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Chapters in Book

Joseph A. Camilleri, ‘The “War on Terror”: Reassessing Rationale and Efficacy’, in Hans Köchler (ed), The ‘Global War on Terror’ and the Question of World Order, Studies in International Relations XXX, Vienna, International Progress Organisation, 2008, pp. 58-84.

Chapters in Book

Joseph A. Camilleri, ‘From Berlin to Baghdad: Competing for Power and Discursive Legitimacy’, in Australian Perspectives on Southeast Asia, the United States and the World, Philippines-Australia Studies Network, Ateneo de Manila University, 2005, pp. 18-38. 

Chapters in Book

Three chapters in Eşref Aksu and Joseph A. Camilleri (eds), Democratizing Global Governance, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002:

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♦  ‘Peace Operations: the Road Ahead’, pp. 230-252

♦  ‘Rethinking the Structures of Global Governance’, pp. 253-271

♦  ‘The Politics of Reform’, pp. 272-283

Chapters in Book

Joseph A. Camilleri, 'Tra Europa e Medio Oriente: geopolitica occasionale o incontro culturale', in Elisabetta Brighi and Fabio Peitto (eds), Il Mediterraneo nelle relazioni internationali, Milano: Vita e Pensiero, 2009, pp. 139-164.

Chapters in Book

Joseph A. Camilleri, 'Iraq, the Illusion of Security and the Limits to Power', in Ben Isakhan (ed), The Legacy of Iraq: From the 2003 War to the 'Islamic State', Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015.

The US military intervention in Iraq and the protracted and continuing violence it has unleashed constitute a defining feature of the post-Cold War world. Many have analysed this violence primarily in terms of its devastating impact on Iraqi society, economy, environment and politics. Legitimate and important though it is this line of inquiry is deficient if it does not adequately integrate into its analysis the regional and global ramifications of the violence which are as enduring as they are wide-ranging. The US decision to intervene is now generally understood to have been illegitimate and illegal, but the reasons for and the consequences of that decision have yet to receive the attention they deserve. If we are to make sense of what the United States attempted in Iraq and what it actually achieved, we need to analyse three key facets of contemporary international life: a) the globalisation of insecurity; b) the limits to empire, and c) the pitfalls associated with the unilateral use of force.