Security, Uncertainty and Politics of Complexity
Course content
Post–Cold War global order is characterized by the emergence of “new threats” such as climate change, terrorism, attacks on critical infrastructure, and migration smuggling, among others. Common to the characterization of these new threats is their unpredictability, either due to the impossibility to calculate the extent of the risks or the increasingly decentralized, networked organization of the imagined adversaries. As a result, it is often argued we live in an age of crisis and uncertainty.
This course deals with the question of how security professionals and experts deal with and govern uncertainty. It specifically discusses scientific worldviews imported from network science, chaos theory, complex adaptive systems theory, and cybernetics into security governance, which naturalize uncertainty, failure, and experimentation in dealing with crises. The course engages with different strands of security studies scholarships to enable an understanding of uncertainty as a multi-faceted concept.
The course is organized into three blocks. The first part examines the conceptual apparatus of systems-cybernetic thinking and its increasing relevance in International Relations. The second part looks into particular systems-cybernetic concepts used in security establishments and international organizations and zooms into a rethinking of risk/uncertainty management by discussing practical examples from peacebuilding, warfare, climate change, terrorism, critical infrastructure protection, migration management, organized crime, and cybersecurity, among others. The final part of the course will introduce theoretical schools of thought that aim to overcome, either pragmatically or critically, the negative impacts of systems-cybernetic thinking in security governance. This part will include worldviews that are yet to be explored in security studies, to enable constructing/imagining alternative notions and futurities of security and uncertainty.
The tentative list of topics is as follows:
- Introduction to systems-cybernetic thinking: a new paradigm in International Relations?
- How do imagined futurities shape security practices? Towards a theory of speculative security
- Introducing the concept of resilience in security governance
- Uncertainty as an organized principle of the Surveillance Society
- Revolution in Military Affairs and the concept of network-centric warfare
- The logic of preemption in the case of counter-terrorism: War on Terror and beyond
- Critical infrastructure protection and vital systems security
- Living with crisis – examining securitization of climate change
- Changing paradigms of crime control in the age of uncertainty
- Migration management in a world of connectivity
- Systems-cybernetic thinking as a cultural logic of late capitalism?
- Techno-feminists re-imagine uncertainty!
- Decolonial approaches to cybernetic security governance: or is decolonial thinking a mode of cybernetic thinking after all?
- Beyond critique: pragmatic worldviews in security studies
Full-degree students enrolled at the Department of Political Science, UCPH
- MSc in Political Science
- MSc in Social Science
- MSc in Security Risk Management
- Bachelor in Political Science
Full-degree students enrolled at the Faculty of Social Science, UCPH
- Master Programme in Social Data Science
- Master programme in Global Development
The course is open to:
- Exchange and Guest students from abroad
- Credit students from Danish Universities
- Open University students
Knowledge:
By the end of the course, students will be able to
- Identify theoretical underpinnings of uncertainty management in security environments
- Understand modes of systems-cybernetic governance involved in the management of military, political, economic, societal, and environmental security through practical examples
- Analyze merits and drawbacks of orthodoxal, critical, and post-critical approaches to systems-cybernetic security governance
Skills:
By the end of the course, students will be able to
- Incorporate theoretical discussions into the empirical studies on governance of uncertainty
- Understand differences within systems-cybernetic thinking as applied across various security issues in various contexts
Competences:
By the end of the course, students will be able to
- Identify the novel features of systems-cybernetic security governance in comparison to more traditional forms of security management
Teaching will combine lecture style elements with interactive discussions, group works and presentations.
The tentative literature list is as follows:
Amoore, L., 2013. The politics of possibility: Risk and security beyond probability. Duke University Press.
Andrejevic, M., 2016. Theorizing drones and droning theory. In Drones and unmanned aerial systems (pp. 21-43). Springer, Cham.
Aradau, C., & Blanke, T. (2022). Algorithmic reason: The new government of self and other. Oxford University Press
Arquilla, J. and Ronfeldt, D., 2001. Networks and netwars: The future of terror, crime, and militancy. Rand Corporation.
Austin, J.L., 2019. A parasitic critique for international relations. International Political Sociology, 13(2), pp.215-231.
Austin, J.L., 2019. Security compositions. European Journal of International Security, 4(3), pp.249-273.
Bellanova, R., Jacobsen, K. L., & Monsees, L. (2020). Taking the trouble: science, technology and security studies. Critical Studies on Security, 8(2), 87-100.
Bousquet, A., 2008. Chaoplexic warfare or the future of military organization. International Affairs, 84(5), pp.915-929.
Bousquet, A. and Curtis, S., 2011. Beyond models and metaphors: complexity theory, systems thinking and international relations. Cambridge review of international affairs, 24(01), pp.43-62.
Collier, S.J. and Lakoff, A., 2015. Vital systems security: Reflexive biopolitics and the government of emergency. Theory, Culture & Society, 32(2), pp.19-51.
