Abstract
Anthony Burke’s ‘security cosmopolitanism’ is a fresh and thought-provoking contribution to critical theorizing about security. In this discussion piece, I would like to join Burke’s call for ‘security cosmopolitanism’ by way of arguing against ‘security communitarianism’. I understand the latter as a particular approach that seeks to limit the scope of security to one’s community – be it the ‘nation-state’ or ‘civilization’. I will suggest that arguing against ‘security communitarianism’ requires paying further attention to the postcolonial critique of cosmopolitanism.
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Pinar Bilgin
Pinar Bilgin is an associate professor of International Relations at Bilkent University. She is the author of Regional Security in the Middle East: A Critical Perspective (2005), and The International in Security, Security in the International (forthcoming).