1.
Buzan, B. People, States and Fear: An Agenda for International Security Studies in the Post-Cold War Era. (ECPR Press, 2016).
2.
Buzan, B. People, States and Fear: An Agenda for International Security Studies in the Post-Cold War Era. (ECPR Press, 2016).
3.
Krause, K. & Williams, M. C. Critical Security Studies: Concepts and Cases. (2002).
4.
Peoples, C. & Vaughan-Williams, N. Critical Security Studies: An Introduction.
5.
Wolfers, Arnold. National Security as an Ambiguous Symbol. Political science quarterly (1952).
6.
David A. Baldwin. The Concept of Security. Review of International Studies 23, 5–26 (1997).
7.
Enloe, C. H. Globalization and militarism: feminists make the link. vol. Globalization (Rowman & Littlefield, 2007).
8.
Herz, J. H. Idealist Internationalism and the Security Dilemma. World Politics 2, 157–180 (1950).
9.
Mattelart, A. The globalization of surveillance: the origin of the securitarian order. vol. Economy&society (Polity, 2010).
10.
Roland Paris. Human Security: Paradigm Shift or Hot Air? International Security 26, 87–102 (2001).
11.
Peoples, C. & Vaughan-Williams, N. Critical Security Studies: An Introduction.
12.
Security Dialogue.
13.
Christie, R. Critical Voices and Human Security: To Endure, To Engage or To Critique? Security Dialogue 41, 169–190 (2010).
14.
Fierke, K. Critical Approaches to International Security, 2nd Edition.
15.
Mary Kaldor, Mary Martin and Sabine Selchow. Human Security: A New Strategic Narrative for Europe. International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-) 83, 273–288 (2007).
16.
Marhia, N. Some humans are more human than Others: Troubling the ‘human’ in human security from a critical feminist perspective. Security Dialogue 44, 19–35 (2013).
17.
UNHCR - The State of The World’s Refugees 1997: A Humanitarian Agenda. http://www.unhcr.org/uk/publications/sowr/4a4c72719/state-worlds-refugees-1997-humanitarian-agenda.html.
18.
Duffield, M. R. Development, security and unending war: governing the world of peoples. (Polity, 2007).
19.
Thomas, C. Global governance, development and human security: exploring the links: Third World Quarterly: Vol 22, No 2.
20.
Human Development Report 1994. http://hdr.undp.org/en/content/human-development-report-1994.
21.
Peoples, C. & Vaughan-Williams, N. Critical security studies: an introduction. (Routledge, 2015).
22.
Huysmans, J. The politics of insecurity: fear, migration and asylum in the EU. vol. The new international relations (Routledge, 2006).
23.
Peoples, C. & Vaughan-Williams, N. Critical Security Studies: An Introduction.
24.
Bigo, D. Security and Immigration: Toward a Critique of the Governmentality of Unease. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 27, 63–92 (2002).
25.
Guild, E. Security and migration in the 21st century. (Polity, 2009).
26.
Doty, R. L. Immigration and the politics of security. Security Studies 8, 71–93 (1998).
27.
Rudolph, C. National security and immigration: policy development in the United States and Western Europe since 1945. (Stanford University Press, 2006).
28.
Weiner, M. Security, Stability, and International Migration. International Security 17, (1992).
29.
Agnew, J. A. Geopolitics: re-visioning world politics. (Routledge, 2003).
30.
Trip-wire deterrence; NATO’s summit (The Economist). The Economist (London) (2016).
31.
European war-games (Financial Times). Financial Times.
32.
Sleepwalking into a big war, by Michael T Klare (Le Monde diplomatique - English edition, September 2016). http://mondediplo.com/2016/09/02war.
33.
Dodds, K. Geopolitics: a very short introduction.
34.
Dalby, S. The geopolitics of climate change. Political Geography 37, 38–47 (2013).
35.
Guzzini, Stefano. The return of geopolitics in Europe? : social mechanisms and foreign policy identity crises. (2012).
36.
Massaro, V. A. & Williams, J. Feminist Geopolitics. Geography Compass 7, 567–577 (2013).
37.
Starr, H. On Geopolitics: Spaces and Places. International Studies Quarterly 57, 433–439 (2013).
38.
Toal, G., Dalby, S. & Routledge, P. The geopolitics reader. (Routledge, 1998).
39.
