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The intellectual origins of this book lie in conversations that the authors first had during 2007 and 2010 at the University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus, about the absence of any serious engagement between literatures produced by International Relations and Security Studies on the one hand and Public Opinion, Political Psychology and Behaviour on the other. Countless open-day events at the Cornwall Campus gave us opportunities to develop these conversations into more structured presentations, and we took the politics of threat as our central focus for discussion. Over the years our double-act was only encouraged by lively audience participation – among prospective students and their families alike – and we became convinced that there was something intellectually and politically valuable not only in working across disciplinary boundaries, but also in engaging in participatory forms of research in politics. The advent of the 2010 UK National Security Strategy and its renewed commitment to citizen engagement provided the catalyst for a joint application in 2011 to the UK Economic and Social Research Council entitled ‘Public Perceptions of Threat in Britain: Security in an Age of Austerity’ (grant number ES/J004596/1) and it is on the basis of this programme of research – and out of those early conversations and open days – that the book has gradually developed.
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