Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1527Hits:19148332Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID110832
Title ProperSecurity and secularization in international relations
LanguageENG
AuthorMavelli, Luca
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)What is the relationship between security and secularization in International Relations? The widespread acceptance of secularism as the paradigmatic framework that underlies the study of world politics has left this question largely unexplored. Yet, the recent challenges to the secularization thesis and the growing attention that is being devoted to questions of religion and secularism in international politics increasingly suggest the importance of undertaking this investigation. This article takes up this task in three main steps. First, it will explore how the limits of a widely accepted but nonetheless problematic account of the emergence of the modern Westphalian nation-state contribute to a dominant underlying assumption in security studies that implicitly associates security with secularization. Second, it will articulate a competing genealogy of security and secularization which suggests that rather than solving the problem of religious insecurity, secularization makes the question of fear and the politics of exceptionalism central to the state-centric project of modernity and its related vision of security. Finally, the article will examine how these elements inform and, most of all, constrain attempts to move beyond the traditional state-centric framework of security. The focus will be on three such attempts: human security, the securitization theory and Ken Booth's critical theory of security.
`In' analytical NoteEuropean Journal of International Relations Vol. 18, No.1; Mar 2012: p.177-199
Journal SourceEuropean Journal of International Relations Vol. 18, No.1; Mar 2012: p.177-199
Key WordsAquinas ;  Critical Approaches to Security ;  Hobbes ;  Religion ;  Secularization ;  Secularism ;  Security