The Copenhagen School\u27s notion of securitization is widely recognised as an important theoretical innovation in the conceptualisation of security, not least for its potential for including a range of actors and spatial scales beyond the state. However, its empirical utility remains more open to question due to a lack of reflexivity regarding local socio-cultural contexts, narrow focus on speech and inherently retrospective nature. Drawing on fieldwork conducted by the author in Kyrgyzstan between September 2005 and June 2006, this paper will examine the implications of these limitations for conducting empirical research on "security" logistically and methodologically. Centrally, the question of how “security” can be...
Copenhagen School securitization theory has made significant inroads into the study of security in W...
When I look at social anthropology today, from the perspective of my own research on security, I see...
This article concentrates on the evolution of the concept of security from its traditional ‘Realist’...
This thesis presents a critique of the Copenhagen School's conceptualisation of security via an expl...
The concept of human security continues to defy definitional clarity at the same time as it is being...
The article argues that the theoretical framework presented by the Copenhagen School is currently un...
provides one of the most innovative, productive, and yet controversial avenues of research in contem...
This article addresses the normative dilemma located within the application of `securitization,’ as ...
Creating a dialogue between the fields of International Relations, Peace and Conflict Studies, Socio...
Today almost any social or political problem can be legitimately framed in terms of dangers, risks, ...
Security is one of the foundations on which a stable and cohesive society is built. It is this secur...
Since its emergence as an alternative approach to traditional security studies, securitization has b...
This book seeks to interrogate how contemporary policy issues become ‘securitized’ and, furthermore,...
The theory of “securitization” developed by the Copenhagen School provides one of the most innovativ...
Why does security require to be handled carefully? Can there be too much security? The scholars of t...
Copenhagen School securitization theory has made significant inroads into the study of security in W...
When I look at social anthropology today, from the perspective of my own research on security, I see...
This article concentrates on the evolution of the concept of security from its traditional ‘Realist’...
This thesis presents a critique of the Copenhagen School's conceptualisation of security via an expl...
The concept of human security continues to defy definitional clarity at the same time as it is being...
The article argues that the theoretical framework presented by the Copenhagen School is currently un...
provides one of the most innovative, productive, and yet controversial avenues of research in contem...
This article addresses the normative dilemma located within the application of `securitization,’ as ...
Creating a dialogue between the fields of International Relations, Peace and Conflict Studies, Socio...
Today almost any social or political problem can be legitimately framed in terms of dangers, risks, ...
Security is one of the foundations on which a stable and cohesive society is built. It is this secur...
Since its emergence as an alternative approach to traditional security studies, securitization has b...
This book seeks to interrogate how contemporary policy issues become ‘securitized’ and, furthermore,...
The theory of “securitization” developed by the Copenhagen School provides one of the most innovativ...
Why does security require to be handled carefully? Can there be too much security? The scholars of t...
Copenhagen School securitization theory has made significant inroads into the study of security in W...
When I look at social anthropology today, from the perspective of my own research on security, I see...
This article concentrates on the evolution of the concept of security from its traditional ‘Realist’...