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Page Wilson - Aggression, Crime and International Security: Moral, Political and Legal Dimensions of International Relations

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Page Wilson Aggression, Crime and International Security: Moral, Political and Legal Dimensions of International Relations
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Aggression, Crime and International Security: Moral, Political and Legal Dimensions of International Relations: summary, description and annotation

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Aggression, Crime and International Security examines the concept of aggression in international relations and how it has been dealt with by international law and collective security organisations.

This book analyses the evolution of the concept of aggression in international relations from World War I to the post-Rome Statute era. It charts the emergence of two competing visions of this notion: on the one hand, as a triggering mechanism for collective security enforcement among states, and, on the other, as an international crime giving rise to individual responsibility. The author argues that despite certain contemporary international trends suggesting a shift away from traditional, state-centric power structures towards a more cosmopolitan, globalized polity, the history of the concept of aggression demonstrates just how far away this is in reality. By examining aggression in theory and practice at the League of Nations, the Nuremberg and Tokyo Trials, the United Nations, the conference establishing the Rome Statute, and beyond, the book reveals the recurring moral, political and legal challenges this concept poses - challenges which continue to be at the forefront of thinking about international relations today.

This book will be of great interest to students of International Law, War Crimes, International Relations and Security Studies.

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Aggression, Crime and International Security
Aggression, Crime and International Security examines the concept of aggression in international relations and how it has been dealt with by international law and collective security organisations.
This book analyses the evolution of the concept of aggression in international relations from World War I to the post-Rome Statute era. It charts the emergence of two competing visions of this notion: on the one hand, as a triggering mechanism for collective security enforcement among states, and, on the other, as an international crime giving rise to individual responsibility. The author argues that despite certain contemporary international trends suggesting a shift away from traditional, state-centric power structures towards a more cosmopolitan, globalised polity, the history of the concept of aggression demonstrates just how far away this is in reality. By examining aggression in theory and practice at the League of Nations, the Nuremberg and Tokyo Trials, the United Nations, the conference establishing the Rome Statute, and beyond, the book reveals the recurring moral, political and legal challenges this concept poseschallenges which continue to be at the forefront of thinking about international relations today.
This book will be of great interest to students of International Law, War Crimes, International Relations and Security Studies.

