Critical security studies, racism and eclecticism

IF 2.8 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
S. Makinda
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Introduction This forum is about race and racism in critical security studies, as well as the latter’s reparative possibilities. Racism is a ubiquitous ailment in many societies and manifests itself differently under varying circumstances (Clair and Denis, 2015; McWhorter, 2019). It is a complex phenomenon that is sometimes hard to define or dismiss. In most cases, racism may be invisible, systemic or structural. For the purposes of this article, racism includes bigotry, prejudice or discrimination against people on the basis of identity, usually race, ethnicity or culture. The above terms are problematic and require explanations, but these cannot be provided in such a short article. Racism may be directed against people who are in a majority, as was the case in South Africa for over a century until the 1990s. It may also be directed against a minority, as is the case in the USA with regard to blacks, in China with regard to Uighurs, and in Myanmar in relation to the Rohingya. This definition of racism is minimalist and may not cover racism in some circumstances. Moreover, racism is primarily about power, control and exploitation. Those who have lived the experience of racism and those who have only read about it understand it in profoundly different ways. Although racism has been largely associated with relationships in which whites discriminate against non-whites, there have been situations in which whites have been at the receiving end of racism. For example, the Anglo-Celtic in Australia discriminated against Aborigines for centuries and against the newly arrived white Italians and Greeks after World War II. The expulsion of Asians from Uganda under Idi Amin in the 1970s resulted from racism perpetrated by non-whites against other non-whites. The call for interventions in this forum refers to critical security studies as a field of study and practice, but this field comprises different research programmes that are sharply divided (Mutimer, 2010). So, establishing that these competitive programmes, such as constructivism, post-structuralism and critical theory, are racist would be difficult (see Hansen, 2020; Howell and RichterMontpetit, 2020; Wæver and Buzan, 2020). In what follows, I explain the global multiracial forces that gave rise to critical security studies, as well as some reparative possibilities. In the next section, I explore the diverse global forces that brought into being critical security studies and posit that claims about its origins in the Frankfurt School and Antonio Gramsci are exaggerated (Bilgin, 2008). I argue that persistent claims of its intellectual heritage from only European sources have effectively reduced the visibility of the racial diversity of its bases and
批判安全研究,种族主义和折衷主义
引言这个论坛是关于批判性安全研究中的种族和种族主义,以及后者的修复可能性。种族主义在许多社会中是一种普遍存在的疾病,在不同的情况下表现得不同(Clair和Denis,2015;McWhorter,2019)。这是一个复杂的现象,有时很难定义或消除。在大多数情况下,种族主义可能是无形的、系统性的或结构性的。就本条而言,种族主义包括基于身份的偏见、偏见或歧视,通常是种族、族裔或文化。上述术语有问题,需要解释,但这些不能在这么短的文章中提供。种族主义可能是针对占多数的人的,就像南非一个多世纪以来直到20世纪90年代的情况一样。它也可能针对少数民族,就像美国对黑人、中国对维吾尔人和缅甸对罗兴亚人的情况一样。这种对种族主义的定义是最低限度的,在某些情况下可能不包括种族主义。此外,种族主义主要涉及权力、控制和剥削。那些经历过种族主义经历的人和那些只读过种族主义的人对种族主义的理解截然不同。尽管种族主义在很大程度上与白人歧视非白人的关系有关,但也有白人成为种族主义受害者的情况。例如,澳大利亚的盎格鲁-凯尔特人歧视土著几个世纪,并在第二次世界大战后歧视新来的意大利白人和希腊人。20世纪70年代,在伊迪·阿明的领导下,非白人对其他非白人实施种族主义,导致亚洲人被驱逐出乌干达。本论坛呼吁采取干预措施,将关键安全研究称为一个研究和实践领域,但该领域包括不同的研究方案,这些方案存在严重分歧(Mutimer,2010)。因此,很难确定这些竞争性课程,如建构主义、后结构主义和批判性理论,是种族主义的(见Hansen,2020;Howell和RichterMontpetit,2020;Wæver和Buzan,2020)。在下文中,我将解释引发关键安全研究的全球多种族力量,以及一些修复的可能性。在下一节中,我将探讨导致关键安全研究的各种全球力量,并认为法兰克福学派和安东尼奥·葛兰西关于其起源的说法被夸大了(Bilgin,2008)。我认为,仅来自欧洲的对其知识遗产的持续主张实际上降低了其基地种族多样性的可见性
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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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