Across
- 2. Birth city of the scholar (1946).
- 5. Sector tied to resources, markets, and welfare.
- 10. Global-scale version of that framing process.
- 13. Epistemological lens shaping his approach.
- 16. Counterpart whose security is intertwined with Israel’s.
- 18. Copenhagen institute where he led projects (1988–2002).
- 21. Role at the European Journal of International Relations (2004–2008).
- 22. Defined as freedom from threat and preservation of identity.
- 23. Case illustrating identity fractures in the societal sector.
- 25. Sector centered on identity and cohesion.
- 26. Security-studies school he is strongly linked with.
- 27. British-Canadian scholar behind “People, States and Fear.”
- 28. Internal weaknesses contrasted with external dangers.
- 29. Field asking “how do we know?” in theory.
- 30. Strategy of addressing both internal and external risks.
- 31. Field asking “what exists?” in theory.
Down
- 1. Cold War example of a macro-level threat narrative.
- 3. Post-9/11 candidate for macro-securitization.
- 4. Country his family later moved to.
- 6. Sector dealing with armed threats and defense.
- 7. Sector focused on climate, disasters, and nature.
- 8. External dangers contrasted with internal weaknesses.
- 9. System trait his ontology accepts in IR.
- 11. Word completing “regional security ______.”
- 12. State used in Middle East interdependence example.
- 14. Essence of security in his definition.
- 15. The “friendship” side shaping regional orders.
- 17. The hostile counterpart in regional relations.
- 19. Sector covering ideology and state institutions.
- 20. Leader who announced a global “war on terror.”
- 24. Framing an issue as an existential threat.
