
| after september 11 archive |
| In the days following
September 11, the SSRC asked social scientists from around the world to
contribute essays to a website called "After September 11."
Although they were written under quick deadlines, we believe these web-essays
still hold remarkable value for the insights they provide on September
11 and its aftermath, especially in the days and weeks immediately following.
While the information and analyses contained within the essays may now
be dated, we believe it is still worthwhile to make them available in
an archive. The reader is advised that information contained in the essays
should be checked against contemporary sources for accuracy. Updated versions
of many of the essays are available in two volumes published by The New
Press September 1, 2002. Please click here
for more information on the books and on how to order them online.
The Council will continue this website later in the year with essays on a number of contemporary conflicts. The editors have added hyperlinks in the right-hand margin of essays. We have chosen what we hope are useful additional resources to the concepts discussed by the authors. |
| globalization |
| "U.S.
Foreign Economic Policy After September 11th"
Barry Eichengreen, Economics, University of California, Berkeley "Violence,
Law and Justice in a Global Age"
"The
Reach of Transnationalism"
"The
Religious Undercurrents of Muslim Economic Grievances"
"Governance
Hotspots: Challenges We Must Confront in the Post-September 11 World"
|
| fundamentalism(s) |
| "September
11 and the Struggle for Islam"
Robert W. Hefner, Anthropology, Boston University "'Traditionalist'
Islamic Activism: Deoband, Tablighis, and Talibs"
"Women,
War and Fundamentalism in the Middle East "
"The
Evolution of 'Jihad' in Islamist Political Discourse:
"Neo-Fundamentalism"
"The
Future of Secular Values"
|
| terrorism & democratic virtues |
| "After
the WTC Disaster: The Sacred, the Profane, and Social Solidarity"
Janet Abu-Lughod, Sociology, New School University "The
Shifting Grounds for Transnational Civic Activity"
"Unholy
Politics"
"To
Reassure, and Protect, After September 11"
"Negotiating
Identity and Community After September 11"
"The
Return of the State"
"What's
New After September 11th?"
"9/11
and the New 'Anti-politics' of 'Security'"
"Defend
Politics Against Terrorism"
"A
Human Rights Approach to Sept. 11"
"Guarding
the Gates"
|
| competing narratives |
| "Terrorism
and Cosmopolitanism"
Daniele Archibugi, Italian National Research Council "Can
Rational Analysis Break a Taboo? A Middle Eastern Perspective"
"Responses
to 9.11: Individual and Collective Dimensions"
"Symbols
of Destruction"
"September
11th: A Challenge to Whom?"
"Good
Muslim, Bad Muslim - An African Perspective"
"The
Political Psychology of Competing Narratives: September 11 and Beyond"
"Terrorism
and Freedom: An Outside View"
"America
and the World: The Twin Towers as Metaphor"
"Anti-Americanisms,
Thick Description, and Collective Action"
"The
Predicament of Diaspora and Millennial Islam:
|
| new war? |
| "Is
Cyber Terror Next?"
Dorothy E. Denning, Computer Science, Georgetown University "9.11:
Before, After, and In Between"
"Appraising
the War Against Afghanistan"
"Beyond
Militarism, Arms Races and Arms Control"
"The
Psychology of Terrorism"
"Counter-terrorism,
Armed Force and the Laws of War"
"Predictions"
"Responses
to Tilly's 'Predictions'"
"Protecting
Afghan Civilians from the Hell of War"
|
| new world order? |
| "Beyond
Conflicting Powers' Politics"
Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira, Economics, Getulio Vargas Foundation, Brazil "Theorizing
Islam"
"Some
Thoughts Subsequent to September 11th"
"After
September 11th: Chances for a Left Foreign Policy"
"Global
Executioner: Scales of Terror"
"The
End of the Unipolar Moment: September 11 and the Future of World Order"
"Living
with the Hegemon: European Dilemmas"
"The
Attack on Humanity: Conflict and Management"
|
| the view from latin america |
| "Beyond
Conflicting Powers' Politics"
Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira, Economics, Getulio Vargas Foundation, Brazil "Learning
about Terrorism in Colombia"
"An
Overview of the Impact of September 11 on Latin America"
"Hemispheric
Security After September 11"
"Old
Ideas in New Discourses: 'The War Against Terrorism' and Collective Memory
in Uruguay and Argentina"
"Terrorism
and Freedom: An Outside View"
|
| building peace |
| "Post
Taliban Pakistan: A Tentative Recipe for Change"
Kamran Asdar Ali, Anthropology, University of Texas, Austin "Prospects
for Regional Integration in Central Asia"
"A
Roadmap for Afghanistan"
"One
Size Doesn't Fit All: Addressing Diversity in the Needs and Development
Capacities
"Networks
of Dissent: Islamism and Reform in Saudi Arabia"
"Afghanistan
and Threats to Human Security"
"On
War and Peace-Building: Unfinished Legacy of the 1990s"
|
| recovery |
|
"Trading
Sites - Destroyed, Revealed, Restored" "Violence
and Translation" "Insurance
and Safety After September 11: Has the World Become a "Riskier" Place?"
"The
U.S. Bombing of Afghanistan: A Women-Centered Perspective"
"Muslims
in the West: A Positive Asset"
"Memorializing
Absence"
"Strength
of a City: A Disaster Research Perspective on the World Trade Center Attack"
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