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Citizens and Security Threats: Issues, Perceptions, and Consequences Beyond the National Frame

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posted on 2025-08-06, 13:50 authored by N Vaughan-Williams, Daniel P. Stevens
Citizens are now central to national security strategies, yet governments readily admit that little is known about public opinion on security. This article presents a unique and timely examination of public perceptions of security threats. By focusing on the breadth of security threats that citizens identify, their psychological origins, how they vary from personal to global levels, and the relationships between perceptions of threats and other political attitudes and behaviours, the article makes several new contributions to the literature. These include extending the levels at which threats are perceived from the national versus personal dichotomy to a continuum spanning the individual, family, community, nation and globe, and showing the extent to which perceptions of threat at each level have different causes, as well as different effects on political attitudes and behaviour. These findings are also relevant to policy communities’ understanding of what it means for a public to feel secure.

Funding

ES/J004596/1

ESRC

History

Notes

publication-status: Accepted types: Article The version of the article that has been accepted for publication in the journal. Cambridge University Press takes permanent responsibility for the article. Content and layout follow Cambridge University Press’s submission requirements. This version may have been revised following peer review but may be subject to further editorial input by Cambridge University Press.

Journal

British Journal of Political Science

Publisher

CUP

Language

en

Citation

British Journal of Political Science, 2016, Volume 46, Issue 1, pp.149-175

Department

  • Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology

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