Search for dissertations about: "securitisation"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 6 swedish dissertations containing the word securitisation.
-
1. Russian political language and public opinion on the West, NATO and Chechnya : securitisation theory reconsidered
Abstract : .... READ MORE
-
2. Constructing a Post-Soviet International Political Reality : Russian Foreign Policy Towards the Newly Independent States 1990-95
Abstract : The liberal ideas of New Political Thinking, introduced as the governing paradigm of Soviet foreign policy by Mikhail Gorbachev in the late 1980's, were to a substantial extent "adopted" and applied by the new leadership of post-Soviet Russia, not only in its dealings with the Western world, but also when formulating a foreign policy towards the 14 Newly Independent States. However, by mid-1992, a mere six months after the Soviet collapse, there were clear indications that a dramatic change in Russian foreign policy towards its next-door neighbours had come about. READ MORE
-
3. The Securitisation of Migration: Towards an Understanding of Migration Policy Changes in the 1990s. The Case of Sweden
Abstract : .... READ MORE
-
4. Humanity Washed Ashore : Visual representations of practices, people, and the borders of Europe
Abstract : Over the past decade, Frontex (European Border and Coast Guard Agency) has emerged as a central actor for the European Union’s migration and border policies. This doctoral dissertation examines the role of Frontex in constructing understandings of borders, practices, and people present in these spaces as well as more ambivalent representations of risk, unease, and (in)security. READ MORE
-
5. Destabilising Citizenship Practices? : Social work and undocumented migrants in Sweden
Abstract : Globalisation of the economy, as well as movement of people and increasing securitisation of borders, have challenged and to different degrees destabilised forms of national belonging and solidarity. Such developments produce new borders and boundaries, separate citizens from non-citizens and create hierarchies of “deservingness”. READ MORE