Cooper, M., 2006. Pre-empting emergence: the biological turn in the war on terror. Theory, culture & society, 23(4), pp.113-135.
Corry, O., 2012. Securitisation and ‘riskification’: Second-order security and the politics of climate change. Millennium, 40(2), pp.235-258.
Deleuze, G., 2017. Postscript on the Societies of Control. In Surveillance, crime and social control (pp. 35-39). Routledge.
de Goede, M., 2012. Fighting the network: a critique of the network as a security technology. Distinktion: Scandinavian Journal of Social Theory, 13(3), pp.215-232.
Feigenbaum, A. (2015). From cyborg feminism to drone feminism: Remembering women’s anti-nuclear activisms. Feminist Theory, 16(3), 265-288.
Galič, M., Timan, T. and Koops, B.J., 2017. Bentham, Deleuze and beyond: An overview of surveillance theories from the panopticon to participation. Philosophy & Technology, 30(1), pp.9-37
Glouftsios, G., & Loukinas, P. (2022). Perceiving and Controlling Maritime Flows. Technology, Kinopolitics, and the Governmentalization of Vision. International Political Sociology, 16(3), olac010.
Grosfoguel, R., 2011. Decolonizing post-colonial studies and paradigms of political-economy: Transmodernity, decolonial thinking, and global coloniality. Transmodernity: journal of peripheral cultural production of the luso-hispanic world, 1(1).
Grove, N. S. (2023). Receding resilience: On the planetary moods of disruption. Review of International Studies, 49(1), 3-19.
Haggerty, K.D. and Ericson, R.V., 2017. The surveillant assemblage. Surveillance, Crime and Social Control, pp.61-78.
Haraway, D., 2006. A cyborg manifesto: Science, technology, and socialist-feminism in the late 20th century. In The international handbook of virtual learning environments (pp. 117-158). Springer, Dordrecht.
Hoijtink, M., 2014. Capitalizing on emergence: The ‘new’civil security market in Europe. Security Dialogue, 45(5), pp.458-475.
Lemke, T., 2021. The Government of Things: Foucault and the New Materialisms. New York University Press.
Methmann, C. and Oels, A., 2015. From ‘fearing’to ‘empowering’climate refugees: Governing climate-induced migration in the name of resilience. Security Dialogue, 46(1), pp.51-68.
Parslow, J. (2021). The Mechanical Atatürk: Cybernetics and State Violence in the Second Turkish Republic. International Journal of Middle East Studies, 53(4), 569-588.
Paul, R. and Roos, C., 2019. Towards a new ontology of crisis? Resilience in EU migration governance. European Security, 28(4), pp.393-412
Rindzevičiūtė, E., 2020. Soviet policy sciences and earth system governmentality. Modern Intellectual History, 17(1), pp.179-208.
Wilcox, L., 2017. Drones, swarms and becoming-insect: Feminist utopias and posthuman politics. Feminist Review, 116(1), pp.25-45.
When registered you will be signed up for exam.
- Full-degree students – sign up at Selfservice on KUnet
- Exchange and guest students from abroad – sign up through Mobility Online and Selfservice
- Credit students from Danish universities - sign up through this website.
- Open University students - sign up through this website.
The dates for the exams are found here Exams – Faculty of Social Sciences - University of Copenhagen (ku.dk)
Please note that it is your own responsibility to check for overlapping exam dates.
- ECTS
- 15 ECTS
- Type of assessment
-
Written examination
- Type of assessment details
- Written free assignment
- Marking scale
- 7-point grading scale
- Censorship form
- No external censorship
Criteria for exam assessment
Grade 12 is given for an outstanding performance: the student lives up to the course's goal description in an independent and convincing manner with no or few and minor shortcomings
Grade 7 is given for a good performance: the student is confidently able to live up to the goal description, albeit with several shortcomings
Grade 02 is given for an adequate performance: the minimum acceptable performance in which the student is only able to live up to the goal description in an insecure and incomplete manner
Single subject courses (day)
- Category
- Hours
- Class Instruction
- 56
- English
- 56
Kursusinformation
- Language
- English
- Course number
- ASTK18440U
- ECTS
- 15 ECTS
- Programme level
- Full Degree Master
Bachelor
- Duration
-
1 semester
- Placement
- Spring
- Price
-
http://polsci.ku.dk/uddannelser/eftervidereuddannelse/aabent_universitet/
- Studyboard
- Department of Political Science, Study Council
Contracting department
- Department of Political Science
- Department of Anthropology
- Social Data Science
Contracting faculty
- Faculty of Social Sciences
Course Coordinator
- Nijat Eldarov (13-736e6f6679336a71696677747b456e6b7833707a336970)
Are you BA- or KA-student?
Courseinformation of students