
Conceptualizing Power in Dynamics of Securitization
Beyond State and International System- Herausgeber:innen:
- |
- Reihe:
- Politiken der Sicherheit | Politics of Security, Band 5
- Verlag:
- 2019
Zusammenfassung
Der Band stellt erstmalig die ‚Machtfrage‘ in der gegenwärtigen konstruktivistischen Sicherheitsforschung. Wie lassen sich Machtverhältnisse, die Probleme der Sicherheit und Unsicherheit betreffen, aus transdisziplinärer und historischer Sicht analysieren? Der Band führt Beiträge aus der Geschichtswissenschaft, Kunstgeschichte, Politikwissenschaft, Soziologie, Kulturanthropologie und Rechtswissenschaft zusammen, um die bislang eher implizit gestellte Frage nach der konzeptuellen Bedeutung von Macht in Prozessen der Versicherheitlichung zu eruieren. Durch konzeptuell-theoretische Aufsätze und durch historische Fallstudien, die vom 16. bis zum 21. Jahrhundert reichen, werden die dominanten Paradigmen der Critical Security Studies, die zumeist aus den Internationalen Beziehungen stammen und oftmals den Staat ins Zentrum der Analyse rücken, in ein neues Licht gerückt.
Schlagworte
Publikation durchsuchen
Bibliographische Angaben
- Copyrightjahr
- 2019
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-8487-5158-7
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-8452-9354-7
- Verlag
- Nomos, Baden-Baden
- Reihe
- Politiken der Sicherheit | Politics of Security
- Band
- 5
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Seiten
- 400
- Produkttyp
- Sammelband
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Titelei/InhaltsverzeichnisSeiten 1 - 6 Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Andreas Langenohl, Regina Kreide Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Contextualization and outline of the volume
- Part I – Conceptualizing the power dimensions of securitization
- Part II – Historical and contemporary manifestations of the power dynamics in securitization
- References
- Andreas Langenohl Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Introduction
- 1.1 “Copenhagen, Paris, Aberystwyth”: Three interventions into realist International Relations
- 1.2 The ‘audience’ disputes
- 1.3 Securitization: Authorization/legitimation and effectiveness
- 2.1 The preoccupation with relations between polities
- 2.2 The preoccupation with strategic agency
- 2.3 Notions of the political
- 2.4 Conceptions of power
- 3.1 Norbert Elias’s relational model of power
- 3.2 An analytical matrix of power in securitization
- 3.3 A typology of power in securitization
- 4 Conclusion: Paradoxes of power in securitization
- References
- Regina Kreide Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1 Borders
- 2 In favor of closed borders
- 3 Securitization of migration to Europe
- 4 Securitization within Europe
- 5 The power to (de-)securitize
- 6 Conclusion
- References
- Hannah Broecker, Carola Westermeier Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Introduction
- Hegemony according to Laclau and Mouffe
- The signifier ‘security’
- ‘Lack’ in securitization and hegemonic analysis
- The power to securitize and Speech Act Theory in Copenhagen
- The analytical category of ‘success’
- Audience
- State-centrism
- ‘Financial stability’ – The referent object and empty signifier
- Securitization of finance – The referent object of financial stability
- Expert discourses and the hegemony of ‘financial stability’
- Instability of the empty signifier
- The powerless securitizer? Controlling the effects of securitization
- References
- Carola Dietze Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Historical Perspectives on Legitimacy and Security
- 3 Legitimacy and the emergence of terrorism in nineteenth century Europe, Russia and the United States. A Case Study
- 4 Conclusion
- References
- Katharina Krause Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Rule over the city and its environs
- Internal security through external security – The ruling Council’s image of Nürnberg
- Pastoral ambivalence – The cultural elite’s image of Nürnberg
- Modes of presentation
- Concordia
- Stability: The power of securitization
- References
- Christine Krüger, Friedrich Lenger Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1 The camp of confrontation
- 2 The camp of dialogue
- 3 The organized working classes
- 4 Security policies
- 5 Conclusion
- 6 Epilogue
- References
- Thilo Marauhn, Marie-Christin Stenzel Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1.1 Background: Building blocks of collective security
- 1.2 Old and new narratives about security
- 1.3 How does (Public International) Law fit in?
- 2.1 Law as an argument of power
- 2.2 Law as a limitation of power
- 2.3 From national to collective security – from coordination to cooperation
- 3.1 Ius in bello
- 3.2 Ius ad bellum
- 3.3 Commonalities: the importance of collective approaches
- 4.1 Using law to de-construct power
- 4.2 Using security to limit war
- 4.3 Who decides?
- 5 The juridification-securitization interface
- References
- Maria Ketzmerick Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1 Introduction
- 2 State building, Power, and Security within Historical Approaches
- 3 Theoretical Reflections: Securitization Framework and the Configuration of Power
- 4.1 Background
- 4.2 A Configuration of Securitizing Actors
- 4.3 The Creation of the Referent Object – Protection of Cameroun’s Public Order
- 4.2 Camerouns’ Future as Referent Object: Countersecuritization by the U.P.C.
- 5 Discussion and Conclusion
- References
- Sebastian Haus Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Securitizing junkies: framings of heroin use in the 1970s and 1980s
- 3 Spatial control and involuntary commitment: practices against heroin users around 1980
- 4 Challenging ‘security’: shifting power relations in the context of the emerging HIV/AIDS epidemic
- 5 Making the case for survival: the establishment of harm reduction policies, 1988-1991
- 6 “All of Frankfurt will be a drug scene”: politicized junkies, urban security and the dissolution of the heroin scene in 1992
- 7 Conclusion
- References
- Ana Ivasiuc Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Roots of insecurity: The fixity of nomadism
- Reassembling (in)security: Networks of mediators
- The power of materiality and the materiality of power
- References
- List of ContributorsSeiten 395 - 400 Download Kapitel (PDF)




