Publications

Smooth security. Creative adaptation, mimicry and deception in everyday securityscapes

Release Date

2019-07

Language

  • English

Topics


The article traces the everyday securityscapes of marginalized groups in Kyrgyzstan. It finds that they are as much about the crossing as the drawing of boundaries. To seek security is to become invisible, deceive, withdraw, seize momentary opportunities and continuously adapt one’s body and appearance to fit different times and places. Such activities are somewhat at odds with established apprehensions of security practice in both orthodox and critical writings, which foreground visibility and boundary-making. With a view to theoretical concepts put forward by Michel de Certeau and Gilles Deleuze, they can be understood as smooth and tactical - as opposed to striated and strategic - ways of dealing with existential insecurities of life. The acknowledgement of these smooth security practices has both analytical as well as normative implications for larger debates in (Critical) Security Studies.

Please find the article here.

Cite as

https://doi.org/10.1080/21624887.2019.1644049
@article{vonBoemcken2019, author = "Marc von Boemcken", title = "Smooth security. Creative adaptation, mimicry and deception in everyday securityscapes", latexTitle = "Smooth security. Creative adaptation, mimicry and deception in everyday securityscapes", publisher = "Taylor & Francis", booktitle = "Critical Studies on Security", number = "2", institution = "Taylor & Francis", type = "Journal Article", pages = "91-106", year = "2019", doi = "10.1080/21624887.2019.1644049", }

Document-Type

Journal Article

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1080/21624887.2019.1644049

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Is part of / In:

Title:
Critical Studies on Security

Countries/Region

Kyrgyzstan