In the Defence of Cities: A History of Security Planning in Canada

Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, urban spaces have become increasingly subject to various methods of surveillance and control, especially by physical means. Yet, while 9/11 acted as a catalyst for rapid increases in security measures, the process of securitization has a much longer...

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Main Author: Burke, Jason Robert
Other Authors: Farish, Matthew
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/33942
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-339422013-11-02T03:43:08ZIn the Defence of Cities: A History of Security Planning in CanadaBurke, Jason RobertSecurityPlanningUrbanLiberalism099903340615Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, urban spaces have become increasingly subject to various methods of surveillance and control, especially by physical means. Yet, while 9/11 acted as a catalyst for rapid increases in security measures, the process of securitization has a much longer history. Accordingly, this research looks at how security has been planned and how this has changed over the last four decades in the context of Canada. The dissertation focuses on three Canadian case studies to explore the evolution of security planning: the October Crisis with an emphasis on Montreal (1970), the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Vancouver (1997), and the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic Games. Each case represents a significant moment in Canadian security planning and provides insight into the shifting structure of Canada’s security apparatus. Furthermore, these cases offer a lens into the historical transformations of the Canadian ‘security state’. While the issues and actions associated with these cases cut across local, national, and international scales, the impacts of security measures in each were mostly local and urban. To show how Canadian urban spaces have been transformed and controlled by an evolving security framework, I argue that security planning must be understood as a form of urban planning, although one that remains to be properly acknowledged by the profession or even the academic discipline of planning. Given the democratic claims of liberal planning and its professed concern for the good city, it is therefore significant that the security measures studied in these case studies were implemented without democratic scrutiny but with significant consequences for urban experience. This dissertation tells a story of security planning in Canada, demonstrating how its practices have changed over time in ways that are at odds with liberal political values cherished by mainstream planning.Farish, MatthewGoonewardena, Kanishka2012-112012-12-10T20:28:30ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-12-10T20:28:30Z2012-12-10Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/33942en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Security
Planning
Urban
Liberalism
0999
0334
0615
spellingShingle Security
Planning
Urban
Liberalism
0999
0334
0615
Burke, Jason Robert
In the Defence of Cities: A History of Security Planning in Canada
description Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, urban spaces have become increasingly subject to various methods of surveillance and control, especially by physical means. Yet, while 9/11 acted as a catalyst for rapid increases in security measures, the process of securitization has a much longer history. Accordingly, this research looks at how security has been planned and how this has changed over the last four decades in the context of Canada. The dissertation focuses on three Canadian case studies to explore the evolution of security planning: the October Crisis with an emphasis on Montreal (1970), the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Vancouver (1997), and the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic Games. Each case represents a significant moment in Canadian security planning and provides insight into the shifting structure of Canada’s security apparatus. Furthermore, these cases offer a lens into the historical transformations of the Canadian ‘security state’. While the issues and actions associated with these cases cut across local, national, and international scales, the impacts of security measures in each were mostly local and urban. To show how Canadian urban spaces have been transformed and controlled by an evolving security framework, I argue that security planning must be understood as a form of urban planning, although one that remains to be properly acknowledged by the profession or even the academic discipline of planning. Given the democratic claims of liberal planning and its professed concern for the good city, it is therefore significant that the security measures studied in these case studies were implemented without democratic scrutiny but with significant consequences for urban experience. This dissertation tells a story of security planning in Canada, demonstrating how its practices have changed over time in ways that are at odds with liberal political values cherished by mainstream planning.
author2 Farish, Matthew
author_facet Farish, Matthew
Burke, Jason Robert
author Burke, Jason Robert
author_sort Burke, Jason Robert
title In the Defence of Cities: A History of Security Planning in Canada
title_short In the Defence of Cities: A History of Security Planning in Canada
title_full In the Defence of Cities: A History of Security Planning in Canada
title_fullStr In the Defence of Cities: A History of Security Planning in Canada
title_full_unstemmed In the Defence of Cities: A History of Security Planning in Canada
title_sort in the defence of cities: a history of security planning in canada
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/33942
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