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This book analyses the challenges of secrecy in security research, and develops a set of methods to navigate, encircle and work with secrecy.
List of contents
Introduction: navigating secrecy in security research, Interlude: rigorous research in critical security studies, PART 1: Secrecy complexities; Section I: Secrecy, silence and obfuscation, 1. The problem of access: site visits, selective disclosure, and freedom of information in qualitative security research, 2. The state is the secret: for a relational approach to the study of border and mobility control in Europe, 3. Postsecrecy and place: secrecy research amidst the ruins of an atomic weapons research facility, Section II: Access, confidentiality and trust, 4. Navigating difficult terrain, 5. Accessing lifeworlds: getting people to say the unsayable. 6. Research dilemmas in dangerous places, PART 2: Mapping secrecy, Section III: Reflexive methodologies, 7. Writing secrecy, 8. Gender, ethics and critique in researching security and secrecy, 9. (In)visible security politics: reflections on photography and everyday security landscapes, Section IV: Ethnographies of technologies, 10. The black box and its dis/contents: complications in algorithmic devices research, 11. Multi-sited ethnography of digital security technologies, 12. Researching the emergent technologies of state control: the court-martial of Chelsea Manning, PART 3: Research secrets, Section V: Critique and advocacy, 13. Searching for the smoking gun? Methodology and modes of critique in the arms trade, 14. Critical engagement when studying those you oppose, 15. Secrecy vignettes, Section VI: Research ethics in practice, 16. Research ethics at work: account-abilities in fieldworkon security, 17. Material guides in ethically challenging fields: following deportation files, Index
About the author
Marieke de Goede is Professor of Political Science at the University of Amsterdam. She is author of Speculative Security: the Politics of Pursuing Terrorist Monies and Associate Editor of Security Dialogue. She currently holds a Consolidator Grant of the European Research Council (ERC) called FOLLOW: Following the Money from Transaction to Trial.
Esmé Bosma is a Doctoral Candidate at the Department of Political Science of the University of Amsterdam and a member of project FOLLOW, funded by the European Research Council. For her research project she has conducted field research inside and around banks in Europe to analyse counter terrorism financing practices by financial institutions. She has taught qualitative research methods to political science students and holds a master's degree in Political Science from the University of Amsterdam.
Polly Pallister-Wilkins is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science, at the University of Amsterdam. Her work has been published in Security Dialogue, Political Geography and International Political Sociology amongst others. She is a principal investigator in the European Union Horizon 2020 project ‘ADMIGOV: Advancing Alternative Migration Governance’ looking at issues of humanitarian protection in wider systems of migration governance.
Summary
This book analyses the challenges of secrecy in security research, and develops a set of methods to navigate, encircle and work with secrecy.
Additional text
'Thevolume succeeds in giving insights into a variety of research methodologies and at the same time gives a kaleidoscopic insight into how secrecy shapes contemporary security practices, its technologies, and most importantly its politics. The volume will be of interest not only to scholars of security sites but it will hopefully attract attention outside the field. The short chapters and the description of various research project make it a great addition for any syllabus on research methods in IR.'--Linda Monsees, Security Dialogue