Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Studying Danger in Central Asia: Towards a Concept of Everyday Securityscapes
- 3 Security Practices and the Survival of Cafes in Southern Kyrgyzstan
- 4 Securing the Future of Children and Youth: Uzbek Private Kindergartens and Schools in Osh
- 5 Selective Memories, Identities and Places: Everyday Security Practices of the Mughat Lyulis in Osh
- 6 How to Live with a Female Body: Securityscapes against Sexual Violence and Related Interpretation Patterns of Kyrgyz Women
- 7 Romantic Securityscapes of Mixed Couples: Resisting Moral Panic, Surviving in the Present and Imagining the Future
- 8 The Space– Time Continuum of the ‘Dangerous’ Body: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Securityscapes in Kyrgyzstan
- 9 Postscript: Towards a Research Agenda on Security Practices
- Index
9 - Postscript: Towards a Research Agenda on Security Practices
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 March 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Studying Danger in Central Asia: Towards a Concept of Everyday Securityscapes
- 3 Security Practices and the Survival of Cafes in Southern Kyrgyzstan
- 4 Securing the Future of Children and Youth: Uzbek Private Kindergartens and Schools in Osh
- 5 Selective Memories, Identities and Places: Everyday Security Practices of the Mughat Lyulis in Osh
- 6 How to Live with a Female Body: Securityscapes against Sexual Violence and Related Interpretation Patterns of Kyrgyz Women
- 7 Romantic Securityscapes of Mixed Couples: Resisting Moral Panic, Surviving in the Present and Imagining the Future
- 8 The Space– Time Continuum of the ‘Dangerous’ Body: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Securityscapes in Kyrgyzstan
- 9 Postscript: Towards a Research Agenda on Security Practices
- Index
Summary
Introduction
This book has followed an explorative approach to detect securityscapes, which we understand as imaginary concepts that reveal themselves in everyday practices and highlight the spatial as well as conflictive dimensions of security. This explorative character is underscored by the high number and wide variety of case studies discussed in this volume. Our aim has been to study security from ‘below’ by putting the practices of the individuals concerned at the centre of our research approach. We have described and analysed different types of securityscapes of people who perceive themselves– for different reasons– as marginalized in their own society. Our intention here is to understand how individuals manoeuvre their everyday life through situations perceived by them as risky and insecure. We have explored a wide variety of insecure situations, ranging from vague and amorphous feelings of uncertainty, to concrete and explicit exposure to physical harm. Confronted with such security threats, our interest has been to understand security practices that find their expression in common routines of avoiding, separating, mimicking, hiding and so on.
Through a collection of individual case studies, we present and discuss the security practices of diverging social groups. We included minority ethnic groups such as Uzbeks and Lyulis in the city of Osh, and socially marginalized groups such as the LGBT community, but also young females and interethnic mixed couples. As a general finding, our research detected diverging sets of repertoires of security practices and securityscapes for different social groups and communities. A key conclusion is that everyday security practices are framed, above all, by the positionality of the actors and very much depend on the very specific context of (in)security.
The conceptual pathway of our research was pre-structured by two distinct decisions: first, we chose the state of Kyrgyzstan as the common point of reference for our research; and, second, we focused on the everyday security practices of marginalized groups. Both decisions were necessary to make our different case studies comparable. However, we are aware that such decisions meant that our research excluded certain other aspects of security practices that might be of interest for future research.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Surviving Everyday LifeThe Securityscapes of Threatened People in Kyrgyzstan, pp. 203 - 210Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2020