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ID117606
Title ProperKnowledge production in the security-development nexus
Other Title Informationan ethnographic reflection
LanguageENG
AuthorStepputat, Finn
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article contributes to the analysis of transnationalized forms of security governance in the postcolonial world by looking into the production of knowledge aimed at increasing coherence between domains of security and development in Western donor policies. The article takes an ethnographic approach to the analysis of knowledge production, using the author's personal experience of writing a policy analysis for a donor government concerning how to 'further improve' the policy of 'concerted civil-military planning and action'. This attempt to 'study up' and analyse upstream practices involved in transnational security governance shows the degree to which policy-related knowledge production is a negotiated, social process that involves informal practices and defensive tactics. The policy process seems to be less concerned with effects on the ground than with the problem of creating unity among the wide range of agents and institutions involved in the emerging policy field. While such an approach may have potentially destabilizing effects - both for policy narratives and for researchers' authority - it responds to calls for reflections on the politics of representation and writing in studies of international relations.
`In' analytical NoteSecurity Dialogue Vol. 43, No.5; Oct 2012: p.439-455
Journal SourceSecurity Dialogue Vol. 43, No.5; Oct 2012: p.439-455
Key WordsEthnography ;  Identity ;  International Security ;  War ;  Knowledge Production ;  Intervention ;  Policy