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E-raamat: Ethical Security Studies: A New Research Agenda [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (University of Leicester, UK), Edited by (University of New South Wales, Australia)
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This edited volume addresses the potential for ethical visions of security and what such visions might look like.

The key contribution of this book is in bringing together the emerging theoretical discussions on ethics and ethical reasoning within security studies to speak to this common theme. These ethical ‘visions’ of security engage directly with the meaning and value of security and security practice, and present a new research agenda directly concerned not only with what security is, but with what securityshould be, and as such consider these questions:

  • Who, or what, should be secured?

  • What are the fundamental ontological grounds and commitments of different security ethics?

  • Who or which actor/s are legitimate agents, providers or speakers of security?

  • What do ethical security practices look like? What ethical principles, arguments, or procedures, help generate understandings of ethical security practices?

In a world of increasing insecurity and threats, security studies critically needs to engage directly with these normative questions to consider what securityshould be about and for whom it exists.

The first part of the text discusses ontologies of security in relation to ethics, outlining first the critical ‘anti-security’ perspective, before discussing the ethical potential within security; it then considers world security, the referent of security, and posthuman ethical security. The second part surveys a wide range of different visions of ethical security and security practice, from just securitisation theory to human security, cosmopolitan security and positive security. The editors use ‘Ethical Security Studies’ as an umbrella term, representing a new field comprised of a wide range of perspectives on ethics and security rather than advocating a specific vision. What brings the field and these authors together is a common faith in the idea that security either is or can be, a good thing. A key aim is to create a richer and more constructive engagement—both between traditional and critical security studies, and streams within critical security studies and theory which divide on the merits of opposing, or seeking to reform, security practices and ontologies.

This book will be of much interest to students of critical security studies, ethics philosophy, and IR.

Acknowledgements ix
Contributors x
Introduction Imagining ethical security studies 1(14)
Jonna Nyman
Anthony Burke
PART I Foundations of ethical security
15(58)
1 Security: critique, analysis and ethics
17(15)
Vivienne Jabri
2 Whose security? Ethics and the referent
32(14)
Matt McDonald
3 World security: towards a `local' research agenda
46(14)
Ali Bilgic
4 Posthuman security/ethics
60(13)
Audra Mitchell
PART II Visions and debate
73(143)
5 The promise of theories of just securitisation
75(14)
Rita Floyd
6 Security, emancipation and the ethics of vulnerability
89(13)
Joao Nunes
7 The promise and dangers of human security
102(14)
Annick T. R. Wibben
8 Feminist care ethics and everyday insecurities
116(15)
Fiona Robinson
9 Pragmatism, practice and the value of security
131(14)
Jonna Nyman
10 The ethical sources of security cosmopolitanism
145(15)
Anthony Burke
11 Ethics and ontological security
160(14)
Christopher Browning
12 War, ethics and the individual
174(15)
Helen Dexter
13 The decolonial option: toward an ethic of self-securing
189(12)
Priya Chacko
14 Activism, resistance and security
201(15)
Chris Rossdale
Conclusion Security as ethics: an orthogonal rotation from egoism to compassion 216(13)
K. M. Fierke
Index 229
Jonna Nyman is a Teaching Fellow in International Relations at the University of Leicester, UK.

Anthony Burke is Associate Professor/Reader of Politics and International Relations at UNSW Australia. He is author or editor of six books, including Beyond Security, Ethics and Violence (Routledge, 2007) and Ethics and Global Security (Routledge, 2014).