
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Antecedents and Assumptions of Securitization Theory Antecedents and Assumptions of Securitization Theory
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Connecting FPA and Securitization: A Multi-Faceted Research Agenda Connecting FPA and Securitization: A Multi-Faceted Research Agenda
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Setting the Agenda of Threats: The Context of the Securitizing Agent Setting the Agenda of Threats: The Context of the Securitizing Agent
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Policy as an Intersubjective Process: The Role of the Audience Policy as an Intersubjective Process: The Role of the Audience
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Moving away from Linearity: Addressing De- and Resecuritization Moving away from Linearity: Addressing De- and Resecuritization
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Looking Forward: New Theoretical and Empirical Avenues of Exploration Looking Forward: New Theoretical and Empirical Avenues of Exploration
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References References
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10 Foreign Policy Analysis and Securitization
Get accessRoxanna Sjöstedt is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Lund University. Her research focus concerns international relations and international security; foreign policy analysis; and peace and conflict studies. More specifically, she has conducted research on securitization, identity, norms, epidemics, international intervention, and post-civil war electoral politics. She has published on these topics in, for example, Security Dialogue; Security Studies; Foreign Policy Analysis; European Journal of International Security; Nationalism and Ethnic Politics; and International Relations.
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Published:22 February 2024
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Abstract
To what extent can securitization theory help us to engage with the puzzles and problems of foreign policy analysis (FPA)? And how can FPA scholarship contribute to the development of the assumptions of securitization? This chapter will probe these questions and attempt to demonstrate that these seemingly disparate research traditions indeed both complement and inform one another. Securitization theory has habitually been viewed as a theory of international relations (IR) rather than FPA. However, hot topics such as climate change, immigration, and epidemics increasingly become the core of both research fields. Just as the problem-driven and agency focus of FPA research goes hand in hand with the central tenets of securitization, securitization theory contributes to the development of FPA by problematizing the decision-making of different foreign policy problems, by using a different set of assumptions.
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