
This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary conference
seeks to provide a challenging forum for the examination and evaluation
of the nature, purpose and experience of war, and its impacts on
all aspects of communities across the world. Viewing war as a multi-layered
phenomenon, the conference series seeks to explore the historical,
legal, social, religious, economic, and political contexts of conflicts,
and assess the place of art, journalism, literature, music, the media
and the internet in representation and interpretation of the experience
of warfare.
In particular papers, workshops, reports, and presentations
are invited on any of the following themes;
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the sources, origins, and causes of war; why
and how do wars begin?
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the ‘control' of warfare; how is and should
warfare be conducted? What are the limits of conflict? Are there
any prohibitions in fighting a war? Security issues; protection
issues; borders and boundaries
-
the nature of warfare; strategy and strategic
thought; changes and the implications of changes in the ways wars
are fought; the influence and effect of technologies; changes in
the nature and role of military personnel; information and information
warfare
-
types of warfare - land, sea, air, space, chemical,
biological; guerrilla warfare; ‘total' warfare'; genocide,
ethnic cleansing; terrorism; preemptive war; scorched earth; war
crimes; crimes against humanity
-
virtual war; terrorism; cyberpower, cyberwar;
computer technologies in the conduct of war
-
the extent of war; blockades, sanctions, defence
expenditure and the impact on social and public policy
-
the ‘ethics' of war; just war; deterrence;
defence and self-defence; the influence of nationalism; the place
of human rights; societies and the military; increases in moral
sensibilities - qualms about carpet bombing, collateral damage;
the important role of religion, the church, and the intellectual
elite in multi-ethnic conflict
-
the experience of war; art, literature, music,
poetry, and the theatre; the role of the media - journalism, radio,
television, the internet; propaganda; representing the realities
of war versus ‘national interest' - images of the heroism,
glory, tacit and explicit justifications of war
-
the prevention of war; the role of conflict
resolution; avoiding war; peace-keeping; the role and importance
of law and international legal order; the rise and impact of non-violent
movements
Papers will be considered on related themes. 300 word
abstracts should be submitted by Friday 25th June 2004. Full
draft papers should be submitted by Friday 17th September 2004.
Two volumes of themed papers are in preparation
from the previous conferences. All papers accepted for and presented
at this conference will be published in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers
accepted for and presented at the conference will be published in
one or more themed hard copy volumes.
Papers should be submitted to Dr
Rob Fisher as an email attachment in Word or WordPerfect;
abstracts can also be submitted in the body of the email text
rather than as an attachment.
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