Counter-terrorism training "at your kitchen table": the promotion of "CT citizens" and the securitisation of everyday life in the UK/ Itoiz Rodrigo Jusué

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2022Subject(s): Online resources: In: Critical Studies on Terrorism Vol 15, No 2, June 2022, pp. 290-310 (112)Summary: Drawing on studies on governmentality, this article examines the promotion of the "CT citizen" as a distinctive political agent and social identity embedded in the participation of mass surveillance and the normalisation of pre-emptive security logics. Based on a critical discourse analysis of the most recent official counter-terrorism and counter-radicalisation websites and e-learning materials (Let's Talk About It, Educate Against Hate, Action Counters Terrorism, and the Prevent duty), I show how citizens are being inscribed as counter-terrorism officials through discourses of responsibility, care, awareness, empowerment, and action. This article explores the role of British counter-terrorism in the production of new models of citizenship based on a generalised culture of suspicion and in the participation in security duties previously reserved to the authorities. The discussion highlights ultimately that the securitisation of everyday life and the inscription of individuals in "national security" results in the depoliticisation of both the civil society and political violence.
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Journal Article Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals TERRORISM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 69036.1001

Drawing on studies on governmentality, this article examines the promotion of the "CT citizen" as a distinctive political agent and social identity embedded in the participation of mass surveillance and the normalisation of pre-emptive security logics. Based on a critical discourse analysis of the most recent official counter-terrorism and counter-radicalisation websites and e-learning materials (Let's Talk About It, Educate Against Hate, Action Counters Terrorism, and the Prevent duty), I show how citizens are being inscribed as counter-terrorism officials through discourses of responsibility, care, awareness, empowerment, and action. This article explores the role of British counter-terrorism in the production of new models of citizenship based on a generalised culture of suspicion and in the participation in security duties previously reserved to the authorities. The discussion highlights ultimately that the securitisation of everyday life and the inscription of individuals in "national security" results in the depoliticisation of both the civil society and political violence.

TERRORISM, NATSEC, SECURITY

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