War Citizenship Territory 1st Edition by Deborah Cowen, Emily Gilbert – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0203938127, 9780415955133
Full download War Citizenship Territory 1st Edition after payment
Product details:
ISBN 10: 0203938127
ISBN 13: 9780415955133
Author: Deborah Cowen, Emily Gilbert
War Citizenship Territory 1st Table of contents:
1 The Politics of War, Citizenship, Territory
War
Citizenship
Territory
Chapter Overview
Notes
References
Part I At War: Struggle, “Strategy,” and Spatiality
2 Imagining Urban Warfare Urbanization and U.S. Military Technoscience
Introduction
Dreams Frustrated? Urbanization and the “Revolution in Military Affairs” (RMA)
Signal Failures: Urban Environments as Physical Interrupters to “Network-Centric Warfare”
The “Urbanization of Insurgency” Global South Cities, U.S. Vertical Power, and the Obliteration of Urban Citizenship
Dreams Reclaimed? From Preemptive War to “Persistent Area Dominance”?
Technophiliac Unveilings of Global South Cities: Dreams of “Real-Time Situational Awareness”
“Persistent Area Dominance” Toward Robotic Killing Systems in Urban Warfare?
Conclusions: War, Citizenship, and Territory on an Urbanizing Planet
Acknowledgments
References
3 Spaces of Exception and Unexceptionability
Agamben: Sovereign Power and Bare Life
State of Exception
Homo Sacer
History and Geography of Sovereignty
A lingering geographical question and a case study
The unexceptionable spaces of the RAF
“Conspiratorial Apartments” (Konspirative Wohnungen)
Transportation and Communication
Geography of the “Sympathizer Scene”
Horst Herold and the exceptional hunt for knowledge
The other side of “bare life”: “territory laid bare”
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
4 Bombs, Bodies, Acts The Banalization of Suicide
Understanding Acts of Suicide Violence
Freedom and Responsibility
The Question of Facticity
The Problem of the Alibi
The Prosaicism of Suicide
Actor and the Face of the Other
Acts to Habitus: The Banalization of Violence
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
5 Panic, Civility, and the Homeland
Histories of the Homeland
A National Target
Panic in the Streets?
The Social Science of Survival
Novelty and Normalcy
Notes
References
6 Distributed Preparedness Space, Security, and Citizenship in the United States
Distributed Preparedness, Civil Defense, and National Security
Autonomy, Economy, and Coordination: Emergency Federalism
Vulnerability Mapping
Imaginative Enactment and Urban Analysis
Producing Maps
Distributed Preparedness and the Politics of Contemporary Security
Notes
References
Part II Re/constituting Territory
7 Reconstituting Iraq
Three Days
The Political Process
The Process of Constitution
The Constitution of Iraqi Territory
The International Situation
The Referendum
Looking Toward the Future
Acknowledgments
Appendix: Iraqi Constitutions
Appendix: United Nations Security Council Resolutions
Notes
References
8 War Veterans, Disability, and Postcolonial Citizenship in Angola and Mozambique
Introduction: Postcolonial Transformations
Angola: Conflict, Citizenship, and “the Worst Country in the World”
Conclusions: anonymous heroes and broken promises
Acknowledgments
APPENDIX: List of Acronyms
Notes
References
9 Who Are the Victims? Where Is the Violence? The Spatial Dialectics of Andean Violence as Revealed by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Peru
Introduction
Conceptualizing the Spatial Injustice of Andean Violence
Insights from Feminist Geopolitics
Spatial Justice and Citizenship
Citizenship, Ethnicity, and the Deployment of Violence in Andean Peru2
Tiers of Citizenship
Citizenship and Ethnic Identity
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Peru: Genesis, Mandate, and Logistics
TRC Revelations and Recommendations in Relation to Race and Space
Who Were the Victims? Where Was the Violence?
Recommendations to Redress Violations of the Rights and Duties of Citizenship
Prospects for the Reconstitution of Citizenship
Whither the Recommendations of the TRC?
Faltering Prospects for Reconciliation
Prospects for Creating a New Political Culture
Conclusion: Memory, Truth, Citizenship, and Spatial Injustice
Notes
References
10 Unreliable Chinese Internal Security and the Devaluation and Expansion of Citizenship in Postwar Hong Kong
Introduction
Citizenship and Colonial Urbanism
Hong Kong in 1950
Internal Security and Unreliability
Squatter Resettlement and the Beginnings of Social Citizenship
Conclusions
Notes
References
11 Conflict, Citizenship, and Human Security Geographies of Protection
Human Security, Human Rights, and Humanitarianism
UN Humanism
Security and Scale
Concluding Thoughts
Notes
References
Part III Citizens and the Body Politic
12 Citizenship in the “Homeland” Families at War
Introduction
Fighting for Family
War, Homeland, Family
Familial Politics and Neurotic Citizens
The Family at War: A New Sovereign?
Notes
References
13 Resistance, Detainment, Asylum The Onto-Political Limits of Border Crossing in North America
Borders Defining National Identity
Racial Ontologies: “Risky Subjects”
Borders: Temporal Spaces
Racializing the 49th parallel
“Securing an Open Society”
Onto-Political Limit
Detainment Indefinite Time
Notes
References
14 IDs and Territory Population Control for Resource Expropriation
Internal passports: past and present
Tools in policing hierarchy: Registry, IDs, license plates, and checkpoints
An open-air prison for “voluntary expulsion”
Labor is not the issue: A biopolitics of the unwanted
Bringing it all together: Maps, codes, cards, and land
“They limit who we can marry”
Territory
Closing thoughts
Notes
References
15 Nation and Gender in Jewish Israel
The Study of Nationalism
Territoriality and the Jewish Nation
Period I: The construction of Jewish Nationalism
Jewish Nationalism and the New Jew
Period II: Putting the New Jew to the test—the implementation stage (1920s to the late 1940s)
1920s–1948
After Statehood: 1948 to the Late 1950s
Period III: From Monolithic to Fragmented Identities (late 1960s and early 1970s)
Period IV: Multiple voices
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
16 Mobilizing Civil Society for the Hegemonic State The Korean War and the Construction of Soldiercitizens in the United States
The Korean War
Clash of Political Geographies
Chinese Propaganda and the Fragility of Political Geography Imaginations
How to Meet an ExtraTerritorial Enemy: Rearming Civil Society
Conclusion
Notes
References
17 “Not for Queen and Country or Any of That Shit …” Reflections on Citizenship and Military Participation in Contemporary British Soldier Narratives
Soldiers, citizenship, and denial
The British soldier-citizen
On the use of soldier narratives
Enlisting to serve one’s fellow citizens
“Mateship”: expressing a different sort of citizenship
Conclusions about narratives and citizenship debates
People also search for War Citizenship Territory 1st:
citizen war
territorial citizenship
war between citizens of the same country
a war between citizens of the same country
b civil war
Tags: Deborah Cowen, Emily Gilbert, War Citizenship, Territory



