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Book Cover
E-book
Author Hendricks, Mohamed Natheem

Title Manufacturing terrorism in Africa : the securitisation of South African Muslims / Mohamed Natheem Hendricks
Published Singapore : Palgrave Macmillan, 2020

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Description 1 online resource (257 pages)
Series Islam and Global Studies
Islam and Global Studies
Contents 1. Prolegomenon: The White Widow-The Kenyan Westgate Mall Attack -- 2. The United State: Pivotal in the Terrorism Debate in Africa -- 3. Conceptualising Securitisation -- 4. The Invisible College -- 5. Expertise, Epistemes and the Construction of a Suspect Community -- 6. Writing Insecurity: Representations of Muslims and Islam in the South African Print Media -- 7. Conclusion
Summary "Theoretically sophisticated, empirically rich and always interesting, Manufacturing Terrorism in Africa adds greatly to our knowledge of the globally dominant terrorism discourse and its damaging effects on community relations and counterterrorism policy-making. Highly recommended."--Professor Richard Jackson, University of Otago, New Zealand "Natheem Hendricks challenges the sensationalist media hysteria on so-called "Islamic terror in South Africa". He also presents a much-needed corrective to a small coterie of so-called experts who spew Islamophobic tropes about a growing "Islamic terror threat in South Africa." -- Dr. A. Rashied Omar, Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame, USA This book uses Securitisation Theory to explore how Muslims have been constructed as a security issue in Africa after the 9/11 attacks in the United States. These attacks became the rationale for the US's Global War on Terror (GWOT). The centrality of Africa as an arena to execute the GWOT is the focus of this book. This book explores, particularly, how western-centred security discourses around Muslims has permeated South African security discourse in the post-apartheid period. It claims that the popular press and the local think-tank community were critical knowledge-sites that imported rather than interrogated debates which have underpinned policy-initiatives such as the GWOT. Such theorisation seems contrary to the original architects of securitisation theory who maintain that issues become security concerns when institutional voices declare these as such. However, this book confirms that non-institutional voices have securitised the African Muslims by equating them with terrorism. This book illustrates that such securitisation reproduces partisan knowledge that promote Western interests. Dr Mohamed Natheem Hendricks, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa. His interest in security matters was sparked by debates related to Regional, Water and Human Security
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Terrorism -- South Africa
Terrorism -- South Africa -- Prevention
Terrorism -- South Africa -- Religious aspects -- Islam
Terrorism, armed struggle.
Peace studies & conflict resolution.
Crime & criminology.
International relations.
Political Science -- Political Freedom & Security -- Terrorism.
Political Science -- Peace.
Social Science -- Criminology.
Political Science -- Political Freedom & Security -- International Security.
Terrorism
Terrorism -- Prevention
Terrorism -- Religious aspects -- Islam
South Africa
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9789811556265
9811556261