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Conceptualizing Power in Dynamics of Securitization / Securitized State Building? The Camerounian Decolonization in Conflict
Conceptualizing Power in Dynamics of Securitization / Securitized State Building? The Camerounian Decolonization in Conflict
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1–6
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
1–6
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7–22
Introduction: Situating Power in Dynamics of Securitization
Andreas Langenohl, Regina Kreide
Andreas Langenohl, Regina Kreide
7–22
Details
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
23–174
Part I – Conceptualizing the Power Dimensions of Securitization
23–174
23–66
Dynamics of Power in Securitization: Towards a Relational Understanding
Andreas Langenohl
Andreas Langenohl
23–66
Details
Introduction
1 Current Securitization Studies: Three schools and their disputes
1.1 “Copenhagen, Paris, Aberystwyth”: Three interventions into realist International Relations
1.2 The ‘audience’ disputes
1.3 Securitization: Authorization/legitimation and effectiveness
2 Conceptions of the political in securitization studies: The legacies of realist IR
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 The power to securitize and the power of securitization: Towards a relational model of power in securitization
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
67–90
The Power of Border Politics: On Migration in and outside Europe
Regina Kreide
Regina Kreide
67–90
Details
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
91–134
Securitization as Hegemony
Hannah Broecker, Carola Westermeier
Hannah Broecker, Carola Westermeier
91–134
Details
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
135–174
Legitimacy and Security from a Historical Perspective: A Case Study in the History of Terrorism
Carola Dietze
Carola Dietze
135–174
Details
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
175–394
Part II – Historical and Contemporary Manifestations of the Power Dynamics in Securitization
175–394
175–238
The Legitimation of Council Rule Through Vedute of the City and Territory of Nürnberg from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century: Visualizing Insecurity within an Image of Secured Order
Katharina Krause
Katharina Krause
175–238
Details
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
239–264
“A question of power and war:” Social Conflict in Hamburg and London in the Late Nineteenth Century
Christine Krüger, Friedrich Lenger
Christine Krüger, Friedrich Lenger
239–264
Details
1 The camp of confrontation
2 The camp of dialogue
3 The organized working classes
4 Security policies
5 Conclusion
6 Epilogue
References
265–290
Power, Security, and Public International Law – an Intricate Relationship
Thilo Marauhn, Marie-Christin Stenzel
Thilo Marauhn, Marie-Christin Stenzel
265–290
Details
1 Conceptual and terminological framework
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 The ambivalence of juridification
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 Limitations on the use of (military) force
3.1 Ius in bello
3.2 Ius ad bellum
3.3 Commonalities: the importance of collective approaches
4 Peaceful settlement of disputes
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
291–324
Securitized State Building? The Camerounian Decolonization in Conflict
Maria Ketzmerick
Maria Ketzmerick
291–324
Details
1 Introduction
2 State building, Power, and Security within Historical Approaches
3 Theoretical Reflections: Securitization Framework and the Configuration of Power
4 Securitizing State Building in Cameroun
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
325–366
Reconfigurations of Security: Governing Heroin Users in Frankfurt am Main, 1975–1995
Sebastian Haus
Sebastian Haus
325–366
Details
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
367–394
Reassembling Insecurity: The Power of Materiality
Ana Ivasiuc
Ana Ivasiuc
367–394
Details
Roots of insecurity: The fixity of nomadism
Reassembling (in)security: Networks of mediators
The power of materiality and the materiality of power
References
395–400
List of Contributors
395–400
Details
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Conceptualizing Power in Dynamics of Securitization , page 291 - 324
Securitized State Building? The Camerounian Decolonization in Conflict
Autoren
Maria Ketzmerick
DOI
doi.org/10.5771/9783845293547-291
ISBN print: 978-3-8487-5158-7
ISBN online: 978-3-8452-9354-7
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doi.org/10.5771/9783845293547-291
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