1st Edition

Decentring Security Policing Communities at Home and Abroad

Edited By Mark Bevir Copyright 2018
    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    Contemporary security governance often relies on markets and networks to link public agencies to non-governmental actors. This book explores the rise, nature, and future of these new forms of security governance across various domestic, transnational, and international settings. The chapters reveal similarities and differences in the way security governance operates in various policy settings. The contributors argue that the similarities generally arise because policy elites, at various levels of governance, have come to believe that security depends on building resilience and communities through various joined-up arrangements, networks, and partnerships. Differences nonetheless persist because civil servants, street level bureaucrats, voluntary sector actors, and citizens all draw on diverse traditions to interpret, and at times resist, the joined-up security being promoted by these policy elites. This book therefore decentres security governance, showing how all kinds of local traditions influence the way it works in different settings. It pays particular attention to the meanings, cultures, and ideologies by which policy actors encounter, interpret, and evaluate security dilemmas. This book was originally published as a special issue in Global Crime.

    Decentring security governance Mark Bevir Multi-centred governance and circuits of power in liberal modes of security Adam Edwards  New narratives of international security governance: the shift from global interventionism to global self-policing David Chandler Exporting decentred security governance: the tensions of security sector reform Rita Abrahamsen  Webs, walls, and wars David J Betz  Ideologies and crime: political ideas and the dynamics of crime control Ian Loader and Richard Sparks  Peacebuilding and SSR in Kosovo: an Interactionist perspective Anne Holohan  Governance of policing and cultural codes: interpreting and responding to policy directives Louise Westmarland

    Biography

    Mark Bevir is a Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for British Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, USA. He is the author of various books including Democratic Governance (2010), Governance: A very short introduction (2012), and A Theory of Governance (2013).