Your Search Results

      • Trusted Partner
        Business, Economics & Law
        November 2019

        The securitisation of Islam

        Indirect speech acts and affect in the United States post 9/11

        by Clara Eroukhmanoff, Emmanuel Pierre Guittet, Peter Lawler

        Introduction 1. Methodology: language in securitisation studies Part I: Linguistic approaches 2. Framing Islam as a non security issue 3. A practice of indirect securitising speech acts Part II: Sociological approaches 4. The everyday securitisation of Islam in New York: the NYPD in action 5. Rationalism and remoteness 6. Emotions in securitisation studies: establishment versus anti-establishment Conclusion

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        February 2024

        Radicalisation, counter-radicalisation and Prevent

        A vernacular approach

        by Lee Jarvis, Andrew Whiting, Stuart Macdonald

        This book offers the first sustained investigation into non-elite understandings of radicalisation and counter-radicalisation policy. Drawing on original focus group research with students from universities across England and Wales, the book explores how 'ordinary' citizens understand radicalisation, how they make sense of counter-radicalisation initiatives like the UK Prevent Strategy, and how they evaluate its functioning and effects across society. Radicalisation, counter-radicalisation and Prevent demonstrates that these non-elite insights often contradict and diverge from traditional (elite) security knowledge and thus shed new light on wider questions around the politics of security. This has vitally important implications not only for counter-radicalisation and counter-terrorism policy but for the very study and practice of security.

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        February 2024

        Radicalisation, counter-radicalisation and Prevent

        A vernacular approach

        by Lee Jarvis, Andrew Whiting, Stuart Macdonald

        This book offers the first sustained investigation into non-elite understandings of radicalisation and counter-radicalisation policy. Drawing on original focus group research with students from universities across England and Wales, the book explores how 'ordinary' citizens understand radicalisation, how they make sense of counter-radicalisation initiatives like the UK Prevent Strategy, and how they evaluate its functioning and effects across society. Radicalisation, counter-radicalisation and Prevent demonstrates that these non-elite insights often contradict and diverge from traditional (elite) security knowledge and thus shed new light on wider questions around the politics of security. This has vitally important implications not only for counter-radicalisation and counter-terrorism policy but for the very study and practice of security.

      • Trusted Partner
        Business, Economics & Law
        November 2019

        The securitisation of Islam

        Indirect speech acts and affect in the United States post 9/11

        by Clara Eroukhmanoff, Emmanuel Pierre Guittet, Peter Lawler

        This book is about the securitisation of Islam in the United States from the Bush to the Trump administration. It explores the ways in which the securitisation is justified and felt when president G.W Bush, Barack Obama and (even) President Donald J. Trump have often securitised through deception and covert language rather than by mobilizing a security grammar. This book contributes to the debate on islamophobia and the construction of Islam as a threat to the liberal order since the 11 September attacks. Its approach is innovative by connecting covert racism and the securitisation of minority groups, through what the book calls 'indirect securitisation', and by introducing emotions and affect to securitisation studies. This book is of interest to a wide audience interested in Islamophobia in the US, security studies, the 'emotions turn' in International Relations, and scholars interested in theories of language.

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        February 2024

        Radicalisation, counter-radicalisation and Prevent

        A vernacular approach

        by Lee Jarvis, Andrew Whiting, Stuart Macdonald

        This book offers the first sustained investigation into non-elite understandings of radicalisation and counter-radicalisation policy. Drawing on original focus group research with students from universities across England and Wales, the book explores how 'ordinary' citizens understand radicalisation, how they make sense of counter-radicalisation initiatives like the UK Prevent Strategy, and how they evaluate its functioning and effects across society. Radicalisation, counter-radicalisation and Prevent demonstrates that these non-elite insights often contradict and diverge from traditional (elite) security knowledge and thus shed new light on wider questions around the politics of security. This has vitally important implications not only for counter-radicalisation and counter-terrorism policy but for the very study and practice of security.

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter