This new book shows how from the end of the Cold War, the security agenda has been transformed and redefined, academically and politically.
It focuses on the theme of protection. It moves away from the dominant question of whom or what is threatening to the crucial questions of who is to be protected, and in the case of conflicting claims, who has the capacity to define whose needs prevail.
It also poses the question of political agency in relation to some of the most significant questions raised in relation to the governance of insecurity and protection in the contemporary world. The authors identify and explore issues that challenge or raise a number of questions about the traditional notion that states are to protect their citizens through retaining a monopoly over the legitimate use of violence.
Preface
Chapter 1. Agency and The Politics of Protection: Implications for Security Studies
Jef Huysmans
Chapter 2. Privatizing the Politics of Protection: Military Companies and the Definition of Security Concerns
Anna Leander
Chapter 3. Privatisation, Globalisation, and the Politics of Protection in South Africa
Rita Abrahamsen and Michael C. Williams
Chapter 4. Taking Rights, Mediating Wrongs: Disagreements over the Political Agency of Non-Status Refugees.
Peter Nyers
Chapter 5. Resisting Sovereign Power: Camps In-between Exception and Dissent.
Raffaela Puggioni
Chapter 6. Protection: security, territory and population.
Didier Bigo
Chapter 7. Civilizing the Balkans, Protecting Europe: the International Politics of Reconstruction in Bosnia and Kosovo
Alexandra Gheciu
Chapter 8. The Judicialisation of Armed Conflict: transforming the 21stl"