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Full Description
This book argues that the war on terror is a paradigmatic foreign policy that has had profound effects on domestic social order. Cameron develops an original framework which inverts the traditional analysis of foreign policy in order to interpret its impact upon subject formation through everyday practises of security and social regulation.
Contents
Introduction PART I: THEORISING FOREIGN POLICY AS SOCIAL CONTROL 1. Sovereignty and the Modern Subject: Theory as Practice 2. Conceptualising Foreign Policy and Social Control 3. Foreign Policy as Domestic Discipline and Control PART II: CASE STUDIES OF FOREIGN POLICY REGULATION 4. Beyond Conspiracy? Cold War Antecedents of Foreign Policy Regulation 5. Bodies, Space and Politics: The Intensification of Spatial Control after 9/11 6. Populations, Health and Trauma: The Mass Psychological Effects stemming from 9/11 Bibliography