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Full Description
This edited collection offers new engagement with important case studies and contexts that have been neglected in the field of vernacular security research. With cutting edge scholarship from fieldwork and primary research in Georgia, Tunisia, Bangladesh, the Pacific Islands, and beyond, the book's international focus takes vernacular security research far beyond its traditional focus on migration and counterterrorism policy in the global North. Engaging with unusual and untouched sources of vernacular security knowledge such as soldiers' autobiographies, popular culture artefacts, and national security strategies, the book pushes the field into new methodological and conceptual directions. This agenda-setting collection will be essential reading to anyone interested in the everyday politics of security.
Contents
1. Lee Jarvis (Loughborough, UK), Michael Lister (Oxford Brookes, UK), and Akinyemi Oyawale (Warwick, UK) - New Directions in Vernacular Security Research: An Introduction.- 2. Tinatin Khomeriki (Free University of Tbilisi, Georgia) Horns, Thorns and Territory: Vernacular (in)Security in Tbilisi after the Rose Revolution.- 3. Albert Cano (LSE, UK) Lacanian Vernacular Security: Analysing Peace Walls and Pop Culture in Northern Ireland.- 4. Joshua Akintayo (Kent, UK) Deifying the Vernacular: The Borno Model and the limits of Over-romanticizing Community-Driven Security.- 5. Miranda Booth (Charles Darwin, Australia) Exploring polycentrism and vernacular security in the Pacific.- 6. Muhammed Onuh Copoglu (Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey), What Fire Tells us about Security? A Vernacular Approach on the Security-Politics-Environment Nexus in Turkey.- 7. Andrew Whiting (RHUL, UK) - Militarised masculinity as 'everyday' instrumentality: A narrative analysis of popularised soldier's autobiographies.- 8. Sabrina Ahmed (UEA, UK) - "The Police are like terrorists": Vernacular security stories from the refugee camps in Bangladesh.- 9. Marine Guéguin (Leeds Beckett, UK) Everyday security practices in an exceptional space: the French carceral system.- 10. Fabrizio Leonardo Cuccu (DCU, Ireland) "You have a responsibility to tell this story". Positionality, subjugated knowledges, and researching 'vernacular' security in Tunisia.- 11. Tom Martin (Open University, UK) Vernacular (national) security strategies.