Popescu, G. The conflicting logics of cross-border reterritorialization: Geopolitics of Euroregions in Eastern Europe.
40.
Williams, M. C. & Neumann, I. B. From Alliance to Security Community: NATO, Russia, and the Power of Identity. Millennium: Journal of International Studies 29, 357–387 (2000).
41.
Dalby, S. Security and environmental change. (Polity, 2009).
42.
Peoples, C. & Vaughan-Williams, N. Critical Security Studies: An Introduction.
43.
Burgess, J. P. The Routledge handbook of new security studies. vol. Routledge handbooks (Routledge, 2010).
44.
Dalby, S. The geopolitics of climate change. Political Geography 37, 38–47 (2013).
45.
Dalby, S. Environmental security. vol. Borderlines (University of Minnesota Press, 2002).
46.
Deudney, Daniel. Environment and Security: Muddled Thinking. Bulletin of the atomic scientists (1991).
47.
Elliott, L. The Global Politics of the Environment.
48.
Fagan, M. Security in the anthropocene: Environment, ecology, escape. European Journal of International Relations 23, 292–314 (2017).
49.
Levy, M. A. Is the Environment a National Security Issue? International Security 20, (1995).
50.
Gearson, J. The Nature of Modern Terrorism. The Political Quarterly 73, 7–24 (2002).
51.
Jackson, R. & Sinclair, S. J. Contemporary debates on terrorism. (Routledge, 2012).
52.
Peoples, C. & Vaughan-Williams, N. Critical Security Studies: An Introduction.
53.
Townshend, C. & MyiLibrary. Terrorism: a very short introduction. vol. Very short introductions (Oxford University Press, 2002).
54.
Bigo, D., Carrera, S., Guild, E. & Walker, R. B. J. The changing landscape of European liberty and security: the mid-term report of the CHALLENGE project. International Social Science Journal 59, 283–308 (2008).
55.
Huysmans, J. Minding Exceptions: The Politics of Insecurity and Liberal Democracy. Contemporary Political Theory 3, 321–341 (2004).
56.
Routledge handbook of critical terrorism studies. (Routledge, 2016).
57.
Whittaker, D. J. The terrorism reader. vol. Routledge readers in history (Routledge, 2012).
58.
Ayse, Z. What makes terrorism modern? Terrorism, legitimacy, and the international system. 37, 2311–2336 (2011).
59.
Robin, C. Fear: the history of a political idea. (Oxford University Press, 2004).
60.
Fierke, K. Critical Approaches to International Security, 2nd Edition.
61.
Altheide, D. L. Media Logic, Social Control, and Fear. Communication Theory 23, 223–238 (2013).
62.
Bleiker, R. & Hutchison, E. Fear no more: emotions and world politics.
63.
Jan H. Blits. Hobbesian Fear. Political Theory 17, 417–431 (1989).
64.
Giroux, H. A. Democracy and the Politics of Terrorism: Community, Fear, and the Suppression of Dissent. Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies 2, 334–342 (2002).
65.
Isin, E. The neurotic citizen.
66.
Hoggett, P. & Thompson, S. D. P. Politics and the emotions.
67.
Neumann, F. L. The democratic and the authoritarian state: essays in political and legal theory.
68.
Nyers, P. Rethinking refugees: beyond states of emergency.
69.
Pain, R. Globalized fear? Towards an emotional geopolitics. Progress in Human Geography 33, 466–486 (2009).
70.
Williams, M. C. Securitization and the liberalism of fear. Security Dialogue 42, 453–463 (2011).
71.
Aradau, C. & Van Munster, R. Governing Terrorism Through Risk: Taking Precautions, (un)Knowing the Future. European Journal of International Relations 13, 89–115 (2007).
72.
Petersen, K. L. Risk analysis – A field within security studies? European Journal of International Relations 18, 693–717 (2012).
73.
Amoore, L. Security and the incalculable. Security Dialogue 45, 423–439 (2014).
74.
Amoore, L. & de Goede, M. Risk and the War on Terror.
75.
Aradau, C., Lobo-Guerrero, L. & Van Munster, R. Security, Technologies of Risk, and the Political: Guest Editors’ Introduction. Security Dialogue 39, 147–154 (2008).
76.
Aradau, C. & Van Munster, R. Politics of catastrophe: Genealogies of the unknown.
77.
Coker, C. Globalisation and insecurity in the twenty-first century: NATO and the management of risk.
