ABSTRACT

This new textbook surveys new and emergent methods for doing research in critical security studies, thereby filling a large gap in the literature of this emerging field.

New or critical security studies is growing as a field, but still lacks a clear methodology; the diverse range of the main foci of study (culture, practices, language, or bodies) means that there is little coherence or conversation between these four schools or approaches.

In this ground-breaking collection of fresh and emergent voices, new methods in critical security studies are explored from multiple perspectives, providing practical examples of successful research design and methodologies. Drawing upon their own experiences and projects, thirty-three authors address the following turns over the course of six comprehensive sections:

  • Part I: Research Design
  • Part II: The Ethnographic Turn
  • Part III: The Practice Turn
  • Part IV: The Discursive Turn
  • Part V: The Corporeal Turn
  • Part VI: The Material Turn

This book will be essential reading for upper-level students and researchers in the field of critical security studies, and of much interest to students of sociology, ethnography and IR.

 

 

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part I|35 pages

Research design

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |4 pages

Criticality1

chapter |4 pages

Do you have what it takes?

Accounting for emotional and material capacities 1

chapter |5 pages

Attuning to mess1

chapter |4 pages

Empiricism without positivism1

King Lear and critical security studies

part II|33 pages

The ethnographic turn

part III|28 pages

The practice turn

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter |4 pages

The practice of writing

chapter |4 pages

Researching anti-deportation

Socialization as method

chapter |4 pages

Testifying while critical

Notes on being an effective gadfly

part IV|25 pages

The discursive turn

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter |4 pages

Archives

chapter |4 pages

Legislative practices

chapter |5 pages

Speech act theory

part V|34 pages

The corporeal turn

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |4 pages

Emotional optics

chapter |4 pages

Affective terrain

Approaching the field in Aamjiwnaang

chapter |3 pages

Theorizing the body in IR

chapter |4 pages

Corporeal migration

part |34 pages

The material turn

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter |5 pages

Infrastructure1

chapter |4 pages

The study of drones as objects of security

Targeted killing as military strategy

chapter |4 pages

Objects of security/objects of research

Analyzing non-lethal weapons

chapter |4 pages

Pictoral texts