Drawing on the insights of critical security studies, this article argues that an understanding of emancipation as a process of freeing up space for dialogue and deliberation enables a focus on crucial questions, experiences and practices neglected in most orthodox accounts of security and terrorism. In particular, emancipation has the potential to serve as a philosophical anchorage for a nascent critical terrorism studies research agenda. The paper goes on to outline what a critical terrorism studies informed by a concern with emancipation might look like, focusing on a series of key questions that such an approach might encourage in the context of the post-2001 war on terror
Securitization is the move in which an issue is argued to pose an existential threat to a referent o...
This article reviews the new journal Critical Studies on Terrorism. The fashionable approach that th...
This entry on Terrorism examines the definition and problems defining the phenomenon, types and typo...
Drawing on the insights of critical security studies, this article argues that an understanding of e...
While welcoming Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS) as an interesting and valuable addition to the disc...
This thesis sets out to reconsider security as emancipation. Security as emancipation is a theoretic...
Although CTS can be described as a broad church, scholars working within this approach want to produ...
In response to the growth of a critical perspective on contemporary issues of terrorism, this edited...
In response to the growth of a critical perspective on contemporary issues of terrorism, this edited...
This paper examines some of the key challenges critical terrorism studies will have to face. Startin...
This article explores the burgeoning academic interest in establishing a critical terrorism studies ...
For over a decade, scholars of Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS) – a subset of terrorism studies iden...
While the Copenhagen School has provided security analysts with important tools for illuminating pro...
Realist assumptions of security studies increasingly have been challenged by an approach that places...
This thesis traces the origins of three critical schools of thought in the area of Security Studies....
Securitization is the move in which an issue is argued to pose an existential threat to a referent o...
This article reviews the new journal Critical Studies on Terrorism. The fashionable approach that th...
This entry on Terrorism examines the definition and problems defining the phenomenon, types and typo...
Drawing on the insights of critical security studies, this article argues that an understanding of e...
While welcoming Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS) as an interesting and valuable addition to the disc...
This thesis sets out to reconsider security as emancipation. Security as emancipation is a theoretic...
Although CTS can be described as a broad church, scholars working within this approach want to produ...
In response to the growth of a critical perspective on contemporary issues of terrorism, this edited...
In response to the growth of a critical perspective on contemporary issues of terrorism, this edited...
This paper examines some of the key challenges critical terrorism studies will have to face. Startin...
This article explores the burgeoning academic interest in establishing a critical terrorism studies ...
For over a decade, scholars of Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS) – a subset of terrorism studies iden...
While the Copenhagen School has provided security analysts with important tools for illuminating pro...
Realist assumptions of security studies increasingly have been challenged by an approach that places...
This thesis traces the origins of three critical schools of thought in the area of Security Studies....
Securitization is the move in which an issue is argued to pose an existential threat to a referent o...
This article reviews the new journal Critical Studies on Terrorism. The fashionable approach that th...
This entry on Terrorism examines the definition and problems defining the phenomenon, types and typo...