78.
Daase, C. & Kessler, O. Knowns and Unknowns in the `War on Terror’: Uncertainty and the Political                Construction of Danger. Security Dialogue 38, 411–434 (2007).
79.
de Goede, M. Speculative security: the politics of pursuing terrorist monies.
80.
Burgess, J. P. The Routledge handbook of new security studies. vol. Routledge handbooks (Routledge, 2010).
81.
Muller, B. J. Security, risk and the biometric state: governing borders and bodies - Library Discovery.
82.
Rasmussen, Mikkel Vedby. The risk society at war : terror, technology and strategy in the twenty-first century. (2006).
83.
Bauman, Z. et al. After Snowden: Rethinking the Impact of Surveillance. International Political Sociology 8, 121–144 (2014).
84.
Burgess, J. P. The Routledge handbook of new security studies.
85.
Amicelle, A. Towards a ‘new’ political anatomy of financial surveillance. Security Dialogue 42, 161–178 (2011).
86.
Bauman, Z. & Lyon, D. Liquid Surveillance: A Conversation.
87.
Bennett, Colin J. In Defence of Privacy: The concept and the regime. Surveillance & society (2011).
88.
Huysmans, J. Security unbound: enacting democratic limits. vol. Critical issues in global politics (Routledge).
89.
Lyon, D. Surveillance society: monitoring everyday life. (Open University Press, 2001).
90.
Ball, K., Haggerty, K. D. & Lyon, D. Routledge handbook of surveillance studies. vol. Routledge international handbooks (Routledge, 2012).
91.
Lyon, D. Surveillance, Security and Social Sorting. International Criminal Justice Review 17, 161–170 (2007).
92.
Mattelart, A. The globalization of surveillance: the origin of the securitarian order. vol. Economy&society (Polity, 2010).
93.
Huysmans, J. The politics of insecurity: fear, migration and asylum in the EU. vol. The new international relations (Routledge, 2006).
94.
Aradau, C. Security and the democratic scene: desecuritization and emancipation.
95.
Kelstrup, M. & Williams, M. C. International relations theory and the politics of European integration: power, security, and community. (Routledge, 2000).
96.
Hansen, L. Reconstructing desecuritisation: the normative-political in the Copenhagen School and directions for how to apply it.
97.
Huysmans, J. Security unbound: enacting democratic limits. vol. Critical issues in global politics (Routledge).
98.
Peoples, C. & Vaughan-Williams, N. Critical Security Studies: An Introduction.
99.
Lipschutz, R. D. On security. vol. New directions in world politics (Columbia University Press, 1995).
100.
Christopher Rudolph. Security and the Political Economy of International Migration. The American Political Science Review 97, 603–620 (2003).
101.
Doty, R. L. Immigration and the politics of security. Security Studies 8, 71–93 (1998).
102.
Dalby, S. Security and environmental change. (Polity, 2009).
103.
BELLAMY, A. J. & McDONALD, M. `The Utility of Human Security’: Which Humans? What Security? A Reply to Thomas & Tow. Security Dialogue 33, 373–377 (2002).
104.
THOMAS, N. & TOW, W. T. The Utility of Human Security: Sovereignty and Humanitarian Intervention. Security Dialogue 33, 177–192 (2002).
105.
Marhia, N. Some humans are more human than Others: Troubling the ‘human’ in human security from a critical feminist perspective. Security Dialogue 44, 19–35 (2013).
106.
Ball, K., Haggerty, K. D. & Lyon, D. Routledge handbook of surveillance studies. vol. Routledge international handbooks (Routledge, 2012).
107.
de Goede, M. Speculative security: the politics of pursuing terrorist monies.
108.
Van Munster, R. Review Essay: Security on a Shoestring: A Hitchhiker’s Guide to Critical Schools of Security in Europe. Cooperation and Conflict 42, 235–243 (2007).
109.
Hansen, L. Book Review Essay: Taking Trafficking Seriously: What the Abject Subject Can Teach IR. Cooperation and Conflict 43, 469–476 (2008).
110.
Chandler, D. Book Review Essay: The Paradox of the ‘Responsibility to Protect’. Cooperation and Conflict 45, 128–134 (2010).
111.
Buzan, B. People, States and Fear: An Agenda for International Security Studies in the Post-Cold War Era. (ECPR Press, 2016).