ABSTRACT

This multidisciplinary edited volume explores how the spread of the 'War on Terror' has entwined matters of state sovereignty and states of war into mutually affecting relations.

Pre-emptive attacks on terrorist groups in ‘rogue’ states, ‘outsourcing’ of state militancy and the mutable state of armed conflict required to wage a ‘hybrid war’ have increasingly been issues for the War on Terror. Moreover, such measures have seen the spread of this war to countries such as Israel, Russia, Ethiopia, and Uganda, all of whom have justified their own attacks in other nation-states as a war of ‘self-defence’ against terrorism.

States of War since 9/11 offers a timely, innovative analysis of how the War on Terror has taken on different modes of militancy and militarisation in spreading to different nation-states and regions. Featuring a multidisciplinary line-up of eminent contributors, the book ranges in reference from the early stages of the war up to France’s 2013 intervention in Mali. Part One examines the various modes of war and militarisation that have been employed in particular nation-states, including Afghanistan, Russia and Chechnya, and Israel and Palestine. Part Two examines how the war’s innovations have more generally involved ‘just war theory’, biopolitics and sovereignty, networked battlespace, new military urbanism, citizenship, homeland security and surveillance. Overall, this book offers a fresh insight into how states have attempted to secure their own bounds by extending the boundaries of war itself.

This book will be of much interest to students of critical terrorism studies, foreign policy and IR in general.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

States at war and modes of war since 9/11

part |146 pages

Part I

chapter |17 pages

Russia's War on Terror

Nationalism, Islam and Chechenization

chapter |15 pages

Female militancy and the Wars on Terror

Revisiting feminist interventions from South Asia 1

chapter |17 pages

The inevitable War on Terror

De-terrorising the Palestinians

chapter |25 pages

A tale of two insurgencies

Oil, authority and the spectre of terror in Nigeria

chapter |21 pages

From Terror War to liberal humanitarian wars

The case of the NATO libyan intervention 1

chapter |18 pages

Reincarnating Al Qaeda

The global War on Terror and the ‘Arab Spring'

part |87 pages

Part II

chapter |14 pages

Between the devil and the deep blue sea

Thinking in new ways about just war

chapter |16 pages

Fighting states of subjection

The biopolitical stakes of the liberal War on Terror

chapter |14 pages

States of urban war

Understanding the new military urbanism