Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1582Hits:19813895Skip 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
 

ID181131
Title ProperSecuritisation gaps
Other Title Informationtowards ideational understandings of state weakness
LanguageENG
AuthorOskanian, Kevork ;  Kevork Oskanian
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article contributes a securitisation-based, interpretive approach to state weakness. The long-dominant positivist approaches to the phenomenon have been extensively criticised for a wide range of deficiencies. Responding to Lemay-Hébert's suggestion of a ‘Durkheimian’, ideational-interpretive approach as a possible alternative, I base my conceptualisation on Migdal's view of state weakness as emerging from a ‘state-in-society's’ contested ‘strategies of survival’. I argue that several recent developments in Securitisation Theory enable it to capture this contested ‘collective knowledge’ on the state: a move away from state-centrism, the development of a contextualised ‘sociological’ version, linkages made between securitisation and legitimacy, and the acknowledgment of ‘securitisations’ as a contested Bourdieusian field. I introduce the concept of ‘securitisation gaps’ – divergences in the security discourses and practices of state and society – as a concept aimed at capturing this contested role of the state, operationalised along two logics (reactive/substitutive) – depending on whether they emerge from securitisations of the state action or inaction – and three intensities (latent, manifest, and violent), depending on the extent to which they involve challenges to state authority. The approach is briefly illustrated through the changing securitisation gaps in the Republic of Lebanon during the 2019–20 ‘October Uprising’.
`In' analytical NoteEuropean Journal of International Security Vol. 6, No.4; Nov 2021: p.439 - 458
Journal SourceEuropean Journal of International Security Vol: 6 No 4
Key WordsLebanon ;  Copenhagen School ;  Securitisation ;  State Weakness ;  Bourdieu


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text