Redefining security in the Middle East / edited by Tami Amanda Jacoby and Brent E. Sasley
Material type:
- 0719062330
- 439
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Oficina Leonel Fernández | Colección 6to. Piso | 439 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000107941 |
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439 DS 63.2 E53n n.106 Negative social outcomes of the global financial crisis / | 439 DS 63.2 E53p n.105 Political outcomes of the global financial crisis / | 439 DS119.7 D249a 2010 Arabs & Israel for beginners / | 439 Redefining security in the Middle East / | 600 SH 319 K52u 1991 Understanding fisheries in the South Pacific / | 602 DU 600 N235q 2008 / | 14 C363 2012 Churchill : the treasures of Winston Churchill, the greatest Briton / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: redefining security in the Middles East -- Conceptualizing security in the Middle East: Israel and a Palestinian state -- Between militarism and moderation in Israel: constructing security historical perspective -- Between Islam and Islamism: a dialogue with Islam as a pattern of conflict resolution and a security approach vis-à-vis Islamism -- Gender relations and national security in Israel -- Understanding environmental security: water scarcity, the 1980's Palestinian uprising and implications for peace -- Political Islam and the Middle East peace process: a veiled threat -- The effects of political liberalization on security.
This book attempts to fill the void in strategic studies literature on the Middle East by focusing on the 'new' security issues related to the Israel-Palestinian context. The contributors to the volume come from a variety of cultural, political and religious backgrounds, whose common interest is in support of dialogue for peace and security for all parties involved. Redefining security during times of crisis is a difficult, albeit necessary undertaking. This book envisages new concepts, policies and discourses about security at a time when it has become clear the old ones have become stagnant. The contributors offer no singular approach, but suggest a broader and more inclusive terrain for discussion, debate and analysis of the possibilities and constraints for understanding conflict and conflict resolution in the region. -- Cover
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