Reconstructing Iraq: merging discourses of security and development

Files

TR Number

Date

2007-04

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Abstract

This article argues that reconstruction is an emerging discourse of international politics that merges security and development discourses in powerful and troubling ways. We focus on Iraq as a site for articulating and institutionalising a particular version of reconstruction, uncovering five narratives that constitute Iraqi reconstruction discourse. We conclude by suggesting that reconstruction repackages security and development into a singular, technical, and bureaucratic worldview. This view obscures working and reliable solutions to poverty and instability by treating development as a central justification for war, and war as a promising way to develop a state and society.

Description

Keywords

international relations

Citation

Benjamin Sovacool; Saul Halfon, "Reconstructing Iraq: merging discourses of security and development," Review of International Studies, 33, pp 223-243, 2007. doi:10.1017/S0260210507007486