Securitisation theory and the securitised university : Europe and the nascent colonisation of global intellectual capital
Abstract
Background: This article explores the increasing prevalence of security themes in higher
education policy.
Aim: Addressing neglect in security studies on the role of the university in the processes of
securitisation, this article shows the integral relationship between securitisation theory and the
securitised university.
Setting: Drawing on exemplars from European higher education, the article argues that this
complex epistemological transformation is part of a new and as yet little understood new
colonisation of global intellectual capital.
Methods: The argument is in three stages: (1) that securitisation theory can account for the
emergence of the securitised university; (2) that this securitisation of universities is integral to
the political process of Europeanisation; and (3) that from this European context we may
glimpse a nascent colonisation of global intellectual capital.
Results: This analysis of securitisation has, therefore, deep if as yet little explored
epistemological implications for the transformation of universities worldwide, particularly
because of this epistemological dimension, a de facto securitisation of knowledge.
Conclusion: This article concludes that these transformations are also important if at present
neglected element to historic and contemporary debates on decolonising the curriculum,
which frequently highlight the postcolonial relations and culturally still powerful relations
between continents, for example between Europe and Africa.