Racism! What do you mean? From Howell and Richter-Montpetit’s underestimation of the problem, towards situating security through struggle

IF 2.8 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Security Dialogue Pub Date : 2021-04-22 DOI:10.1177/09670106211029426
Lara Montesinos Coleman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

I suggest in this essay that colonialism and racism penetrate the intellectual foundations of security studies at a level deeper than recent discussion would have us believe. This is because of unstated or disavowed ontological assumptions that shape the parameters of the field and lead scholars to foreclose upon a deeper understanding of systemic, racialized relations of violence. The problem in much critical scholarship on security, I will argue, is not only a failure to grasp the centrality of structural racism to the practices and interventions under examination. It is a more insidious matter of what knowledges, experiences and struggles are invisible, and – as a result – what practices and interventions are not subject to examination because of the centrality given to security. Even when security is understood in the broadest sense, it is still practices that are about threat and danger, friendship and enmity, that catch the eye of the critical scholar. The result is a tendency to natural- ize the denigration and abandonment of non-white and poor populations deemed lacking in the qualities for success within a profoundly violent global political economy. After staking out my critique – and why I think recent discussion of racism in security studies only scratches the surface of the problem – I will consider how research agendas and methods might be recalibrated with a greater sensitivity towards colonialism and race. Crucially, I caution against attempts to ‘decolonize security studies’ by seeking to add the insights of decolonial and critical race scholarship to the field (see Adamson, 2020) without attention to the ontological assumptions that make it natural to centre security. Taking inspiration from Lewis Gordon (2011) and Olivia Rutazibwa (2020), as well as from my own engagement with decolonial social move- ments, I propose that part of what is required is greater attention to lived thought, to how reality always exceeds the questions our scholarly communities lead us to ask, and to what is revealed when we consider security through the lens of struggle.
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种族歧视!你是什么意思?从豪厄尔和里希特-蒙佩蒂对问题的低估,到通过斗争确立安全
我在这篇文章中建议,殖民主义和种族主义渗透到安全研究的知识基础上,其程度比最近的讨论让我们相信的要深。这是因为未陈述或否认的本体论假设塑造了该领域的参数,并导致学者无法对系统性、种族化的暴力关系有更深入的理解。我认为,在许多关于安全的批判性学术中,问题不仅在于未能抓住结构性种族主义在所审查的做法和干预措施中的中心地位。这是一个更隐蔽的问题,即哪些知识、经验和斗争是看不见的,因此,由于安全的中心地位,哪些做法和干预措施不受审查。即使从最广泛的意义上理解安全,仍然是关于威胁和危险、友谊和敌意的做法吸引了批评学者的眼球。其结果是,在一个极度暴力的全球政治经济中,非白人和贫困人口被认为缺乏成功的素质,他们的诋毁和抛弃倾向于自然化。在阐述了我的批评——以及为什么我认为最近关于安全研究中种族主义的讨论只触及了问题的表面——之后,我将考虑如何重新调整研究议程和方法,对殖民主义和种族问题更加敏感。至关重要的是,我警告不要试图通过寻求将非殖民化和批判性种族学术的见解添加到该领域来“非殖民化安全研究”(见Adamson,2020),而不注意使安全成为自然中心的本体论假设。我从Lewis Gordon(2011)和Olivia Rutazibwa(2020)以及我自己参与非殖民化社会运动中获得了灵感,我认为需要更多地关注生活中的思想,关注现实如何总是超越我们学术界提出的问题,以及当我们从斗争的角度考虑安全时会揭示什么。
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来源期刊
Security Dialogue
Security Dialogue INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Security Dialogue is a fully peer-reviewed and highly ranked international bi-monthly journal that seeks to combine contemporary theoretical analysis with challenges to public policy across a wide ranging field of security studies. Security Dialogue seeks to revisit and recast the concept of security through new approaches and methodologies.
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