ABSTRACT

Presenting securitization as a communication issue, this book combines media framing with the theory of securitization to explain how the discourse of security informs media content and what happens to policy and public understanding when it does.

Because securitization studies the construction of threats to societal structures as well as political-institutional structures, this book addresses security framing as a question of identity and the ability of political-cultural elites and media actors to manipulate it. After setting out how its theories work together, the book turns to news and its effects: How do media accounts make empirical sense of the world when they are bound by the need to make social-cultural sense first? How does "security" look in competing news accounts, and how do securitizing frames affect attitudes toward policies and political elites? Last, the book asks how academics and professionals can address the challenges to a democratic public’s role in decision-making created by the manipulation of security.

Bringing together distinct fields within communication studies to reflect on the pressing issue of securitization, this book will be a key resource for scholars and students working in the fields of mass communication, policy studies, critical linguistics and international relations, as well as risk and crisis communication.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Media framing, securitization and narrative across disciplines

chapter 1|18 pages

Cold War to Long War

Security, securitization and threat

chapter 2|17 pages

State and nation

Culture, identity and exceptionalism

chapter 3|18 pages

Media framing

Still fractured after all these years

chapter 4|16 pages

At the paragraph factory

Professional practice and the routines of objectivity

chapter 5|16 pages

Risk and crisis

What scares you and what kills you

chapter 6|19 pages

Effect in media, effect of media

Securitization in the lab

chapter 7|16 pages

Germany bans sausages

Discourse, magic words and boundary work

chapter 8|18 pages

“Our way of life is at stake”

A century of securitization

chapter 9|17 pages

The normative turn

Ethics in securitization and media