Abstract

Fear is defined as the distinction between risk and danger, a distinction that operates in communicative forms. War is always also warfare about the form of war. The article describes how fear in warfare becomes a symbolically generalized medium of communication, mainly focusing on how the form of fear evolves in asymmetric warfare. Asymmetric war induces fear in both parties, but in a communicative form that leads to very different experiences. Fear is observed and analysed with Niklas Luhmann's theory of self-referential systems of communication as well as his theory of risk. Following Luhmann and in continuation ofClausewitz' conceptual tools, yet with other means, the article proposes to observe war as a system that can de-ontologize itself and thereby concern moving centres of gravity such as communication lines, motivation, public fear, and perceptions of risk and insecurity. The final section draws together the theoretical insights by formalizing a risk analysis of fear.

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