Essays

21st Century ‘Resource Control’ Insurgencies: The Case of the Niger Delta

Charlie Tarr • Oct 9 2011 • Essays

Resources are strategically invaluable economic and political tools. It is the unquestionable human thirst for black gold, and other vital resources such as water and minerals, where global capitalism, post-colonial kleptocracy and the disenfranchised insurgent will meet in an unpredictable and volatile new paradigm.

Does Security exist outside of the speech act?

Nicholas Glover • Oct 9 2011 • Essays

Security is constructed through processes of social interaction, but cannot be defined as existing only within the speech act. Hence, the definition of security in terms of a discourse-action sequence is problematic, inasmuch as it fails to recognise the complexity of the construction of security in global politics.

The Second Anglo-Boer War, the Russo-Japanese War and the shifts in the nature of warfare

Samuel Bullen • Oct 9 2011 • Essays

Both the Anglo-Boer War and the Russo-Japanese War offer evidence of fundamental shifts in the nature of warfare. The Boer War demonstrated a shift between the previous post-Napoleonic traditions to a brand new paradigm. Both conflicts show evidence of many fundamental shifts in warfare as the world entered the Twentieth Century.

Stopping the Islamic Terrorist Financing Machine

Peter Lesniak • Oct 7 2011 • Essays

A lack of cooperation between agencies, ignorance in dealing with the methods of fund-gathering and fund-moving measures, and the implementation of contradictory policies have resulted in a system in which the West cannot find a comprehensive strategy to curb the financing of Islamic terrorism.

NGOs in Haiti: Caught in an Aid Worker Bubble

Grace Everest • Oct 5 2011 • Essays

Since the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the development sector has been engaged in debate concerning the failures of the NGO response. NGOs have destructively transplanted a parallel system of governance, often being caught up within an aid worker bubble which has stood between the Haitian state and its citizens and thus undermined the symbiotic nature of their social contract.

Did the Sexual Revolution of 1968 influence Women’s Political Emancipation in Switzerland?

Pierce Lohman • Oct 5 2011 • Essays

The fight for women’s suffrage in Switzerland dates back to the 19th century. Yet, it may seem surprising to learn that women, in one of the oldest modern democracies in Europe, lacked the right to express their voice on national matters well past the middle of the 20th century.

Consociationalism in the Russian Federation?

Paul Pryce • Oct 3 2011 • Essays

There are 170 recognized ethnic groups in the Russian Federation and recent years have seen a number of conflicts between the Federation and regionally-based secessionist groups. One possible mechanism for preventing or resolving these conflicts is consociational democracy but it may not be sufficient to restore confidence in the Russian state among ethnic minorities and it may entrench ethnic divisions.

Imagined Boundaries? The Legacy of the Cold War on Today’s ‘War on Terror’

Alexander Ward • Oct 2 2011 • Essays

The echoes of the imaginary geographies associated with the Cold War undoubtedly underpin many of the geopolitical phenomena that typify the current ‘War on Terror’; inherent to the geopolitical discourses of both eras are binary distinctions; distinctions between good vs evil, us vs them etc, all stemming from a firmly rooted ‘conflict of ideologies’

Is EU accession confirming Poland’s return to Europe?

Anders Knut Brudevoll • Oct 1 2011 • Essays

Since Poland gained its independence in1989, economic development and modernization has been a driving factor for reforms. As EU at the time was closely associated with democratic stability and the prosperity enjoyed in Western Europe, membership became a vital step in the pursuit to attain Western level of welfare and prosperity.

Soft and Normative Power: The Power of Attraction in International Politics

Zohir Uddin • Oct 1 2011 • Essays

The strength and spread of cultural interactions between different governments and different people’s will reduce the likelihood of war between nations. As globalization takes its seat as the world’s ruling party, the international system will become a single yet vibrant meeting place.

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