2016
DOI: 10.22151/politikon.29.4
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Human Rights Activism and the (De-)securitization of the ‘Other’

Abstract: The article contributes to the scholarly debate through casting light on the (de-)securitizing character of human rights invocations by civil society organizations (CSOs) in ethno-political conflicts. The securitization concept is an innovative tool for understanding the effects of human rights activism on inter-group relationships: A securitizing move asserts an existential threat to a reference object and demands all necessary means to prevent it. Securitization reinforces the hostile 'self'-'other' conflict… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…In other words, if the idea about the enemy remains, even only within the periphery of the audience, the conflict continues (Georgi, 2016). The problem remains that, once securitised, groups perceive one another as threats to the "Selves".…”
Section: The Audience Identity and Desecuritisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, if the idea about the enemy remains, even only within the periphery of the audience, the conflict continues (Georgi, 2016). The problem remains that, once securitised, groups perceive one another as threats to the "Selves".…”
Section: The Audience Identity and Desecuritisationmentioning
confidence: 99%