Speculative Security: The Politics of Pursuing Terrorist Monies
By (Author) Marieke de Goede
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
18th April 2012
United States
General
Non Fiction
Economics, Finance, Business and Management
International law
327.73
Paperback
328
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 23mm
Since the terrorist acts of September 11, 2001, finance and security have become joined in new ways to produce particular targets of state surveillance. In Speculative Security, Marieke de Goede describes how previously unscrutinized practices such as donations and remittances, especially across national borders, have been affected by security measures that include datamining, asset freezing, and transnational regulation. These "precrime" measures focus on transactions that are perfectly legal but are thought to hold a specific potential to support terrorism. The pursuit of suspect monies is not simply an issue of financial regulation, she shows, but a broad political, social, and even cultural phenomenon with profound effects on everyday life.
"While Afghanistan and Iraq grabbed the headlines, much of the war on terror went on below the radar. Marieke de Goede has written a richly detailed and theoretically astute study which acts as a compelling and invaluable guide to the complicated world of terrorist and counter-terrorist finance."Stuart Elden, author of Terror and Territory
"Speculative Security opens up the empirical terrain of terrorist monies and the designation and pursuit of those monies to the wide-ranging interdisciplinary constituency of academics who study money and finance. The books detailed and rich coverage of the way that the regulated financial sector, circuits of kinship, and charitable foundations are all drawn into the domain of security provides an exhaustive account of this terrain."Paul Langley, Durham University
Marieke de Goede is professor of politics at the University of Amsterdam. She is the author of Virtue, Fortune, and Faith: A Genealogy of Finance (Minnesota, 2005) and coeditor, with Louise Amoore, of Risk and the War on Terror.