This book aims to introduce globalization studies to new trends in police and military studies, highlight the cultural and political complexities of the global south, and develop new frameworks that articulate the best of feminist, political-economic, international-relations, and ethnographic perspectives.
This book was published as a special issue of Globalizations.
Foreword 1. Introduction: Global South to the Rescue Section One: Globalizing Peacekeeper Identities 2. Peacexploitation? Interrogating Labor Hierarchies and Global Sisterhood Amongst Indian and Uruguayan Female Peacekeepers 3. Martial Races and Enforcement Masculinities of the Global South: Weaponising Fijian, Chilean, and Salvadoran Postcoloniality in the Mercenary Sector 4. The Pacification of Soldiering, and the Militarization of Development: Contradictions Inherent in Provincial Reconstruction in Afghanistan Section Two: Assertive "Regional Internationalisms" 5. Turkey: An Emerging Hub of Globalization and Internationalist Humanitarian Actor? 6. Globalising Security Culture and Knowledge in Practice: Nigeria's Hybrid Model 7. Indonesia and the Liberal Peace: Recovering Southern Agency in Global Governance 8. Kenya and International Security: Enabling Globalization, Stabilising 'Stateness,' and Deploying 'Humanitarian Counterterrorism' Section Three: Emergent Alternative Paradigms 9. Bolivarian Globalization?: The New Left's Struggle in Latin America and the Caribbean to Negotiate a Revolutionary Approach to Humanitarian Militarism and International Intervention 10. Brazil's Grand Design for Combining Global South Solidarity and National Interests: A Discussion of Peacekeeping Operations in Haiti and Timor 11. Egypt as a Globalist Power: Mapping Military Participation in Decolonizing Internationalism, Repressive Entrepreneurialism, and Humanitarian Globalization between the Revolutions of 1952 and 2011