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War Beatrice Heuser (Chair of International Relations, Chair of International Relations, University of Glasgow)

War By Beatrice Heuser (Chair of International Relations, Chair of International Relations, University of Glasgow)

Summary

War examines the nature of war and presents a genealogy of Western ideas and practices spanning over 2500 years.

War Summary

War: A Genealogy of Western Ideas and Practices by Beatrice Heuser (Chair of International Relations, Chair of International Relations, University of Glasgow)

War has been conceptualised from a military perspective, but also from ethical, legal, and philosophical viewpoints. These different analytical perspectives are all necessary to understand the many dimensions war, the continua on which war is situated - from small-scale to large-scale, from limited in time or long, from less to extremely destructive, with varying aims, and degrees of involvement of populations. Western civilisations have conceptualised war in binary ways denying the variety of manifestations of war along these continua. While binary definitions are necessary to capture different conditions legally, they hamper analysis. The binaries include inter-State and intestine war, just war and unjust war (the latter including insurgencies), citizen-soldiers and professionals, civilians and combatants. Yet realities have mostly straddled such demarcations. Even citizen-armies have usually included professionals, civilians have been treated as enemies and sometimes even formally defined as enemies, and rules have not conformed with binary distinctions, if they were respected at all. While customary rules governing the conduct of war have been turned into International Law, this is the only aspect of war that has developed in a fairly linear way, while the rise, disappearance, and renaissance of the just war tradition has been anything but linear. This non-linearity also applies to the brutality with which war has been fought, especially towards civilians, who for long stretches of European history must have been the main victims of war, notwithstanding increasing protection they were afforded in theory by customary law. To understand war, we must shed some of these binaries.

About Beatrice Heuser (Chair of International Relations, Chair of International Relations, University of Glasgow)

Beatrice Heuser holds the Chair in International Relations at Glasgow University. Her degrees are from the Universities of London (BA, MA) and Oxford (DPhil), and the Philipps-University of Marburg (Habilitation). From 1991-2003 she taught at the Department of War Studies, King's College London, ultimately as Chair of International and Strategic Studies. She has also taught at Sciences Po' and the Universities Paris I, IV (Sorbonne), and VIII (St Denis), and at two German universities. From 1997-1998, she worked in the International Staff at NATO headquarters in Brussels. Between 2003-2007 she was Director for Research at the Military History Research Office of the Bundeswehr in Potsdam.

Table of Contents

1: Introduction 2: War in Europe: A Short Typological Survey 3: Ethical, Political And Legal Concepts Of War 4: Root Causes and Drivers of War 5: Just War Traditions 6: Professed Reasons for Going to War and War Aims 7: Who Fights? 8: Who is the Enemy? 9: Traditional and Legal Constraints on Warfare 10: The Rules and Practice of Warfare 11: Conclusions

Additional information

NGR9780198796893
9780198796893
0198796897
War: A Genealogy of Western Ideas and Practices by Beatrice Heuser (Chair of International Relations, Chair of International Relations, University of Glasgow)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
20220317
448
N/A
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