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Preemption contested: Suspect spaces and preventability in the July 7 inquest
Affiliation:1. Susquehanna University, United States;2. Barnard College, United States;3. The University of Colorado at Boulder, United States;1. University of Washington, USA;2. Dartmouth College, USA;1. ERC “Public Goods through Private Eyes” Project, Institute of Sociology, University of Warsaw, Obozna 7/41, 00-332 Warsaw, Poland;2. Department of Political Science, Trinity College Dublin, 1 College Green, Dublin 2, Ireland
Abstract:The London Coroner's Inquest into the deaths of July 7 2005 unequivocally rejected the notion that the security services could and should have been able to identify the 7/7 perpetrators as potential future terrorists before July 2005. These findings contest powerful post-9/11 security logics of preemption and anticipation that hold that security intervention is logical and desirable in the face of unknown and unspecified threats. This paper analyses the spatio-temporal work conducted in and through the Coroner's Inquest, with a specific focus on its preventability evidence. The Inquest provides a rich archive in which the potentialities for intervention and preemption, and concomitant questions of suspect spaces, are engaged, debated, accepted and rejected. This paper argues that the Inquest rendered ‘7/7’ from a fast a familiar framing as anticipated catastrophe, into a ‘matter of concern’ in the sense discussed by Bruno Latour. The paper considers the ambiguous nature of the Inquest, and the way in which it both opened space for public debate and alternative conceptions of futurity; and closed down such space by accepting and normalising notions of networked threat.
Keywords:7/7 Inquest  Prevention  Preemption  Terrorism  London bombings  Security  Publics
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