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ISBN 978 1 5261 3660 2 hardback
First published 2020
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Alice Martini is Associate Professor of International Security Studies at the Comillas Pontifical University, Spain, and is currently teaching International Relations (IR) for the Queen Mary, University of London Online Programme, UK. She is also an Associate Researcher in International Relations at the Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain, and at the SantAnna School of Advanced Studies, Italy. She is co-convenor of the British International Studies Associations Critical Studies on Terrorism Working Group, and she sits on the board of EISAs Early Career Development Group. She is a member of several working groups, such as GERI (International Relations Study Group) and ERIS Emerging Research on International Security (SantAnna)), and an editor for Relaciones Internacionales and Security Praxis . Her research focuses on the deconstruction of global discourses of (counter)terrorism, and, more recently, countering (violent) extremism.
Kieran Ford graduated with a PhD in Peace and Conflict Studies from the University of Otago, New Zealand, in 2019. His research focuses on critical approaches to countering extremism, with a particular interest in exploring educational approaches to countering extremism and P/CVE (Prevention/Countering of Violent Extremism) more broadly. His published research includes work on the securitisation of education development, and the normalisation of violence in school textbooks. His current research projects focus on developing agonistic alternatives to CVE strategies.
Richard Jackson is Professor of Peace Studies and Director of the National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies (NCPACS), University of Otago, New Zealand. He is the founding editor and current editor-in-chief of the journal Critical Studies on Terrorism , and the author and editor of eleven books and more than seventy journal articles and book chapters. His recent books include Critical Terrorism Studies at Ten: Contributions, Cases and Future Challenges (Routledge, 2019, co-edited with Harmonie Toros, Lee Jarvis and Charlotte Heath-Kelly), Contemporary Debates on Terrorism (Routledge, 2018, 2nd edition, co-edited with Daniela Pisiou), The Routledge Handbook of Critical Terrorism Studies (Routledge, 2016), Confessions of a Terrorist (Zed Books, 2014) and Terrorism: A Critical Introduction (Palgrave-Macmillan, 2011, co-authored with Marie Breen-Smyth, Jeroen Gunning and Lee Jarvis). His most recent research focuses on pacifism and non-violence in international relations.
Jessica Auchter is Assistant Professor at University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, US. Her research focuses primarily on visual politics and culture. Her book The Politics of Haunting and Memory in International Relations (Routledge 2014), examines the politics and ethics of being haunted by lives, deaths and dead bodies. She has recently published articles in the Journal of Global Security Studies, Review of International Studies, Journal for Cultural Research, International Feminist Journal of Politics and Critical Studies on Security, among others. She is currently working on a book manuscript on the politics of the global dead in security studies.
Marie Breen-Smyth has held academic posts at universities in the US and the UK. She is a founding editor of the Taylor and Francis journal Critical Studies on Terrorism and an initiator of the field of Critical Terrorism Studies. She founded the Institute for Conflict Research in Belfast. She was 20022003 Jennings Randolph Senior Fellow at the United States Institute of Peace and has worked with the Special Representative of the Secretary General of United Nations for Children and Armed Conflict. She publishes on political violence and its impact, ethics and methods in violent contexts, the Northern Ireland conflict, truth recovery and managing violent pasts, victim politics and counting casualties of political violence. She has also made two documentary films.
Mariela Cuadro holds a PhD in International Relations from the National University of La Plata, Argentina. He is a sociologist at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina; a researcher at the National Council of Research (CONICET), Argentina; Professor of Theory of International Relations at the National University of General San Martn (UNSAM), Argentina; and Coordinator of the Latin American Council of Social Sciences (CLACSO) working group Latin America and the Middle East. Her latest publications include International Relations and peripheral orientalism: sectarian readings from Latin America ( CIDOB Revista dAfers Internacionals ) and Multipolarity under construction: new paths and difficult balances in ArgentinaMiddle East relations during the Kirchner governments (in Tawil Kuri, M. (ed.), Latin American Foreign Policies towards the Middle East: Actors, Contexts, and Trends (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016)).
Priya Dixit is Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, Virginia Tech, US. Her research interests are qualitative methods and Critical Security Studies. She is the author of various articles and books on global security, including The State and Terrorists in Nepal and Northern Ireland (Manchester University Press, 2015). She is currently researching ideologies and narratives of far-right and militia violent actors in the US.
Tanja Dramac Jiries holds a PhD from the School of Advanced Studies SantAnna in Pisa, Italy. Her research focuses on the recruitment and radicalisation process of foreign fighters from the Balkans. She holds a BA in Journalism from the University of Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and MA in Political Science from the Central European University in Budapest, Hungary. For her Masters thesis she conducted fieldwork in Srebrenica in order to understand the role of women-led NGOs in peacebuilding. She has worked for the Office of the European Union Special Representative to Bosnia and Herzegovina (EUSR), for the Permanent Mission of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the United Nations in New York City and for a number of grass-roots civil society organisations in the Balkans.
Laura Fernndez de Mosteyrn is Lecturer in Sociology at Universidad a Distancia de Madrid, Spain. She is a member of the Group for the Studies in Society and Politics (UCM-UNED). Her research focuses on how security shapes statecitizens relations, and she teaches in the field of sociology of conflict, deviance and security policy. Her most recent publication is Imagining the future in a difficult present: storylines from Spanish youth, co-authored with M.L. Moran ( Contemporary Social Science , 2017).