注释(第13/13页)
[81] Galli, Political Spaces and Global War (2001—2), trans. Fay, 171 – 72; Härting,Global Civil War and Postcolonial Studies; Odysseos, “Violence After the State?”; Odysseos, “Liberalism’s War, Liberalism’s Order.”
[82] hardt and Negri, Multitude, 341.
[83] Agamben, State of Exception, trans. Attell, 2 – 3; see also Agamben, Stasis, trans. Heron, 24 (“The form that civil war has acquired today in world history is‘terrorism’… Terrorism is the ‘global civil war’ which time and again invests this or that zone of planetary space.”).
[84] On the congruences, empirical and definitional, between “civil war” and“terrorism,” see Findley and Young, “Terrorism and Civil War.”
[85] Jung, “Introduction: Towards Global Civil War?”
结语 关于内战的话
[1] Moses, “Civil War or Genocide?”; Rabinbach, “The Challenge of the Unprecedented.”
[2] Lepore, Name of War, xv.
[3] Kalyvas, “Civil Wars,” 416, where he notes it is “a phenomenon prone to serious semantic confusion, even contestation.” See also Waldmann, “Guerra civil”;Angstrom, “Towards a Typology of Internal Armed Conflict”; Sambanis, “What Is Civil War?”; Mundy, “Deconstructing Civil Wars”; González Calleja,Arbusti, and Pinto, “Guerre civili,” 34 – 42; González Calleja, Las guerras civiles, 34 – 78; Jackson, “Critical Perspectives,” 81 – 83.
[4] De Quincey, “[Fragments Relating to ‘Casuistry’]” (ca. 1839—43), in Works of Thomas De Quincey, 11:602.
[5] Pavone, Civil War, 269 – 70.
[6] Mamdani, “Politics of Naming”; Mamdani, Saviors and Survivors, 3 – 6.
[7] Freedman, “What Makes a Civil War?”
[8] Talmon, “Recognition of the Libyan National Transitional Council.”
后记
[1] http://www.iraqbodycount.org/database/; United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq, “Human Rights Report, 1 September–31 October 2006,” 4.
[2] Ted Widmer, Ark of the Liberties: America and the World (New York: Hill and Wang, 2008).