@article{666836a531e1407ebe8703f67b190eea,
title = "Who you gonna call? Theorising everyday security practices in urban spaces with multiple security actors – The case of Beirut's Southern Suburbs",
abstract = "Who do urban residents turn to in everyday security incidents? Why do some go to the police in certain locations, others to armed nonstate actors or kinship networks? We explore the ways in which residents and security actors – state and nonstate – negotiate everyday (in)security in contested urban spaces with multiple security actors. We consider how hybrid security assemblages are shaped by physical and social space and how everyday security practices shape space. We use Beirut's Southern Suburbs (Dahiyeh) as a site of theorisation, bringing local vernacular experiences into dialogue with Bourdieu's concepts of capital, habitus, doxa and field to develop a spatially dynamic analytical framework. Using this framework, we map security actors' different types and sizes of capital and how this capital is affected by residents' habitus and doxa within the everyday security field. We introduce the notion of {\textquoteleft}translocal habitus{\textquoteright} to capture the impact of families' origins outside Dahiyeh on everyday security dynamics. The framework we develop contributes to the spatialisation, vernacularisation and pluralisation of everyday security studies, furthers the spatialisation of Bourdieu and adds to the literature on hybrid forms of governance. Our analysis is based on extensive fieldwork, including over 150 interviews and {\textquoteleft}street chats{\textquoteright} with residents and security actors in and around Dahiyeh.",
keywords = "Beirut, Bourdieu, Contested urban space, Dahiyeh, Everyday security, Hizbullah, Hybrid governance, Hybrid security assemblages, Lebanon, Policing, Translocal habitus",
author = "Jeroen Gunning and Dima Smaira",
note = "Funding Information: We would like to express our gratitude to our interviewees for making time to talk with us. A special thanks goes to our research assistant for helping with many of the interviews and the walking tours and for their insights into everyday security practices in Dahiyeh. We thank Hizbullah's Media Office and the Lebanese Ministry of Interior and Municipalities for granting permission to conduct {\textquoteleft}street chats{\textquoteright} during elections. We are grateful to Alex Mahoudeau for introducing us to the method of walking tours and to Fabrice Ripoll for sharing his thoughts on spatialising Bourdieu. We would like to thank the Durham Global Security Institute for funding the June 2017 {\textquoteleft}Cities of Violence – Violence of the City{\textquoteright} Workshop at Durham University, which provided the impetus for this article, and the Carnegie Corporation of New York for funding the September 2019 {\textquoteleft}Challenges of Transnational Movements and Inclusionary States in the MENA{\textquoteright} workshop at the Lebanese American University, Beirut, at which a summary of our research was presented. We thank Jutta Bakonyi and Kirsti Stuv{\o}y, and Bassel Salloukh and Marc Lynch for organising the respective workshops. We are immensely grateful to Jutta Bakonyi, Toby Dodge, Ferdinand Eibl, Michael Farquhar, Marc Lynch, Simon Mabon, Bassel Salloukh, Kirsti Stuv{\o}y, Morten Valbj{\o}rn and the three anonymous reviewers for their incisive feedback. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 Elsevier Ltd",
year = "2022",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.polgeo.2021.102485",
language = "English",
volume = "98",
journal = "POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY",
issn = "0962-6298",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",
}