Book Chapter

Introduction to the book - Resilience: Militaries and militarization

In the aftermath of the attack on the US on 11 September 2001, the government called upon experts to explain why mass trauma did not occur. If humans have the capacity for resilience, can resilience be harnessed to prevent traumatic responses both in civilian and military contexts? 

In the introduction to the book "Resilience: Militaries and Militarization", editors Joanna Bourke and Robin May Schott trace the way in which the concept of resilience has entered social imaginaries and traveled across disciplines from psychology to security. The contributors argue that with the introduction of positive psychology in the US military, resilience has become militarized and negatively impacts psyches, family life, and spirituality. While resilience has emerged as a strategy of neoliberal governance, there may be a possibility for developing its positive potentiality in community relations.

Regions
United States

DIIS Experts

Robin May Schott
Peace and violence
Senior Researcher
+45 9132 5508
Resilience book
Introduction
Resilience , Joanna Bourke & Robin Schott: , Cham, Switzerland: : Palgrave Macmillan, 2022