‘Everyone knew what was happening’: paradoxes of state secrecy and its making

Soundings - Print ISSN 1362-6620 - Online ISSN 1741-0797
Volume 2025 Number 89

‘Everyone knew what was happening’: paradoxes of state secrecy and its making
Ibtehal Hussain pages 29‑58
DOI: 10.3898/SOUN:89.02.2025

Abstract

This article focuses on official means and practices related to British state secrecy. In highlighting some of the tensions, paradoxes and continuing colonial characteristics of UK state secrecy practices, it calls into question understandings of secrecy associated with authoritarianism. It attempts to speak to the murky mobilisation of secrecy and its antidotes as imposed and deployed by the British state. This piece focuses on state documentation, knowledge and violence in understanding the making and contradictions of secrecy. It argues that, while it is crucial to trace, expose and undermine the state’s practices of secrecy, we should also be aware of the dangers of reproducing or depending on its knowledge systems, or making them central to the exposing of British violence, or other accountability efforts.

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To cite this article
Ibtehal Hussain (2025) ‘Everyone knew what was happening’: paradoxes of state secrecy and its making, Soundings, 2025(89), 29-58 . https://doi.org/10.3898/SOUN:89.02.2025

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