The construction of ‘criminal outsiders’: Security services and whitening-securitisation in higher education

Laura Connelly, Remi Joseph-Salisbury, Siobhan O'Neill, Kerry Pimblott, Harry Taylor

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This article examines students’ experiences of security services on university campuses. Drawing on semi-structured interviews and a national survey of UK students, we demonstrate that students’ perceptions of safety often rely on excluding non-student “outsiders” and “criminals” from campus. We argue that neither the figure of “the outsider” nor “the criminal” is race-neutral. Thus, the exclusionary impulses held by students and institutions legitimize securitization practices that disproportionately impact racially minoritised students. On the one hand, these practices (re)produce the deep-rooted association between Blackness and criminality. On the other, they (re)produce the whiteness of the university. We conceptualise whitening-securitization to underscore the previously overlooked role of security services in maintaining whiteness and perpetuating institutional racism. In so doing, we argue for a more comprehensive conceptualization of institutional racism in higher education than that found in existing literature, one that considers the peripheral, more informal spaces where racism is sustained.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEthnic and racial studies
Early online date7 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 7 Aug 2024

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