This essay reflects on the approaches to inclusion and exclusion put forward in this special issue and suggests a more radical alternative: the project of “decolonizing” the field of security studies. Drawing on work in decolonial thought and critical security studies, I discuss systemic-level structures of inclusion and exclusion such as global racial hierarchies, imperial and colonial legacies, and North-South inequities. Such structures both shape the material reality of the global security order, and affect knowledge production in the field of security studies itself, including the definition of what is and is not viewed as a legitimate “security issue.” I conclude by asking what a “decolonized” security studies might look like
About the book: Focusing on contemporary challenges, this major new Handbook offers a wide-ranging c...
This article analyses important trends in contemporary decolonial approaches in the field of interna...
In this essay we argue for the utility of moving from a “national” to an “entangled global” perspect...
This essay reflects on the approaches to inclusion and exclusion put forward in this special issue a...
I suggest in this essay that colonialism and racism penetrate the intellectual foundations of securi...
Critical Security Studies proceeds from the premise that words are world-making, that is that the wa...
When I look at social anthropology today, from the perspective of my own research on security, I see...
This article provides an introduction to the Special Issue as a whole by situating the collection of...
This article provides an introduction to the Special Issue as a whole by situating the collection of...
These two papers add further dimensions to the discussions in IDS Bulletin 40.2 (March 2009) on ‘Tr...
Despite ongoing Realist entrenchment in and domination of a still relatively narrow conceptualisatio...
Increased attention to racialized knowledge and methodological whiteness has swept the political sci...
This article is a contribution to transcending the dichotomy between deconstruction and reconstructi...
Development researchers, governance specialists, security and international relations analysts are c...
This paper addresses the political and epistemological stakes of knowledge production in post-struct...
About the book: Focusing on contemporary challenges, this major new Handbook offers a wide-ranging c...
This article analyses important trends in contemporary decolonial approaches in the field of interna...
In this essay we argue for the utility of moving from a “national” to an “entangled global” perspect...
This essay reflects on the approaches to inclusion and exclusion put forward in this special issue a...
I suggest in this essay that colonialism and racism penetrate the intellectual foundations of securi...
Critical Security Studies proceeds from the premise that words are world-making, that is that the wa...
When I look at social anthropology today, from the perspective of my own research on security, I see...
This article provides an introduction to the Special Issue as a whole by situating the collection of...
This article provides an introduction to the Special Issue as a whole by situating the collection of...
These two papers add further dimensions to the discussions in IDS Bulletin 40.2 (March 2009) on ‘Tr...
Despite ongoing Realist entrenchment in and domination of a still relatively narrow conceptualisatio...
Increased attention to racialized knowledge and methodological whiteness has swept the political sci...
This article is a contribution to transcending the dichotomy between deconstruction and reconstructi...
Development researchers, governance specialists, security and international relations analysts are c...
This paper addresses the political and epistemological stakes of knowledge production in post-struct...
About the book: Focusing on contemporary challenges, this major new Handbook offers a wide-ranging c...
This article analyses important trends in contemporary decolonial approaches in the field of interna...
In this essay we argue for the utility of moving from a “national” to an “entangled global” perspect...