Focusing on the region surrounding the Maroni River, which forms the border between Suriname and French Guiana, we examine how relations between different state and non-state social groups are articulated in terms of security. The region is characterised by multiple "borders" and frontiers of various kinds, the state boundary having the features of an interface or contact zone. Several key collectivities meet in this border zone: native Amazonians, tribal Maroon peoples, migrant Brazilian gold prospectors, and metropolitan French state functionaries. We explore the relationships between these different sets of actors and describe how their mutual encounters center on discourses of human and state security, thus challenging the commonly held view of the region as a stateless zone and showing that the "human security" of citizens from the perspective of the state may compete with locally salient ideas or experiences of well-being.

Securitization, alterity, and the state: Human (in)security on an amazonian frontier / Brightman, Marc; Grotti, Vanessa. - In: REGIONS & COHESION. - ISSN 2152-906X. - STAMPA. - 4:3(2014), pp. 17-38. [10.3167/reco.2014.040302]

Securitization, alterity, and the state: Human (in)security on an amazonian frontier

Brightman, Marc
;
Grotti, Vanessa
2014

Abstract

Focusing on the region surrounding the Maroni River, which forms the border between Suriname and French Guiana, we examine how relations between different state and non-state social groups are articulated in terms of security. The region is characterised by multiple "borders" and frontiers of various kinds, the state boundary having the features of an interface or contact zone. Several key collectivities meet in this border zone: native Amazonians, tribal Maroon peoples, migrant Brazilian gold prospectors, and metropolitan French state functionaries. We explore the relationships between these different sets of actors and describe how their mutual encounters center on discourses of human and state security, thus challenging the commonly held view of the region as a stateless zone and showing that the "human security" of citizens from the perspective of the state may compete with locally salient ideas or experiences of well-being.
2014
Securitization, alterity, and the state: Human (in)security on an amazonian frontier / Brightman, Marc; Grotti, Vanessa. - In: REGIONS & COHESION. - ISSN 2152-906X. - STAMPA. - 4:3(2014), pp. 17-38. [10.3167/reco.2014.040302]
Brightman, Marc; Grotti, Vanessa
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/669705
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