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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Walter A. Kemp (Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime, Switzerland)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.640kg ISBN: 9781032102184ISBN 10: 1032102187 Pages: 128 Publication Date: 31 December 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'In the wake of the Cold War international cooperation was announced to be the future of international politics, now many ask themselves does international cooperation have a future. If you look for a hopeful answer to this question, read this clear-sighted and well-argued book.'-- Ivan Krastev, Chair of the Centre for Liberal Strategies in Sofia and a Permanent Fellow at the IWM Institute of Human Sciences in Vienna 'For anyone seeking a volume on cooperation and security, Walter Kemp's superb new book Security Through Cooperation: To The Same End is an absolute must-read. The author does a masterful job of distilling all the major theories on the subject and placing them neatly in their historical contexts. While the book is scholarly in tone and very well-researched Kemp must be especially applauded for writing it in a style that is delightfully clean, where all the arguments are easy to follow.'--Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, University of Pennsylvania and former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 'International cooperation is often measured by simply our ability to avoid resorting to the use of bombs and bullets. But as this book powerfully demonstrates, the complex labyrinth of transnational issues we now confront means our security depends on a new era of diplomatic cooperation - not simply for the sake of cooperation, but because this is what our individual national interests and the planet now demand. Had we not mobilised the G20 a decade ago, the global economy would have fallen even further off the cliff. And had we not salvaged the Copenhagen Accord, the Paris Agreement would not have risen from the ashes. - Kevin Rudd, former Prime Minister of Australia 'Security Through Cooperation is essential reading for anyone unsatisfied with the desultory state of contemporary international relations. Walter Kemp's highly accessible, concisely expressed volume is packed with probing analysis and suffused with penetrating insights, illustrated with prescient examples and informed by extensive first-person experience. His treatment of leading-edge issues such as artificial intelligence, big data and the impact of technology more generally is particularly timely and relevant. The author sets out a planet in peril, staggering under the burden of a new threat set comprised of unconventional security challenges, ranging from climate change to pandemic disease, from cyber-crime to management of the global commons. In the face of this complex constellation of wicked , transnational issues, Kemp makes a highly compelling case for diplomacy and is (quite rightly) convinced that a combination of negotiation, dialogue, science and understanding must displace coercion and the application of armed force as the international policy instrument of choice. The identification of shared interests, communication and cooperation are the most promising options for survival on our small, imperilled planet. If disastrous failures such as the ill-starred and costly interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya are to be avoided in future, the world's political leadership would be well-advised to heed Kemp's sensible advice. Talk, don't fight: there are no military solutions.'- Daryl Copeland, author of Guerrilla Diplomacy 'In the wake of the Cold War international cooperation was announced to be the future of international politics, now many ask themselves does international cooperation have a future. If you look for a hopeful answer to this question, read this clear-sighted and well-argued book.'-- Ivan Krastev, Chair of the Centre for Liberal Strategies in Sofia and a Permanent Fellow at the IWM Institute of Human Sciences in Vienna 'For anyone seeking a volume on cooperation and security, Walter Kemp's superb new book Security Through Cooperation: To The Same End is an absolute must-read. The author does a masterful job of distilling all the major theories on the subject and placing them neatly in their historical contexts. While the book is scholarly in tone and very well-researched Kemp must be especially applauded for writing it in a style that is delightfully clean, where all the arguments are easy to follow.'--Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, University of Pennsylvania and former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights 'International cooperation is often measured by simply our ability to avoid resorting to the use of bombs and bullets. But as this book powerfully demonstrates, the complex labyrinth of transnational issues we now confront means our security depends on a new era of diplomatic cooperation - not simply for the sake of cooperation, but because this is what our individual national interests and the planet now demand. Had we not mobilised the G20 a decade ago, the global economy would have fallen even further off the cliff. And had we not salvaged the Copenhagen Accord, the Paris Agreement would not have risen from the ashes. - Kevin Rudd, former Prime Minister of Australia 'Security Through Cooperation is essential reading for anyone unsatisfied with the desultory state of contemporary international relations. Walter Kemp's highly accessible, concisely expressed volume is packed with probing analysis and suffused with penetrating insights, illustrated with prescient examples and informed by extensive first-person experience. His treatment of leading-edge issues such as artificial intelligence, big data and the impact of technology more generally is particularly timely and relevant. The author sets out a planet in peril, staggering under the burden of a new threat set comprised of unconventional security challenges, ranging from climate change to pandemic disease, from cyber-crime to management of the global commons. In the face of this complex constellation of wicked , transnational issues, Kemp makes a highly compelling case for diplomacy and is (quite rightly) convinced that a combination of negotiation, dialogue, science and understanding must displace coercion and the application of armed force as the international policy instrument of choice. The identification of shared interests, communication and cooperation are the most promising options for survival on our small, imperilled planet. If disastrous failures such as the ill-starred and costly interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya are to be avoided in future, the world's political leadership would be well-advised to heed Kemp's sensible advice. Talk, don't fight: there are no military solutions.'- Daryl Copeland, author of Guerrilla Diplomacy Author InformationWalter A. Kemp is Senior Fellow at the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime, and Strategic Policy Adviser at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy. He teaches at the Diplomatic Academy in Vienna, Austria. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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