Description

Book Synopsis
Investigates when a reigning power will make its military containment of a challenging power ‘compound’ by simultaneously employing restrictive economic measures. The book’s main theoretical claims are corroborated by an analysis of key historical cases of reigning power-challenging power competition.

Trade Review
“A searing exploration of the variety of ways that ‘normalcy’ functions in contemporary international affairs to justify and sustain a particular vision of acceptable politics. The authors’ critical mapping of normalization practices provides ample food for thought for anyone interested in the current condition and future prospects of liberal international order.”- Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, American University

“Normalization through normative manipulation is liberalism in action, much in evidence as the global liberal order implodes. In this conceptually innovative book, Visoka and Lemay-Hébert identify three distinctive situations in which dominant states set rules for ‘helping’ outlier states become normal and meticulously document interventionary normalization in state practice.”—Nicholas Onuf, Florida International University“It is an excellent book: sophisticated in the argument, elegant in presentation and style. The authors convincingly present international interventions as complex governmentality arrangements where discourses and practices are deployed to normalize and discipline states. Usually, studies tend to focus solely on approaches to state-building or resilience or development or disaster-management, but the stakes here are higher.”—Pol Bargués, CIDOB (Barcelona Centre for International Affairs)“This book is well-written and innovative in its conceptual contribution to the discipline of International Relations. As the notion of ‘normalization’ captures a vast number of political phenomena, it resonates with the scholarship that investigates the discursive and lived effects of wars, oppression, and disasters.”- Stefanie Kappler, Durham University

Table of Contents
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • Acknowledgements
  • Chapter 1: Introduction
  • Chapter 2: A Theory of Compound Containment
  • Chapter 3: The Absence of Britain’s Compound Containment against Germany, 1898-1914
  • Chapter 4: U.S. Compound Containment of Japan, 1939-1941
  • Chapter 5: U.S. Compound Containment of the Soviet Union, 1947-1950
  • Chapter 6: Fluctuations in U.S. Response to the Soviet Union, 1979-1985
  • Chapter 7: The Absence of U.S. Compound Containment against China, 2009-2016
  • Chapter 8: Conclusion

Compound Containment

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    A Paperback by Dong Jung Kim


      View other formats and editions of Compound Containment by Dong Jung Kim

      Publisher: The University of Michigan Press
      Publication Date: 3/30/2022 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780472039005, 978-0472039005
      ISBN10: 0472039008
      Also in:
      Diplomacy

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Investigates when a reigning power will make its military containment of a challenging power ‘compound’ by simultaneously employing restrictive economic measures. The book’s main theoretical claims are corroborated by an analysis of key historical cases of reigning power-challenging power competition.

      Trade Review
      “A searing exploration of the variety of ways that ‘normalcy’ functions in contemporary international affairs to justify and sustain a particular vision of acceptable politics. The authors’ critical mapping of normalization practices provides ample food for thought for anyone interested in the current condition and future prospects of liberal international order.”- Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, American University

      “Normalization through normative manipulation is liberalism in action, much in evidence as the global liberal order implodes. In this conceptually innovative book, Visoka and Lemay-Hébert identify three distinctive situations in which dominant states set rules for ‘helping’ outlier states become normal and meticulously document interventionary normalization in state practice.”—Nicholas Onuf, Florida International University“It is an excellent book: sophisticated in the argument, elegant in presentation and style. The authors convincingly present international interventions as complex governmentality arrangements where discourses and practices are deployed to normalize and discipline states. Usually, studies tend to focus solely on approaches to state-building or resilience or development or disaster-management, but the stakes here are higher.”—Pol Bargués, CIDOB (Barcelona Centre for International Affairs)“This book is well-written and innovative in its conceptual contribution to the discipline of International Relations. As the notion of ‘normalization’ captures a vast number of political phenomena, it resonates with the scholarship that investigates the discursive and lived effects of wars, oppression, and disasters.”- Stefanie Kappler, Durham University

      Table of Contents
      • Table of Contents
      • List of Figures
      • List of Tables
      • Acknowledgements
      • Chapter 1: Introduction
      • Chapter 2: A Theory of Compound Containment
      • Chapter 3: The Absence of Britain’s Compound Containment against Germany, 1898-1914
      • Chapter 4: U.S. Compound Containment of Japan, 1939-1941
      • Chapter 5: U.S. Compound Containment of the Soviet Union, 1947-1950
      • Chapter 6: Fluctuations in U.S. Response to the Soviet Union, 1979-1985
      • Chapter 7: The Absence of U.S. Compound Containment against China, 2009-2016
      • Chapter 8: Conclusion

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