Rethinking Securities in an Emergent Technoscientific New World Order (e-bog) af -
Nhemachena, Artwell (redaktør)

Rethinking Securities in an Emergent Technoscientific New World Order e-bog

436,85 DKK (inkl. moms 546,06 DKK)
The emergent technoscientific New World Order is being legitimised through discourses on openness and inclusivity. The paradox is that openness implies vulnerability and insecurities, particularly where closure would offer shelter. While some actors, including NGOs, preach openness of African societies, Africans clamour for protection, restitution and restoration. Africans struggle for ownershi...
E-bog 436,85 DKK
Forfattere Nhemachena, Artwell (redaktør)
Forlag Langaa RPCIG
Udgivet 13 marts 2018
Længde 428 sider
Genrer Politics and government
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9789956764839
The emergent technoscientific New World Order is being legitimised through discourses on openness and inclusivity. The paradox is that openness implies vulnerability and insecurities, particularly where closure would offer shelter. While some actors, including NGOs, preach openness of African societies, Africans clamour for protection, restitution and restoration. Africans struggle for ownership and access to housing, for national, cultural, religious, economic, and social belonging that would offer them the necessary security and protection, including protection from the global vicissitudes and matrices of power. In the presence of these struggles, to presuppose openness would be to celebrate vulnerability and insecurities. This book examines ways in which emergent technologies expose Africans and, more generally, peoples of the global south to political, economic, social, cultural and religious shocks occasioned by the coloniality of the global matrices of power. It notes that there is the use , by global elites , of technologies to incite postmodern revolutions designed to compound the vicissitudes and imponderables in the already unsettled lives of people north and south. Particularly targeted by these technologies are African and other governments that do not cooperate in the fulfilment of the interests of the hegemonic global elites. The book is handy to students and practitioners in security studies, African studies, development studies, global studies, policy studies, and political science.