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Planetary precarity and 'More-Than-Human Security' : The securitization challenge in the aftermath of COVID-19

Morrissey, John
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http://hdl.handle.net/10379/16864
https://doi.org/10.13025/19870
Publication Date
2021-07-09
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Article
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Morrissey, John. (2021). Planetary Precarity and ‘More-Than-Human Security’: The Securitization Challenge in the Aftermath of COVID-19. Journal of Human Security, 17(1), 15-22. doi:10.12924/johs2021.17010015
Abstract
COVID-19 has elevated anew the import of holistically conceiving human-environmental well-being and tackling the overarching precarities of our ecologies, societies and public health in strategies of securitization. This paper considers the key challenge of reimagining securitization in the aftermath of COVID-19 and makes two core arguments. The first is that in addressing precarity a key starting point lies in being mindful of how it is differentially experienced across multiple social hierarchies in the human world. The paper draws upon Judith Butler s work on frames of seeing to consider how our current moment can elicit a contrapuntal concern for those who have always been precarious but not in view. The second core argument is that it is vital to move beyond a concern for human precarity to a concern for a broader sense of planetary precarity, which in turn prompts the need to strategize for a more-than-human sense of security. Developing the concept of human security , the paper reflects on how we can usefully envision a more-than-human security for a more biologically stable and sustainable planet.
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland