New Book: Human Insecurity by David Roberts

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find below information on a new book: Human Insecurity by David Roberts.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

Human Insecurity
Global Structures of Violence

David Roberts

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Human Insecurity is concerned with our refusal to confront the millions of avoidable deaths of women and children each year. Those missing millions are rarely the subject of conventional security studies, yet such avoidable deaths are a vital part of the notion of ’security’ more broadly understood. The book argues that such deaths are caused by the man-made structures of neoliberalism and ‘andrarchy’ and argues that the debate on human security can be reinvigorated by looking at the unarmed, civilian role in causing the deaths of millions of innocent people; from child deaths from preventable disease to honour killings.

David Roberts claims that by facing up to this relationship between social structures and massive avoidable human suffering we can create another system less prone to global violence. This book is a powerful intervention in the debate on human security and an urgent call to face up to our responsibilities to the millions killed needlessly each year.

‘David Roberts makes a powerful plea for rethinking the notion of security. In the process, he not only lays siege to the intellectual structure of ‘realism’ but makes the compelling empirical case that until and when the world deals with the increasingly large gap between the few haves and the many have nots, it will remain a deeply disturbed place. A book that will hopefully provoke others - possibly even policy-makers - to reassess their views on the key questions facing the international system in the early part of the 21st century.’ - Michael Cox, London School of Economics and Political Science

‘Roberts’ work offers a careful and comprehensive re-reading of the contemporary security literature and offers us tragic, shocking, and ultimately avoidable, examples of the threats, fear and violence which affect humanity on a daily basis. As Roberts’ states more attention needs to be paid to ‘why’ such acts of violence occur on such a vast scale. This book makes an invaluable contribution to helping us answer that question.’ - Pauline Eadie, University of Nottingham

Contents
Abbreviations List of Tables and Figures Acknowledgments 1. Introduction 2. Thinking about Security and Violence 3. Global Human Insecurity 4. Institutions, Infanticide and Mortality 5. Institutions and Intimate Murder 6. Human and Realist Security 7. International Institutions 8. Andrarchy and Neoliberalism 9. The Social Construction of Global Structures 10. Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

About the Author
David Roberts is a lecturer in the School of History and International Affairs at the University of Ulster. He has previously published Power, Elitism and Democracy: Political Transition in Cambodia 1991-1999 (2000) and over thirty articles on human security; statebuilding; democratisation and Cambodia.

Available: December 2007
Paperback ISBN: 978 1 84277 825 8 £16.99 / $27.95
Hardback ISBN: 978 1 84277 824 1 £55.00 / $89.95
224 pages

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