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Contesting danger: a new agenda for policy and scholarship on Central Asia
Lookup NU author(s)
Dr Nick Megoran
Author(s)
Heathershaw J, Megoran N
Publication type
Article
Journal
International Affairs
Year
2011
Volume
87
Issue
3
Pages
589-612
ISSN (print)
0020-5850
ISSN (electronic)
1468-2346
Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.
Western geopolitical discourse misrepresents and constructs Central Asia as an inherently and essentially dangerous place. This article identifies how the region is made knowable to a US–UK audience through three mutually reinforcing dimensions of endangerment: Central Asia as
obscure
,
oriental
, and
fractious
. This is evidenced in the writings of conflict resolution and security analysts, the practices of governments, the activities of international aid agencies, and numerous lurid films, documentaries and novels. It is argued that this pervasive ‘discourse of danger’ obscures knowledge of the region, deforms scholarship and, because it has policy implications, actually endangers Central Asia. This argument is demonstrated through a discussion of how policy-making and practice is informed by this discourse of danger, and considered with reference to the violence in Osh in 2010. It concludes by raising the challenge to policy-makers, journalists and academics to contest this western geopolitical discourse and provide better accounts of how danger is experienced by Central Asians.
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2346.2011.00992.x
DOI
10.1111/j.1468-2346.2011.00992.x
Notes
Sets an agenda for Central Asian studies. Presented at the UK's leading think-tank on foreign affaris, Chatham House, as an invited seminar. 50% each
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