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