ID | 152405 |
Title Proper | Securing the anthropocene? international policy experiments in digital hacktivism |
Other Title Information | a case study of Jakarta |
Language | ENG |
Author | Chandler, David |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article analyses security discourses that are beginning to self-consciously take on board the shift towards the Anthropocene. It first sets out the developing episteme of the Anthropocene, highlighting the limits of instrumentalist cause-and-effect approaches to security, which are increasingly becoming displaced by discursive framings of securing as a process generated through new forms of mediation and agency and capable of grasping interrelations in a fluid context. This approach is the methodology of hacking: creatively composing and repurposing already existing forms of agency. It elaborates on hacking as a set of experimental practices and imaginaries of securing the Anthropocene, using as a case study the field of digital policy activism with a focus on community empowerment through social-technical assemblages being developed and applied in ‘the City of the Anthropocene’: Jakarta, Indonesia. The article concludes that policy interventions today cannot readily be grasped in modernist frameworks of ‘problem solving’ but should be seen more in terms of evolving and adaptive ‘life hacks’. |
`In' analytical Note | Security Dialogue Vol. 48, No.2; Apr 2017: p.113-130 |
Journal Source | Security Dialogue Vol: 48 No 2 |
Key Words | Security ; Hacking ; Jakarta ; Anthropocene ; Digital Activism |