About the Book
War is now an important part of development discourse. Aid agencies have become involved in humanitarian assistance, conflict resolution and the social reconstruction of war-torn societies. This deeply thoughtful book explores the growing merger of development and security. Its author unravels the nature of the new wars - in Africa, the Balkans, Central Asia - and the response of the international community, in particular the new systems of global governance that are emerging as a result.
The breakdown of order is seen as symptomatic of long-term social processes: economic crisis, the social exclusion of wide strata of populations and internal conflict. Instead of the historic goals of modernity, development to reduce inequality, and a central role for the state, we have a neo-medieval situation in which overlapping and fragmented sovereignties confront an increasingly weakened central authority.
The consequences, as Duffield shows, are far-reaching. Development now focuses primarily on the shortcomings of structures within the South. Aid is privatized. A rising level of violence and misery are accepted as normal, and new forms of humanitarian aid intervention, far from solving the problem, accommodate and coexist with this instability and inequality. Pessimistic perhaps, but this book is profound in its insights and pregnant with policy implications.
Commendations
'Mark Duffield‘s book is a "must" for anyone grappling with the contemporary nature of war and humanitarianism. Taking us beyond the stilted confines of international policy to the politics of modern violence, the argument exposes the way talk of "complex political emergencies" fails to grasp the fundamental characteristics of "emergent political complexes". Duffield lays bare the failings of aid policy in this regard' - Dr David Campbell, Professor of International Politics and Director, Centre for Transnational Studies, University of Newcastle
'What is needed is to move beyond the idea of war-as-breakdown towards a fundamental rethink about how local elites, ordinary people, and international governments are continuously adapting to war and to global economic change. This breathtaking tour-de-force from one of the leading thinkers in this field points the way forward' - David Keen, author of The Benefits of Famine
'Duffield's well-written book offers groundbreaking research in the emerging field created by the intersection of international security and international development...The book offers not only theoretical understanding of the problem but also good research to understand the problem in practice.' - D. S. Reveron, CHOICE
Contents
1. Introduction: The New Development-Security Terrain
2. The Merging of Development and Security
3. Strategic Complexes and Global Governance
4. The New Humanitarianism
5. Global Governance and the Causes Of Conflict
6. The Growth of Transborder Shadow Economies
7. Non-Liberal Political Complexes and The New Wars
8. Internal Displacement and the New Humanitarianism: Displacement and Complicity In Sudan (Part 1)
9. Aid and Social Subjugation: Displacement and Complicity In Sudan (Part 2)
10. Conclusion: Global Governance, Moral Responsibility and Complexity
Bibliography
About the Author
Mark Duffield is Professor of Development Politics at the University of Bristol
Academic Adoption Information
This book is used for teaching at the following institutions:
Liverpool John Moores University
Queens University Belfast
University of Sheffield
University of liverpool