Coleman-Rosenow-CSS-accepted-version.pdf (349.41 kB)
Security (studies) and the limits of critique: why we should think through struggle
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 01:22 authored by Lara Montesinos ColemanLara Montesinos Coleman, Doerthe RosenowThis paper addresses the political and epistemological stakes of knowledge production in post-structuralist Critical Security Studies. It opens a research agenda in which struggles against dominant regimes of power/knowledge are entry-points for analysis. Despite attempts to gain distance from the word ‘security’, through interrogation of wider practices and schemes of knowledge in which security practices are embedded, post-structuralist CSS too quickly reads security logics as determinative of modern/liberal forms of power and rule. At play is an unacknowledged ontological investment in ‘security’, structured by disciplinary commitments and policy discourse putatively critiqued. Through previous ethnographic research, we highlight how struggles over dispossession and oppression call the very frame of security into question, exposing violences inadmissible within that frame. Through the lens of security, the violence of wider strategies of containing and normalizing politics are rendered invisible, or a neutral backdrop against which security practices take place. Building on recent debates on critical security methods, we set out an agenda where struggle provokes an alternative mode of onto political investment in critical examination of power and order.
Funding
Discipline, dissent and dispossession; G1216; INDEPENDENT SOCIAL RESEARCH FOUNDATION
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Journal
Critical Studies on SecurityISSN
2162-4887Publisher
Taylor & FrancisExternal DOI
Issue
2Volume
4Page range
202-220Department affiliated with
- International Relations Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes