Bültmann & Gerriets
Israel's Death Hierarchy
Casualty Aversion in a Militarized Democracy
von Yagil Levy
Verlag: Zando
Reihe: Warfare and Culture Nr. 4
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ISBN: 978-0-8147-3833-7
Erschienen am 05.11.2012
Sprache: Englisch

Preis: 61,49 €

61,49 €
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

List of Figures and Tables

Acknowledgments

Preface from the Series Editor

Wayne E. Lee

Introduction

The Right to Protect and the Right to Protection

The Essence of Rights

Balancing Strategies

Conclusions

Unbalancing and Balancing the Rights

Balanced Rights

Unbalanced Rights

Demands for Burden Reduction

The Subversive Bereavement Discourse

Balancing Strategies

Conclusions

Bereavement-Motivated Collective Actors

The South Lebanon Guerrilla War (1985-2000)

Explaining Four Mothers' Success

The Al-Aqsa Intifada (2000-2005)

The Second Lebanon War (2006) and Operation Cast Lead (2009)

Conclusions

Bereavement-Motivated Collective Actors

Gold Star Families for Peace

Alternative Explanations

Theoretical Conclusions

The Death Hierarchy

The Principles of the Death Hierarchy

The Structure of the Death Hierarchy

Conclusions

Casualty Sensitivity Breeds High Lethality

The Essence of the Force-Casualty Tradeoff

Israel's Wars against Gaza: A General Outline

The Tradeoff

Conclusions and Theoretical Implications

Casualty Sensitivity and Political-Military Relations

Civilian Control of the IDF: General Background

Casualty Sensitivity Reinforces the Military

Conclusions and Theoretical Implications

Conclusions

Notes

Bibliography

Index

About the Author



2012 Winner of the Shapiro Award for the Best Book in Israel Studies, presented by the Association for Israel Studies
Whose life is worth more?
That is the question that states inevitably face during wartime. Which troops are thrown to the first lines of battle and which ones remain relatively intact? How can various categories of civilian populations be protected? And when front and rear are porous, whose life should receive priority, those of soldiers or those of civilians? In Israel's Death Hierarchy, Yagil Levy uses Israel as a compelling case study to explore the global dynamics and security implications of casualty sensitivity. Israel, Levy argues, originally chose to risk soldiers mobilized from privileged classes, more than civilians and other soldiers. However, with the mounting of casualty sensitivity, the state gradually restructured what Levy calls its ?death hierarchy? to favor privileged soldiers over soldiers drawn from lower classes and civilians, and later to place enemy civilians at the bottom of the hierarchy by the use of heavy firepower. The state thus shifted risk from soldiers to civilians. As the Gaza offensive of 2009 demonstrates, this new death hierarchy has opened Israel to global criticism.


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