An introduction to vulnerability: merging social policy with the national security state – Charlotte Heath-Kelly
Part I: From care to risk assessment and national security
1 Shifting notions of vulnerability and learning in Swedish prevention policy – Randi Gressgård and Vanja Lozic
2 Anti-immigrant politics and vulnerability’s conceptual multiplicity – Andrew C. Fletcher and Ali Fuat Birol
3 Governing vulnerability: mental distress, neoliberalism and COVID-19 - Jana Fey
4 Who is vulnerable, the worker or the state? Psychiatric debates on trauma and welfare in Germany, 1871–1914 – Laura Jung
5 Counterterrorism and psychiatry: re-bordering vulnerability and securitisation in UK public protection – Charlotte Heath-Kelly
Part II: The reframing of national security around care
Introducing Part II – Barbara Gruber
6 Governing vulnerability through case management: from crime to radicalization prevention in the Netherlands – Barbara Gruber
7 Local rationalizations of radicalization: an analysis of Danish and Swedish municipal policies – Robin Andersson Malmros and Jennie Sivenbring
8 The 'vulnerability' of Lebanon: reimagining the ‘failing state’ problem through the international PVE agenda – Jan Daniel
9 Prevention politics in non-western contexts: training imams in post-revolutionary Tunisia – Fabrizio Leonardo Cuccu
10 ‘Ontological’ (in)security under postcolonial conditions: countering violent extremism in Nigeria – Akinyemi Oyawale
11 When democracy is deemed vulnerable: preventing far-right extremism by curbing Roma ‘criminality and social pathologies’ in the Czech Republic – Sadi Shanaah
Epilogue: from security to ‘care’, vulnerability to resistance – Hil Aked
Index