Monographie
States without armies : why they exist and how they survive / Zoltan Barany
Type de contenu
- Texte
Type de médiation
- sans médiation
Type de support
- Volume
Titre(s)
- States without armies : why they exist and how they survive / Zoltan Barany
Auteur(s)
Publication
- Oxford New York, NY : Oxford University Press
Date de copyright
- C 2026
Description matérielle
- 1 volume (243 pages) : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
- 978-0-1976-7967-8
EAN
- 9780197679678
Classification décimale Dewey
- 321.06
- 355.03
Note sur les bibliographies et les index
- Bibliographie pages 213-230. Index pages 229-243
Résumé ou extrait
- One of the fundamental assumptions regarding the modern state is that it must have the capacity to defend itself from external enemies. Yet, there are twenty-one countries today - one ninth of the United Nations' membership - that do not maintain standing armies. What historical contexts, geographical endowments or socio-economic conditions allow or even encourage a state to go without an army ? When does a country decide not to have an army, and under what circumstances is the issue discussed? What kind of security provisions or guarantees, if any, do countries that consider demilitarization seek prior to making such a decision? And what are the disadvantages and benefits of not fielding a standing army ? Zoltan Barany addresses all of these questions and more with three core arguments. First, he shows that the question of whether to create a new army or disband an extant force tends to arise at critical historical junctures for a nation. This may follow a civil war, a military coup, or an economic collapse. Second, virtually all of the states that do not maintain standing armies enjoy formal or informal security arrangements that provide explicit guarantees or implicit assurances that sovereignty will be safeguarded. Third, demilitarized states are more democratic and generally better off - and often far better off - in terms of political stability and nearly every measurable variable of socio-economic well-being than similar countries that maintain standing armies. States without Armies sheds new and counterintuitive light on the role of force in the international state system.
- Shines the light on the possibility of existing without armed forces. Takes advantage of field research from around the world. Written in an accessible way, allowing the non-specialist to learn and appreciate the book's arguments easily
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