Security and Development (POLS7325)
Information valid for Semester 1, 2025
Course level
Postgraduate Coursework
Faculty
Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
School
Politic Sc & Internat Studies
Units
2
Duration
One Semester
Attendance mode
In Person
Class hours
General contact hours 1.0 Hour/ Week
Seminar 1.0 Hour/ Week
Recommended prerequisite
8 units of postgraduate POLS-coded courses
Assessment methods
Essays
Course enquiries
Doctor Heloise Weber ()
Current course offerings
Course offerings | Location | Mode | Course Profile |
Semester 1, 2025 (24/02/2025 - 21/06/2025) | St Lucia | In Person | Course Profile |
Please Note: Course profiles marked as not available may still be in development.
Course description
That security and development are intricately linked may be a common assumption widely shared. However, there are competing approaches to understanding how security and development may be related to one another, and these in turn are contingent upon how security and development are conceptualised. In this course we familiarise ourselves with new conceptual and methodological approaches aimed at understanding and explaining not only the co-constitution of development and security, but also contexts in which development creates insecurities, or in which security police has adverse implications for development aspirations. By investigating case examples from both, historical and contemporary contexts and settings, we critically examine the many connections and tensions associated with the pursuit of development and security objectives. Topics we cover include Human Security, anticolonial struggles over security and development, the politics and political economy of Fragile States, extractivism and insecurity, the migration-prison industrial complex, authoritarian populism, and 'Zapatismo'.