16 research outputs found
Archipelagos of Fear:CT technology and the securitisation of everyday life
In this chapter, I re-examine the transformation of our cities under the impression of recent terrorist attacks from a critical perspective. I argue that a âdiscourse of fearâ enables a process that turns ever more of our public spaces into âsafe spacesâ which are essentially âquasi-publicâ only â quasi-public in the sense that they can be accessed only by those citizens fortunate enough to have the right credentials, thus excluding or âotheringâ all those we deem to be âundesirablesâ, however defined. I point out that this exclusion already is a common practice â and not necessarily connected to the threat of terrorism. Rather, in my view a âhostile architectureâ has emerged that targets everyone who does not fit in. To defend my point of view, I discuss concepts such as âdefensible spaceâ, âarchitecture of fearâ and âarchipelagos of fearâ in the shape of loosely connected inner-cities citadels and gated communities in the suburbs.</p
The land of black gold, corruption, poverty and sabotage:Overcoming the Niger Deltaâs problems through the establishment of a Nigerian Non-Renewable Revenue Special Fund (NNRSF)
Through statistics published by the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), the paper explores why oilfield sabotage from 2009 to 2015 remains a problem in the Niger Delta, despite the 2009 amnesty programme. It explains why some of these incidents are a direct result of the failure to implement socio-economic development in successive state agencies due to corruption, a consequence of the natural resource curse. The article then explores why and how a Nigerian Non-Renewable Revenue Special Fund overseen by the United Nations Development Programme should be established which would not only manage a portion of oil revenue funds from the Niger Delta but also initiate valid social and economic projects in order to help reduce the prevalence of sabotage and instability in the region