Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/137259
Title: Others as Security Threats: Securitizing Discourses, Social Magic, and the Bureaucratic Field
Authors: Grigor’eva, K. S.
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: Уральский федеральный университет
Ural Federal University
Citation: Grigor’eva K. S. Others as Security Threats: Securitizing Discourses, Social Magic, and the Bureaucratic Field / K. S. Grigor’eva // Changing Societies & Personalities. — 2024. — Vol. 8. Iss. 2 : Demographic Well-Being as a Factor of Social Development. — P. 418–442.
Abstract: For over 20 years, there has been an ongoing debate about what is primary in the process of securitization discourses or practices. Traditional research on securitization tends to analyze discourses and practices separately, which can be seen even in studies that attempt to combine these two approaches. In this context, the concept “discourses” refers to a wide range of public political statements, while the concept “practices” mainly refers to the strategies of security professionals. I argue that, in order to gain a better understanding of securitization processes, the research focus should be narrowed to first-order securitizing performatives and the related securitizing practices. This approach will highlight political statements that can genuinely alter social reality, bridge the gap between discourses and practices, facilitate the analysis of institutional mechanisms of securitization, and help obtain much new relevant empirical material. The potential benefits of the proposed approach are illustrated through the analysis of two cases: the Italian case and the Russian case. For the Italian case, the analysis includes declarations of states of emergency related to the exacerbation of the “nomad issue.” For the Russian case, it examines legal acts stipulating the official recognition of migrants as prone to terrorism.
Keywords: SECURITIZATION
PIERRE BOURDIEU
SYMBOLIC POWER
PERFORMATIVE SPEECH ACTS
SECURITIZING PRACTICES
URI: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/137259
RSCI ID: https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=68638994
ISSN: 2587-6104
2587-8964
DOI: 10.15826/csp.2024.8.2.281
Origin: Changing Societies & Personalities. 2024. Vol. 8. Iss. 2 : Demographic Well-Being as a Factor of Social Development
Appears in Collections:Changing Societies & Personalities

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