Abstract

It is difficult to think about global connectivity without confronting the importance of the network as a metaphor and a model of contemporary social life and transnational danger. From the dispersed global terrorism threat, to the spread of (computer) viruses, from the identification of organized crime ‘hubs’ to the depiction of al Qaeda terrorism, the network has become a key metaphor of contemporary danger. This paper analyzes and critiques the network as a mode of security knowledge and as a risk technology. It regards invocations of network not simply as a metaphorical representation of danger, but as devices that render the world actionable and amenable to intervention. More than a metaphor for capturing threat discursively, the network is a device for calculating and classifying security risks and acting upon them. ‘Fighting the network’, in this paper, refers to the development of a critical perspective on the ubiquity of the metaphorical network in security practice and its operation as a security technology.

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