« Political Violence and Security Practices » : différence entre les versions
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Version du 9 février 2018 à 00:59
Faculté | Faculté des sciences de la société |
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Département | Département de science politique et relations internationales |
Professeur(s) |
Stephan Davidshofer Christian Olsson[1][2][3] |
Lectures
The main objective of this course is to encourage a critical analysis of past and present forms of organized violence. While studies on peace and conflict have traditionally focused mainly on the statistical dimension of the construction of "armed conflicts" (analysed from databases), this course focuses on the sociohistorical construction of war and security. To do this, teaching will be divided into two parts.
First of all, it will analyse historical contingencies and the "conditions of possibility" of organised violence and war. This is in order to understand the historical variations at the macrosociological level of the practice of warfare and the process that has led in the West since the end of the Middle Ages to the state monopoly of violence. The central issue here will be to grasp the implications of the practice of war as a condition for the constitution of modern European states. The issues that will emerge from this section will touch on war as the sole prerogative of the state and the implications of applying this understanding of organized violence in non-Western contexts.
The second part of the course focuses on the challenges of professionalizing security. A phenomenon made possible by the growing bureaucratization of Western states, it will involve analysing the practices of security professionals (military, police, private military companies, intelligence services, etc.). While maintaining a historical approach, this dive into the "world" of security professionals will take place at the microsociological level. This section will be structured around questions related to the constitution of these professions in relation to the state and the possibility of security and political violence in a globalised world.
The two parts are based on the historical sociology of the State, drawing heavily on the work of Max Weber, Norbert Elias, Charles Tilly and Pierre Bourdieu. The historical sociology of the State aims to approach history not as a data mining enterprise, but as a way of problematizing the present.
Lectures
Political violence and the practice of security
The birth of modern warfare: war-making and state-making from a Western perspective
Transformations of war and violence in Europe
War beyond the West: is the modern state a Western invention?
What is non-state violence? The Case of Afghan Conflict
Intervention: Reinventing war?
The transformation of contemporary security practices: between war and global policing?
The transformation of contemporary security practices: the logic of risk
Privatized coercion: from mercenarism to private military companies
Annexes
References
Cours
La violence politique et la pratique de la sécurité
La naissance de la guerre moderne : war-making et state-making dans une perspective occidentale
Transformations de la guerre et de la violence en Europe
La guerre au-delà de l’Occident : l’État moderne est-il une invention occidentale ?
Qu’est-ce que la violence non-étatique ? Le cas des conflits afghans
L’intervention : la guerre réinventée ?
La transformation des pratiques contemporaines de sécurité : entre guerre et police globale ?
La transformation des pratiques contemporaines de sécurité : la logique du risqué
La coercition privatisée : du mercenariat aux compagnies militaires privées
Renseignement et logiques de surveillance
Annexes
References