Mick Dillon’s long-awaited Deconstructing International Politics is coming out in December with the Interventions series at Routledge.
Michael Dillon is internationally regarded for his contributions by political philosophers, international relations scholars and security studies experts, as well as by philosophers more broadly. It is difficult to overrate his importance to the development of critical deconstructive approaches not only in challenging traditional scholarship and addressing contemporary politics, but in articulating new approaches and new thinking.
This book draws together some of his key works and is framed by an introduction written specially for the volume. It is the first full-length work to draw on the insights and techniques of deconstruction to analyse international relations. Influenced primarily by Derrida, it critiques the cornerstones of international relations such as modernity, the state, the subject, security and ethics and justice.
Unfortunately it looks like the semi-companion volume of essays Biopolitics of Security in the 21st Century has been put back again, this time to August 2013.
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