Page Wilson is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of International Affairs at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, UK. She has a PhD in International Relations from the London School of Economics and qualified as a solicitor in Melbourne, Australia.
Contemporary security studies
Series Editors: James Gow and Rachel Kerr
Kings College London
This series focuses on new research across the spectrum of international peace and security, in an era where each year throws up multiple examples of conflicts that present new security challenges in the world around them.
  • NATOs Secret Armies
  • Operation Gladio and terrorism in Western Europe
  • Daniele Ganser
  • The US, NATO and Military Burden-sharing
  • Peter Kent Forster and Stephen J. Cimbala
  • Russian Governance in the Twenty-first Century
  • Geo-strategy, geopolitics and new governance
  • Irina Isakova
  • The Foreign Office and Finland 19381940
  • Diplomatic sideshow
  • Craig Gerrard
  • Rethinking the Nature of War
  • Edited by Isabelle Duyvesteyn and Jan Angstrom
  • Perception and Reality in the Modern Yugoslav Conflict
  • Myth, falsehood and deceit 19911995
  • Brendan OShea
  • The Political Economy of Peacebuilding in Post-Dayton Bosnia
  • Tim Donais
  • The Distracted Eagle
  • The rift between America and old Europe
  • Peter H. Merkl
  • The Iraq War
  • European perspectives on politics, strategy, and operations
  • Edited by Jan Hallenberg and Hkan Karlsson
  • Strategic Contest
  • Weapons proliferation and war in the greater Middle East
  • Richard L. Russell
  • Propaganda, the Press and Conflict
  • The Gulf War and Kosovo
  • David R. Willcox
  • Missile Defence
  • International, regional and national implications
  • Edited by Bertel Heurlin and Sten Rynning
  • Globalising Justice for Mass Atrocities
  • A revolution in accountability
  • Chandra Lekha Sriram
  • Ethnic Conflict and Terrorism
  • The origins and dynamics of civil wars
  • Joseph L. Soeters
  • Globalisation and the Future of Terrorism
  • Patterns and predictions
  • Brynjar Lia
  • Nuclear Weapons and Strategy
  • The evolution of American nuclear policy
  • Stephen J. Cimbala
  • Nasser and the Missile Age in the Middle East
  • Owen L. Sirrs
  • War as Risk Management
  • Strategy and conflict in an age of globalised risks
  • Yee-Kuang Heng
  • Military Nanotechnology
  • Potential applications and preventive arms control
  • Jurgen Altmann
  • NATO and Weapons of Mass Destruction
  • Regional alliance, global threats
  • Eric R. Terzuolo
  • Europeanisation of National Security Identity
  • The EU and the changing security identities of the Nordic states
  • Pernille Rieker
  • International Conflict Prevention and Peace-building
  • Sustaining the peace in post conflict societies
  • Edited by T. David Mason and James D. Meernik
  • Controlling the Weapons of War
  • Politics, persuasion, and the prohibition of inhumanity
  • Brian Rappert
  • Changing Transatlantic Security Relations
  • Do the U.S., the EU and Russia form a new strategic triangle?
  • Edited by Jan Hallenberg and Hkan Karlsson
  • Theoretical Roots of US Foreign Policy
  • Machiavelli and American unilateralism
  • Thomas M. Kane
  • Corporate Soldiers and International Security
  • The rise of private military companies
  • Christopher Kinsey
  • Transforming European Militaries
  • Coalition operations and the technology gap
  • Gordon Adams and Guy Ben-Ari
  • Globalization and Conflict
  • National security in a new strategic era
  • Edited by Robert G. Patman
  • Military Forces in 21st Century Peace Operations
  • No job for a soldier?
  • James V. Arbuckle
  • The Political Road to War with Iraq
  • Bush, 9/11 and the drive to overthrow Saddam
  • Nick Ritchie and Paul Rogers
  • Bosnian Security after Dayton
  • New perspectives
  • Edited by Michael A. Innes
  • Kennedy, Johnson and NATO
  • Britain, America and the Dynamics of Alliance, 196268
  • Andrew Priest
  • Small Arms and Security
  • New emerging international norms
  • Denise Garcia
  • The United States and Europe
  • Beyond the neo-conservative divide?
  • Edited by John Baylis and Jon Roper
  • Russia, NATO and Cooperative Security
  • Bridging the gap
  • Lionel Ponsard
  • International Law and International Relations
  • Bridging theory and practice
  • Edited by Tom Bierstecker, Peter Spiro, Chandra Lekha Sriram and Veronica Raffo
  • Deterring International Terrorism and Rogue States
  • US national security policy after 9/11
  • James H. Lebovic
  • Vietnam in Iraq
  • Tactics, lessons, legacies and ghosts
  • Edited by John Dumbrell and David Ryan
  • Understanding Victory and Defeat in Contemporary War
  • Edited by Jan Angstrom and Isabelle Duyvesteyn
  • Propaganda and Information Warfare in the Twenty-first Century
  • Altered images and deception operations
  • Scot Macdonald
  • Governance in Post-conflict Societies
  • Rebuilding fragile states
  • Edited by Derick W. Brinkerhoff
  • European Security in the Twenty-first Century
  • The challenge of multipolarity
  • Adrian Hyde-Price
  • Ethics, Technology and the American Way of War
  • Cruise missiles and US security policy
  • Reuben E. Brigety II
  • International Law and the Use of Armed Force
  • The UN charter and the major powers
  • Joel H. Westra
  • Disease and Security
  • Natural plagues and biological weapons in East Asia
  • Christian Enermark
  • Explaining War and Peace
  • Case studies and necessary condition counterfactuals
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