1st Edition

Controlling the Weapons of War Politics, Persuasion, and the Prohibition of Inhumanity

By Brian Rappert Copyright 2006
236 Pages
by Routledge

236 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

A fresh examination of the ethical and intellectual issues and dilemmas associated with attempts to establish formal humanitarian limits on weaponry. This new study considers how governments, non-governmental organizations, academics, political commentators and others have responded to the predicaments associated with imposing classifications about the relative acceptability of force... Read more

Part 1. This Happening World  1. The Chains that Bind?  2. Striving for Order  3. The Word and the World  Part 2  1. The Technologies of Conflict and the Conflicts about Technology  2. Weapons: What are they?  3. Weapons: What are they for?  4. Weapons: What do they do?  Part 3. Prohibiting Weapons  1. Predicaments with Prohibitions  2. Fractured Worlds: The Case of Cluster Bombs  3. Dealing with Unfinished Business  Part 4. Future Agendas  1. Troubles with Humanitarian Prohibitions

Biography

Brian Rappert is Lecturer in the Department of Sociology, at the School of Historical, Political and Sociological Studies at Exeter University.