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Postcolonialism

Laffey, Mark; Nadarajah, Suthaharan

Authors



Contributors

Alan Collins
Editor

Abstract

In this chapter, we introduce postcolonialism as a recent and increasingly influential set of positions and perspectives within the wider discipline of International Relations, and sketch its implications for security studies. We begin with postcolonialism’s genealogies, tracing its emergence in a set of transnational debates about the mutually constitutive relations between knowledge and imperialism. The chapter then lays out the standard account of world history as organized around Westphalian sovereignty which informs security studies and shows how postcolonialism puts it in question, forcing us to reconceive of the international as the context within which security is defined, practised, and studied. Third, we put postcolonialism to work and discuss what it might mean to decolonize security studies. In a short conclusion, we return to the question of the tense and contested relations between security studies and postcolonialism itself.

Citation

Laffey, M., & Nadarajah, S. (2016). Postcolonialism. In A. Collins (Ed.), Contemporary Security Studies (122-138). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780198708315.003.0009

Publication Date Jan 1, 2016
Deposit Date Sep 27, 2015
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 122-138
Book Title Contemporary Security Studies
ISBN 9780198708315
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780198708315.003.0009