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Call for Panelists:

Geographies of Closed Doors: Methodologies for Interrogating Security, the
State, and Spatialities of Power

Organizers: Lauren Martin & Stephanie Simon, University of Kentucky

Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Las Vegas, NV

March 22-29, 2009

Studies of "security" have charted a proliferation of techniques,
technologies, and practices through which states—and increasingly private
entities—surveil, sort, and police. Countering the "networks" of terrorism,
state security practices have attempted to become networked, unpredictable,
and flexible themselves.  From "designing in" security functions to midnight
immigration raids, the practices included under the rubric of "security" are
diffuse and include a range of state and non-state entities.  Yet while we
find "security" concerns in an increasing number of everyday spaces, the
institutions and persons behind them are increasingly obscure.  Fears that
studying security practices will enable terrorist attacks make public
officials hesitant to release information to researchers, which constrains
our ability to explore and understand the ways in which spaces are being
transformed.  Ordinary geographic research practices, such as taking
photographs in public places, are questioned by security personnel, and
documentation of security practices is difficult to access.  Where access to
prisons has long been granted, access to immigration detention centers
require federal background checks and can be revoked without explanation.
Thus, gaining access to research sites has its own bureaucratic life, and
offers critical moment in which to trace the contours of the security that
surrounds "security."  This session will explore these changing dynamics of
access and denial to those researching security and state institutions and
practices.  In addition we would like to extend this conversation to
theorize the spatialities of power that emerge from research exploring
sensitive topics.

The questions guiding this session include:

-What are the political and ethical implications of research becoming (or
being perceived as) a "security risk?"

-What tactics and methodological approaches help us overcome the closed
doors security and state institutions, personnel, and practices?

-How are our findings and claims curtailed (or enabled) by the surveillance
of our research

-What does it mean for our theories of power, the state, and governance that
researchers are routinely denied access to documentation, personnel, and
sites?

-What are the implications of asking questions we have difficulty answering
empirically?

-What do reprisals, detentions, and policing of research activities mean for
us?

-How do these experiences show us spatialities of power we wouldn't have
otherwise seen?
We invite papers (5-10 min.) from any location, context, or methodological
approach.  *Please submit abstracts of no more than 250 words to Lauren
Martin (**Lauren.martin[at]uky.edu* <[log in to unmask]>*) and
StephanieSimon (
Stephanie.simon[at]uky.edu) by October 10, 2008. *



-- 
Lauren Martin
Doctoral Candidate
Department of Geography
University of Kentucky
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