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Full Description
This book covers new conceptual, methodological, and empirical issues that will progress the debates on Vernacular Security Studies (VSS) and the value of studying ordinary articulations of (in)security. Bringing together established and emerging scholars, it offers a timely and much needed engagement with this explicitly critical - and increasingly prominent - framework in security research. Demonstrating its value in different geographical, thematic, and historical contexts these experts consider the impact of VSS on a range of topical issues including multi-species relations, decolonial/postcolonial approaches to security, migration, borders, and cities.
This volume will be of great interest to scholars and students engaging with 'bottom-up' approaches in critical security studies or critical International Relations.
Contents
Forward Introduction Chapter 1: Vernacular grammars of in/security: (post)colonial language games of border 'crisis' in the Channel by Thom Tyerman Chapter 2: Insecurity of migrant women and complex state violence: a vernacular security approach by Alexandria Innes Chapter 3: Material measures and (im)material threats: A 'vernacular' exploration of security in Istanbul by Samarjit Ghosh Chapter 4: Branding Vernacular (in)security in and with the City: An Appnographic Study of Snapchat in Marseille by Dr Joseph Downing Chapter 5: Vernacular actors in Trieste's migrant geographies: Towards a spatialisation of vernacular security studies by Noemi Bergesio Chapter 6: Relational security: a 'vernacular turn' in the Pacific by Maima Koro Chapter 7: Vernacular Security Studies: Concepts, Cases and Critiques Speaking for, speaking with: vernacular research in the Global South by Hannah Owens Chapter 8: Security - vernacular, more-than-human, and otherwise by Nils Bubandt Conclusion Index