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A European security architecture after the Cold War questions of legitimacy

The development of a European security architecture, comprising NATO, the EU, the WEU and the OSCE, provides a critical account of the re-projection and redefinition of western values and institutions since the Cold War. This transformation is explored in three stages. The first stage covers the period 1990-91 and explains the preservation of a western security community inherited from the Cold War, through a process of institutional reconstruction. The second stage from 1991 to 1992 sees the incorporation of a purpose for these institutions as a framework for the implementation of collective security. The third stage explores the emerging questions of legitimacy surrounding the new tasks of these institutions as they become embroiled in the war in the former Yugoslavia. The precedents of legitimate intervention in upholding democracy, free markets and human rights since the Cold War are examined from the perspectives of international law and Gramscian-derived concepts of legitimacy, focusing on the acceptance of military power by civil society, and how intervention in these terms becomes a cultural practice.

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  • "The development of a European security architecture, comprising NATO, the EU, the WEU and the OSCE, provides a critical account of the re-projection and redefinition of western values and institutions since the Cold War. This transformation is explored in three stages. The first stage covers the period 1990-91 and explains the preservation of a western security community inherited from the Cold War, through a process of institutional reconstruction. The second stage from 1991 to 1992 sees the incorporation of a purpose for these institutions as a framework for the implementation of collective security. The third stage explores the emerging questions of legitimacy surrounding the new tasks of these institutions as they become embroiled in the war in the former Yugoslavia. The precedents of legitimate intervention in upholding democracy, free markets and human rights since the Cold War are examined from the perspectives of international law and Gramscian-derived concepts of legitimacy, focusing on the acceptance of military power by civil society, and how intervention in these terms becomes a cultural practice."@en

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  • "Electronic books"@en

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  • "A European security architecture after the Cold War : questions of legitimacy"
  • "A european security architecture after the cold war : questions of legitimacy"
  • "A European security architecture after the Cold War questions of legitimacy"@en
  • "A European security architecture after the Cold War questions of legitimacy"
  • "A European security architecture after the cold war : questions of legitimacy"