Out now in Museum Management and Curatorship
Colin Atkinson, Nick Brooke, and I have another new article out concerning museum security and the idea of terrorism. This is a sister piece to our other article “Researching a Risky Business? The Use of Freedom of Information to Explore Counterterrorism Security at Museums in the United Kingdom”. Like with the other, Colin and Nick deserve most of the credit for this and any good work is theirs. Have a look and see what you think!
If you have institutional access to the journal please use this link: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09647775.2019.1683881
If you do not have institutional access, there are 50 free downloads available at this link: https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/74BZM9HYGEBZJKKXCPPB/full?target=10.1080/09647775.2019.1683881
Abstract
This article explores counter-terrorism security practices at museums in the United Kingdom (UK), locations that terrorists have targeted through both propaganda and operational activity. Drawing upon research that re-interprets the museum within the ‘single narrative’ of global jihadist terrorism, an outlook that justifies and legitimises the targeting of socio-cultural sites from instrumental and symbolic perspectives, this article highlights the important roles of the police Counter Terrorism Security Adviser (CTSA) and the museum security manager in counter-terrorism practice at museums in the UK. The practices of highlighting risk to the museum and managing risk in the museum environment are subsequently outlined. In doing so two key challenges facing counter-terrorism security practice in the museum are noted: the cost of implementing counter-terrorism measures and the cultural challenge of communicating and responsibly embedding such security thinking in everyday practice. The researchers also reflect upon the potential consequences of the implementation of counter-terrorism security measures at museums as a form of securitisation.