Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/15402
Title: The Racialized Surveillant Assemblage: Islam and the fear of Terrorism
Authors: Sharma, S
Nijjar, J
Keywords: assemblages;Islam;racialization;racism;radicalisation;surveillance;terrorism
Issue Date: 12-Jan-2018
Publisher: Routledge (Taylor & Francis Group)
Citation: Sharma, S. and Nijjar, J. (2018) 'The Racialized Surveillant Assemblage: Islam and the fear of Terrorism', Popular Communication, 16 (1), pp. 72 - 85. doi: 10.1080/15405702.2017.1412441.
Abstract: Increasingly intense, multifaceted, and integrated forms of surveillance are a central feature of Western national security attempts to counter the violence of “Islamic terrorism.” However, there has been a lack of research examining contemporary regimes of surveillance as profoundly racialized. This study examines how counterterrorism efforts are underpinned by ill-conceived accounts of radicalization that preemptively construct Muslim migrants as a threat to national security, thereby justifying practices of mass surveillance that further propagate racist discourses of uncertainty and risk. We advance an analysis of a racialized surveillant assemblage, which is generative of mutable, algorithmically determined profiles of the Muslim-as-terrorist. Such a regime of mass surveillance effectively puts all Muslims under suspicion. We highlight that, paradoxically, mass data-mining operations stifle, rather than aid, the identification of actual terrorist threats. This conditions a paranoid surveillant racism, through which Muslim populations become modulated as an unknowable threat of death and destruction.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/15402
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/15405702.2017.1412441
ISSN: 1540-5702
Appears in Collections:Dept of Social and Political Sciences Research Papers

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