Spiraling toward a New Cold War in the North? The Effect of Mutual and Multifaceted Securitization

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Abstract

Building on a discourse-theoretical reading of securitization theory, this article theorizes and examines how two political entities can become locked in a negative spiral of identification that may lead to a violent confrontation. Through mutual and multifaceted securitization, each party increasingly construes the other as a threat to itself. When this representation spreads beyond the military domain to other dimensions (trade, culture, diplomacy), the other party is projected as "different"and "dangerous"at every encounter: positive mutual recognition is gradually blocked out. Military means then become the logical, legitimate way of relating: contact and collaboration in other issue-areas are precluded. Drawing on official statements 2014-2018, this article investigates how Norwegian-Russian relations shifted from being a collaborative partnership to one of enmity in the High North. The emerging and mutual pattern of representing the other as a threat across issue-areas since 2014 has become an "autonomous"driver of conflict-regardless of whether either party might originally have had offensive designs on the other.

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APA

Wilhelmsen, J. (2021). Spiraling toward a New Cold War in the North? The Effect of Mutual and Multifaceted Securitization. Journal of Global Security Studies, 6(3). https://doi.org/10.1093/jogss/ogaa044

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