![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments
This book investigates how Uyghur-related violent conflict and Uyghur ethnic minority identity, religion, and the Xinjiang region, more broadly, became constituted as a 'terrorism' problem for the Chinese state. Building on securitization theory, Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS), and the scholarly definitional debate on terrorism, it develops the concept of terroristization as a critical analytical framework for the study of historical processes of threat construction. Investigating the violent events reported in Xinjiang since the early 1980s, the evolving discursive patterns used by the Chinese state to make sense of violent incidents, and the crackdown policies that the official terrorism discourse has legitimized, the book demonstrates how the securitization, and later terroristization, of Xinjiang and the Uyghurs, is the result of a discursive and political choice of the Chinese state. The author reveals the contingent and unstable nature of such construction, and how it problematizes the inevitability of the rationale behind China's 'war on terror', that has prescribed a brutal crackdown as the most viable approach to governing the tensions that have historically characterized China's rule over the Turkic Muslim ethnic minorities in Xinjiang. This book will be of interest to scholars and students of the politics of contemporary China, security and ethnic minority issues, International Relations and Security, as well as those adopting discursive approaches to the study of security, notably those within the critical security and terrorism studies fields.
This book investigates how Uyghur-related violent conflict and Uyghur ethnic minority identity, religion, and the Xinjiang region, more broadly, became constituted as a 'terrorism' problem for the Chinese state. Building on securitization theory, Critical Terrorism Studies (CTS), and the scholarly definitional debate on terrorism, it develops the concept of terroristization as a critical analytical framework for the study of historical processes of threat construction. Investigating the violent events reported in Xinjiang since the early 1980s, the evolving discursive patterns used by the Chinese state to make sense of violent incidents, and the crackdown policies that the official terrorism discourse has legitimized, the book demonstrates how the securitization, and later terroristization, of Xinjiang and the Uyghurs, is the result of a discursive and political choice of the Chinese state. The author reveals the contingent and unstable nature of such construction, and how it problematizes the inevitability of the rationale behind China's 'war on terror', that has prescribed a brutal crackdown as the most viable approach to governing the tensions that have historically characterized China's rule over the Turkic Muslim ethnic minorities in Xinjiang. This book will be of interest to scholars and students of the politics of contemporary China, security and ethnic minority issues, International Relations and Security, as well as those adopting discursive approaches to the study of security, notably those within the critical security and terrorism studies fields.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
The Methodology of Plant Genetic…
A. C Cassells, Peter W. Jones
Hardcover
R2,654
Discovery Miles 26 540
Biotechnologies of Crop Improvement…
Satbir Singh Gosal, Shabir Hussain Wani
Hardcover
R5,673
Discovery Miles 56 730
Cacao Diseases - A History of Old…
Bryan A. Bailey, Lyndel W. Meinhardt
Hardcover
R4,540
Discovery Miles 45 400
A Research Agenda for Human Rights
Michael Stohl, Alison Brysk
Paperback
R1,037
Discovery Miles 10 370
Genetics and Genomics of Cucurbitaceae
Rebecca Grumet, Nurit Katzir, …
Hardcover
R6,180
Discovery Miles 61 800
Research Handbook on EU Migration and…
Evangelia Tsourdi, Philippe De Bruycker
Hardcover
R7,400
Discovery Miles 74 000
The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights as…
Sybe de Vries, Ulf Bernitz, …
Hardcover
R3,573
Discovery Miles 35 730
|