three objectives: First, it explains how strategic theory can aid in constructing a conceptual framework for explaining the persistence of terrorism, in general, and dissident republican violence, in particular. Second, it examines the dissident threat in light of the general failure of "armed struggle" to achieve republican goals in Irish politics. It is argued here that dissident republicans have confused "means" with "ends" and that this, ultimately, demonstrates the futility of their violence. Finally, the article suggests ways of tackling the dissident republican variant of terrorism.
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