European Security and Justice Critiques series

Series Editors: Christian Kaunert, Professor, University of South Wales, and Sarah Leonard, Professor, School of Humanities, University of the West of England Bristol

Editorial Board: Andrew Geddes, Professor, Department of Politics, University of Sheffield, Emil Kirchner, Jean Monnet Chair in European Political Integration, Department of Government, University of Essex, UK, John Occhipinti, Director of European Studies, Department of Political Science, Canisius College, New York, US, Knud Erik Joergensen, Professor, Department of Political Science and Government, Aarhus University, Denmark, Kamil Zwolski, Lecturer in Global Politics and Policy, University of Southampton, Valsamis Mitsilegas, Head of the Department of Law, Professor of European Criminal Law, Queen Mary University of London, UK, Dora Kostakopoulou, Professor of European Union Law, European Integration and Public Policy, Warwick Law School, Warwick, UK and Monica den Boer, Faculty of Social Sciences, VU University Amsterdam, the Netherlands

What is security in the 21st Century? Recently, issues such as crime, terrorism, energy security, population movements and migration, environmental and climate security, underdevelopment, health and pandemic diseases, as well as economic security have become important matters of European security. Furthermore, more traditional security challenges, such as military conflicts and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs), have evolved and changed character. In this context, an increasing body of scholarship has recognized the European Union (EU) as a security actor, which is well equipped to tackle these complex security challenges, due to the multi-dimensional or structural character of its policies.

Based on a broad definition of security, this unprecedented series examines the role of Europe in international security and justice matters. Taking inspiration from the European Security Strategy (ESS), it identifies more traditional security threats such as WMDs, but also points to global warming and poverty as the possible cause of conflict. Moreover, the series promises to recognize the intrinsic links between security and justice from a multitude of disciplinary perspectives and provides a platform for research that focuses on the study of Europe as a whole, going beyond only the European Union.

The series and its individual publications will be of interest to both students and academics across the areas of politics, international relations, law, sociology, history, area studies, gender studies, post-colonial studies and human and political geography.

Books in this series

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