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Constructing resilience through security and surveillance: the politics, practices and tensions of security-driven resilience

Constructing resilience through security and surveillance: the politics, practices and tensions of security-driven resilience
Constructing resilience through security and surveillance: the politics, practices and tensions of security-driven resilience
This article illuminates how, since 9/11, security policy has gradually become more central to a range of resilience discourses and practices. As this process draws a wider range of security infrastructures, organizations and approaches into the enactment of resilience, security practices are enabled through more palatable and legitimizing discourses of resilience. This article charts the emergence and proliferation of security-driven resilience logics, deployed at different spatial scales, which exist in tension with each other. We exemplify such tensions in practice through a detailed case study from Birmingham, UK: ‘Project Champion’ an attempt to install over 200 high-resolution surveillance cameras, often invisibly, around neighbourhoods with a predominantly Muslim population. Here, practices of security-driven resilience came into conflict with other policy priorities focused upon community-centred social cohesion, posing a series of questions about social control, surveillance and the ability of national agencies to construct community resilience in local areas amidst state attempts to label the same spaces as ‘dangerous’. It is argued that security-driven logics of resilience generate conflicts in how resilience is operationalized, and produce and reproduce new hierarchical arrangements which, in turn, may work to subvert some of the founding aspirations and principles of resilience logic itself.
0967-0106
86 - 105
Coaffee, Jon
2b2d17da-b76e-4edc-bfb7-8800270c3f11
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Coaffee, Jon
2b2d17da-b76e-4edc-bfb7-8800270c3f11
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f

Coaffee, Jon and Fussey, Pete (2015) Constructing resilience through security and surveillance: the politics, practices and tensions of security-driven resilience. Security Dialogue, 46 (1), 86 - 105. (doi:10.1177/0967010614557884).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article illuminates how, since 9/11, security policy has gradually become more central to a range of resilience discourses and practices. As this process draws a wider range of security infrastructures, organizations and approaches into the enactment of resilience, security practices are enabled through more palatable and legitimizing discourses of resilience. This article charts the emergence and proliferation of security-driven resilience logics, deployed at different spatial scales, which exist in tension with each other. We exemplify such tensions in practice through a detailed case study from Birmingham, UK: ‘Project Champion’ an attempt to install over 200 high-resolution surveillance cameras, often invisibly, around neighbourhoods with a predominantly Muslim population. Here, practices of security-driven resilience came into conflict with other policy priorities focused upon community-centred social cohesion, posing a series of questions about social control, surveillance and the ability of national agencies to construct community resilience in local areas amidst state attempts to label the same spaces as ‘dangerous’. It is argued that security-driven logics of resilience generate conflicts in how resilience is operationalized, and produce and reproduce new hierarchical arrangements which, in turn, may work to subvert some of the founding aspirations and principles of resilience logic itself.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 7 February 2015
Published date: 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495076
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495076
ISSN: 0967-0106
PURE UUID: 10814c3f-cf49-46c1-8046-5199f61b43fc
ORCID for Pete Fussey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1374-7133

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Date deposited: 28 Oct 2024 17:58
Last modified: 29 Oct 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Jon Coaffee
Author: Pete Fussey ORCID iD

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