Symposium
European Political Science (2007) 6, 252–259. doi:10.1057/palgrave.eps.2210142
emancipation and critical terrorism studies
Matt Mcdonalda
aDepartment of Politics and International Studies, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK. E-mail: matt.mcdonald@warwick.ac.uk
Abstract
Drawing on the insights of critical security studies, this article argues that an understanding of emancipation as a process of freeing up space for dialogue and deliberation enables a focus on crucial questions, experiences and practices neglected in most orthodox accounts of security and terrorism. In particular, emancipation has the potential to serve as a philosophical anchorage for a nascent critical terrorism studies research agenda. The paper goes on to outline what a critical terrorism studies informed by a concern with emancipation might look like, focusing on a series of key questions that such an approach might encourage in the context of the post-2001 'war on terror'.
Keywords:
emancipation, critical theory, terrorism, ethics, critical security studies, praxis
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