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‘Policing geographies’: engendering securities and insecurities
A Social and Cultural Research Group sponsored session for the RGB-IBG 2012, Edinburgh.
Co-Convenors: Tim Cresswell (Royal Holloway), Hester Parr (Glasgow), Richard Yarwood (Plymouth), Olivia Stevenson (Glasgow).
This session explores the ‘policing’ of diverse human geographies in the world, and specifically how different registers of policing (by force(s), institutions, legislative shapes and other forms of governance) can engender both securities and insecurities. At the same time, we want immediately to problematise the possibility of ever ultimately ‘securing’ geographies (literally, as well as metaphorically, in and through border-work) and thereby to engage with insecurities. What are insecure geographies? We are curious about how geographies can be(come) insecure, dissolute, disruptive, hard-to-track, and simply missing.
Understanding insecurity beyond a discourse of danger is particularly appealing; and we wish to appeal for papers that re-value insecurities in a variety of ways. Overall, the session hopes to bring security and insecurity into tense conversation via the concept and exercise of ‘policing’; and here ‘policing’ is recognised as a metaphor, and a governing arrangement intended to engender lawfulness but also peace.
This session might lend itself to examination of police, police jurisdiction, police force(s), border ‘work’ (legislatively, conceptually), acts of tracing and tracking, dissident mobilities, porous networks and insecure securities. We welcome both conceptual and empirical papers.
The following questions and themes may prompt ideas, but please do not be restricted by them:
What are securities and insecurities?
How can we police security and insecurity?
What is it to police geographies?
How can we conceptualise insecure/secure geographies?
What are appropriate methods for researching securities and insecurities?
What are insecure mobilities and should these always be policed?
Is any type police-work always productive of new insecurities?
Does policing (always or ever) bring peace and security?
What are the differences between policing and security?
Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words to any of the co-convenors by 8th Jan, 2012.
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