02362pam a2200289 a 450000100060000000300080000600500170001400800410003101000130007201500150008502000250010003500100012504000350013508200180017010000290018824501260021726000410034330000220038436500160040650400510042250505130047352009550098665000290194165000290197065100450199970000280204469982BD-DhUL20160427154506.0990809s1999 enk 001 0 eng  a98030980 aGB99-56129 a1855675382qhardback a69982 aDLCbengcDLCdUkdLCdBD-DhUL0 a327.1701bPEC1 aPettiford, Lloyd,d1966-10aChanging security agendas and the Third World /cLloyd Pettiford and Melissa Curley ; with an afterword by Stephen Chan. aLondon ;aNew York :bPinter,c1999. a164 p. ;c24 cm. aGBPb107.00 aIncludes bibliographical references and index.0 aIntroduction: Contemporary Insights on Security -- 1. Rethinking the Third World -- 2. Opening the Can of Worms: Realism to Neorealism -- 3. Critical Theory and Postmodernism: The Challenges -- 4. Environmental/Ecological Philosophies and Security -- 5. Engaging with Other Fields and Disciplines -- 6. Security and Development: Exploring Conceptual and Practical Linkages -- 7. Security and Sustainable Development -- Conclusions: The Future of Security? -- Afterword: Signing the Swamplands / Stephen Chan.1 a"Security has long been a central organizing concept of International Relations. Until the 1980s students of the discipline understood its simple essence in terms of the arms race and balances of power. Then, reflecting changes encouraged by both the inter-paradigm debate and the so-called third debate, security underwent radical reconsideration. The many attempts to redefine the concept led to a proliferation of terms such as true security, global security, common security and environmental security. However, these terms have often been used in confusing and contradictory ways."--BOOK JACKET. "In attempting to help students deal with this confusion, this book outlines the theoretical tools at the disposal of students for their own rethinking of the concept of security. The book will help students wishing to seriously engage with IR's security debate at whatever level, and draws its own conclusions as part of this debate."--BOOK JACKET. 0aSecurity, International. 0aSustainable development. 0aDeveloping countriesxForeign relations.1 aCurley, Melissa,d1971-