| ... |
... |
@@ -1,0
+1,21 @@ |
|
1 |
+===Burke 1NC=== |
|
2 |
+ |
|
3 |
+ |
|
4 |
+ |
|
5 |
+====The aff’s invocation of unpredictable threats to national existence is a futile drive for ontological certainty – this makes endless violence inevitable and turns humans into mere tools as it destroys the world==== |
|
6 |
+**Burke 7** ~~(Anthony, Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations in the University of New South Wales) "Ontologies of War: Violence, Existence and Reason," Theory and Event, Volume 10, Issue 2, 2007~~ AT |
|
7 |
+This essay develops a theory about the causes of war — and thus aims to |
|
8 |
+ |
|
9 |
+AND |
|
10 |
+ |
|
11 |
+to end the global rule of insecurity and violence? Will our thought? |
|
12 |
+ |
|
13 |
+ |
|
14 |
+ |
|
15 |
+====Vote negative to reject the 1AC’s enframing and interrogate its epistemological failures—-this is a prereq to successful policy and prevents extinction ==== |
|
16 |
+**Ahmed 12 **Dr. Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed is Executive Director of the Institute for Policy Research and Development (IPRD), an independent think tank focused on the study of violent conflict, he has taught at the Department of International Relations, University of Sussex "The international relations of crisis and the crisis of international relations: from the securitisation of scarcity to the militarisation of society" Global Change, Peace and Security Volume 23, Issue 3, 2011 Taylor Francis |
|
17 |
+While recommendations to shift our frame of orientation away from conventional state-centrism toward |
|
18 |
+ |
|
19 |
+AND |
|
20 |
+ |
|
21 |
+, effective, and joined-up policy-making on these issues. |