" Unequal Security is a subtle, sophisticated treatment of a deep problem troubling modern societies. Beginning with a wide-ranging review of the security literature(s) and an in-depth treatment of conceptual issues, the editors offer a new framework for the analysis of security and insecurity in a variety of domains including economic insecurity, fear of crime, prisons, and public health. Throughout the collection – which features diverse, original studies by a group of first rate scholars – the focus is on the interplay between insecurity and inequality: an explosive dynamic that lies at the heart of current challenges to democracies around the world."
David Garland, NYU
"Challenging conventional wisdom, Unequal Security compellingly demonstrates the deep entanglement of insecurity with social inequality. Through its multidisciplinary lens, the book unveils the uneven distribution of security within societies and across the globe. The authors deliver a potent message: in an era where states are increasingly abandoning their promise of equal protection, the need for a more equitable approach to security has never been more critical. This volume is an indispensable read for anyone committed to understanding and addressing the contemporary challenges of inequality and security."
Kees van Kersbergen, Aarhus University
"Far too often, research on insecurity has revolved around objective exposure to risk, and as such has overlooked the subjective perception of insecurity that underpins so much of human behavior, attitudes, and citizenship. As this important and timely edited volume demonstrates in rich empirical and theoretical detail, the causes and consequences of felt insecurity pervade multiple aspects of citizenship, primarily through their unequal distribution. Rarely have we seen scholarship on economic and physical insecurity come together in a study of their logical nexus: the state and society. The editors of this volume have brought together an important interdisciplinary collection of essays that will be of great importance for any scholar interested in the multidimensional nature of insecurity, and its consequences for state, society and democracy."
Sarah M. Brooks, Professor of Political Science, Ohio State University
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Peter Starke is a political scientist and a professor at the University of Southern Denmark. Based at the Danish Centre for Welfare Studies (DaWS), he specializes in comparative public policy research and political economy.
Laust Lund Elbek holds a PhD in social anthropology (Aarhus University 2020). His work broadly concerns the ways in which the state makes itself present in politically, economically, and/or geographically marginal places.
Georg Wenzelburger is a political scientist and holds the Chair of Comparative European Politics at Saarland University. His research is centred on the comparative study of public policies with a focus on Western Europe.