Termin realizacji zamówienia: ok. 16-18 dni roboczych.
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This interdisciplinary book presents an intervention into methodological practices in the subfield of Critical Terrorism Studies, and features established and early career scholars.
'This necessary and important volume makes the case for self-reflexivity and methodological pluralism in Critical Terrorism Studies to guard against Eurocentric, racist, and colonial modes of thought that, despite the criticality of its methods, continue to shape much of the scholarship in this field. The contributions to this volume showcase the richness and urgency of postcolonial, decolonial, non-Western, Global South, abolitionist, feminist, and queer approaches, whose insights are central for making visible, rather than perpetuating, the systems of oppression in which “terrorism,” as well as its (critical) study, participate.'
Dr Verena Erlenbusch-Anderson,Syracuse University, US
Introduction: Methodological Plurality and Reflexivity Part One: The Field of Critical Terrorism Studies and Violence 1. Calibrating Violences in Critical Terrorism Studies 2. “Terrorism” as Abjection: Queering/Abolishing Critical Terrorism Studies 3. A Decolonial Mission for Critical Terrorism Studies: Interrogating the Gendered Coloniality and Colonial Function of the Dominant Discourse on Terrorism. Part Two: The Eurocentricity of Critical Terrorism Studies and Global South Approaches 4. Postcolonial Spaces and Critical Terrorism Studies: Towards a Dialogic Research Agenda 5. Cannibalising the Visual in Critical Terrorism Studies: A Counter-Visuality of the 01/08 Anti-democratic Attacks in Brazil 6. Indigenous Voice in Tackling Violent Extremism in Kenya: Coloniality and Exclusion of African Women Part Three: Bridging Disciplinary and Methodological Gaps in Critical Terrorism Studies 7. Going beyond the State-Centrism of Critical Terrorism Studies: Studying Counterterrorism as Contestation across Political Parties 8. Bringing in New Voices: Non-English Linguistic Corpora and Critical Terrorism Studies 9. Rethinking Methodologies in Critical Terrorism Studies: A Mixed-Method Randomised Control Trial Study on Community Reintegration of Former Boko Haram Members in Nigeria
Alice Finden is Assistant Professor in International Politics at Durham University, UK.
Carlos Yebra López is a lecturer at University College London, UK
Tarela Ike is a Senior Visiting Fellow at Coal City University, Nigeria.
Ugo Gaudino works as a Guest Teacher at the London School of Economics and as a lecturer at Kingston University.
Samwel Oando is a Research Associate at the Institute for the Study of African Realities (ISAR) of the Africa International University (AIU), Kenya.