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1. Lee Jarvis (Loughborough, UK), Michael Lister (Oxford Brookes, UK), and Akinyemi Oyawale (Warwick, UK) - New Directions in Vernacular Security Research: An Introduction.- 2. Tinatin Khomeriki (Free University of Tbilisi, Georgia) Horns, Thorns and Territory: Vernacular (in)Security in Tbilisi after the Rose Revolution.- 3. Albert Cano (LSE, UK) Lacanian Vernacular Security: Analysing Peace Walls and Pop Culture in Northern Ireland.- 4. Joshua Akintayo (Kent, UK) Deifying the Vernacular: The Borno Model and the limits of Over-romanticizing Community-Driven Security.- 5. Miranda Booth (Charles Darwin, Australia) Exploring polycentrism and vernacular security in the Pacific.- 6. Muhammed Onuh Copoglu (Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey), What Fire Tells us about Security? A Vernacular Approach on the Security-Politics-Environment Nexus in Turkey.- 7. Andrew Whiting (RHUL, UK) – Militarised masculinity as ‘everyday’ instrumentality: A narrative analysis of popularised soldier’s autobiographies.- 8. Sabrina Ahmed (UEA, UK) - “The Police are like terrorists”: Vernacular security stories from the refugee camps in Bangladesh.- 9. Marine Guéguin (Leeds Beckett, UK) Everyday security practices in an exceptional space: the French carceral system.- 10. Fabrizio Leonardo Cuccu (DCU, Ireland) “You have a responsibility to tell this story”. Positionality, subjugated knowledges, and researching ‘vernacular’ security in Tunisia.- 11. Tom Martin (Open University, UK) Vernacular (national) security strategies.

New Directions in Vernacular Security Research

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    A Hardback by Lee Jarvis

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      View other formats and editions of New Directions in Vernacular Security Research by Lee Jarvis

      Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
      Publication Date: 11/09/2025
      ISBN13: 9783031977169, 978-3031977169
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      1. Lee Jarvis (Loughborough, UK), Michael Lister (Oxford Brookes, UK), and Akinyemi Oyawale (Warwick, UK) - New Directions in Vernacular Security Research: An Introduction.- 2. Tinatin Khomeriki (Free University of Tbilisi, Georgia) Horns, Thorns and Territory: Vernacular (in)Security in Tbilisi after the Rose Revolution.- 3. Albert Cano (LSE, UK) Lacanian Vernacular Security: Analysing Peace Walls and Pop Culture in Northern Ireland.- 4. Joshua Akintayo (Kent, UK) Deifying the Vernacular: The Borno Model and the limits of Over-romanticizing Community-Driven Security.- 5. Miranda Booth (Charles Darwin, Australia) Exploring polycentrism and vernacular security in the Pacific.- 6. Muhammed Onuh Copoglu (Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey), What Fire Tells us about Security? A Vernacular Approach on the Security-Politics-Environment Nexus in Turkey.- 7. Andrew Whiting (RHUL, UK) – Militarised masculinity as ‘everyday’ instrumentality: A narrative analysis of popularised soldier’s autobiographies.- 8. Sabrina Ahmed (UEA, UK) - “The Police are like terrorists”: Vernacular security stories from the refugee camps in Bangladesh.- 9. Marine Guéguin (Leeds Beckett, UK) Everyday security practices in an exceptional space: the French carceral system.- 10. Fabrizio Leonardo Cuccu (DCU, Ireland) “You have a responsibility to tell this story”. Positionality, subjugated knowledges, and researching ‘vernacular’ security in Tunisia.- 11. Tom Martin (Open University, UK) Vernacular (national) security strategies.

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