Securing circulation through mobility: milieu and emergency response in the British fire and rescue service
Securing circulation through mobility: milieu and emergency response in the British fire and rescue service
A growing body of literature draws upon Foucault’s security oeuvre in examining how societies are secured at the level of circulation. Although demonstrating the strength of Foucault’s contribution to debates about security and circulation, sustained attention has yet to be afforded to a central notion in Foucault’s work on security; the concept of milieu. Engaging in particular with Foucault’s 1977–1978 lectures at the Collège de France collectively known in English as Security, Territory, Population (2007), this article introduces and critically appraises Foucault’s notion of milieu. I will show how the notion of milieu renders population an object of governance for security at the level of circulation. I draw upon Foucault’s commentary on the concept of milieu to explore empirical material generated by my own research into risk analysis technologies used by the British Fire and Rescue Service (FRS) to govern fire. Although my research demonstrates the crucial importance of Foucault’s milieu in examining how security is enacted on circulation, I also outline shortcomings in Foucault’s work. The case of risk analysis technologies in the FRS suggests that the conceptualisation of circulation which Foucault offers is overly crude. More nuanced understandings of circulation in relation to other modalities of movement are necessarily harnessed by the FRS in order to secure population through circulation. The differentiations made by risk analysis technologies between forms of movement, furthermore, are enrolled within and facilitate specific temporal imaginaries through which the FRS both makes sense of fire as a risk and intervenes before fires occur.
512-527
O'Grady, Nathaniel
10d54575-aaf3-4efb-acec-907df5c62be2
O'Grady, Nathaniel
10d54575-aaf3-4efb-acec-907df5c62be2
O'Grady, Nathaniel
(2014)
Securing circulation through mobility: milieu and emergency response in the British fire and rescue service.
Mobilities, 9 (4), .
(doi:10.1080/17450101.2014.961259).
Abstract
A growing body of literature draws upon Foucault’s security oeuvre in examining how societies are secured at the level of circulation. Although demonstrating the strength of Foucault’s contribution to debates about security and circulation, sustained attention has yet to be afforded to a central notion in Foucault’s work on security; the concept of milieu. Engaging in particular with Foucault’s 1977–1978 lectures at the Collège de France collectively known in English as Security, Territory, Population (2007), this article introduces and critically appraises Foucault’s notion of milieu. I will show how the notion of milieu renders population an object of governance for security at the level of circulation. I draw upon Foucault’s commentary on the concept of milieu to explore empirical material generated by my own research into risk analysis technologies used by the British Fire and Rescue Service (FRS) to govern fire. Although my research demonstrates the crucial importance of Foucault’s milieu in examining how security is enacted on circulation, I also outline shortcomings in Foucault’s work. The case of risk analysis technologies in the FRS suggests that the conceptualisation of circulation which Foucault offers is overly crude. More nuanced understandings of circulation in relation to other modalities of movement are necessarily harnessed by the FRS in order to secure population through circulation. The differentiations made by risk analysis technologies between forms of movement, furthermore, are enrolled within and facilitate specific temporal imaginaries through which the FRS both makes sense of fire as a risk and intervenes before fires occur.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 22 October 2014
Organisations:
Geography & Environment
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Local EPrints ID: 370439
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/370439
ISSN: 1745-0101
PURE UUID: 7ba3e2cd-c138-41f3-841f-726032858ba1
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Date deposited: 29 Oct 2014 12:29
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:17
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Nathaniel O'Grady
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