|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
This book demonstrates how human rights instruments and values have
brought different movements together in the struggle against free
trade under the banners of state duty and law enforcement with
their underlying principles of equality and human dignity. Special
emphasis is placed on how subjectivities influence identification
with certain values and legal or political strategies. Furthermore,
by focusing on the understanding of human rights by social agents
the book also shows that specific human rights have more political
potential for certain types of subjects in the struggle against
free trade than others, such as the right to development, the
rights of women and the right to food. This analysis is conducted
with a specifically Latin American theorization of human rights
that challenges both Eurocentric scholarly works on the issue and
the arguments of European activists directed at the allegedly
Western authorship of human rights discourses.
Social conflict involving migrants, which includes terrorism,
migrant trafficking and kidnappings, and riots and the occupation
of public places, is a direct result of the systematic refusal of
receiving countries to recognize that migrants have universal human
rights. Analysis of this causal relationship indicates that certain
elements of migration policy in Europe and North America--such as
the securitization of border controls and development cooperation
policies, the use of foreigner internment camps as part of a
tougher asylum policy, the criminalization of irregular migration,
and social exclusion resulting from widespread discrimination--lead
to violent social conflict. These violent conflicts of potentially
global impact could be prevented were countries that receive
migrants to adopt a system of justice--a decolonized global
justice--that recognizes the human rights of migrants.
Using examples from the United States-Mexico border, Central
America, and South America, this book argues that forced migration
is not a spontaneous phenomenon, but rather a product of
necropolitical strategies designed to depopulate resource rich
countries or regions. Estevez merges necropolitical analysis with
postcolonial migration and offers a new framework to study the set
of policies, laws, institutions, and political discourses producing
a profit in a legal context in which habitat devastation is legal,
but mobility is a crime. Violence, deprivation of food or water,
environmental contamination, and rights exclusion are some of the
tactics used in extractivist capitalism. Private and state actors
alike, use necropower, both its first and third world versions, to
make people, living and dead, a commodity.
This book discusses and theorizes Achille Mbembe's necropolitics,
the politics of death, in the specific context of North America. It
works to characterize and analyze the particularities and
relational differences of American and Canadian necropowers
vis-a-vis their devices, subjectivities, necroempowered subjects,
and production of spaces of death in their geographical and
symbolic borderlands with the Third World: the US-Mexico border,
indigenous lands, migrant and Black-American neighborhoods, and
resource rich geographies. North American necropowers not only
profit from death, but also conduct disposable populations to death
throughout the region. The volume proposes a postcolonial
perspective that characterizes the political power of North America
as a necropower-or the sovereign power to make die. Each chapter
therefore theorizes and analyzes the specificities of necropower,
examining different necropolitics that range from asylum and
migration restrictions to the economic exploitation and abandonment
of deprived populations and policing of ethnic minorities, in
particular Mexican immigrants, indigenous peoples, and African Am
erican communities.
This book discusses and theorizes Achille Mbembe's necropolitics,
the politics of death, in the specific context of North America. It
works to characterize and analyze the particularities and
relational differences of American and Canadian necropowers
vis-a-vis their devices, subjectivities, necroempowered subjects,
and production of spaces of death in their geographical and
symbolic borderlands with the Third World: the US-Mexico border,
indigenous lands, migrant and Black-American neighborhoods, and
resource rich geographies. North American necropowers not only
profit from death, but also conduct disposable populations to death
throughout the region. The volume proposes a postcolonial
perspective that characterizes the political power of North America
as a necropower-or the sovereign power to make die. Each chapter
therefore theorizes and analyzes the specificities of necropower,
examining different necropolitics that range from asylum and
migration restrictions to the economic exploitation and abandonment
of deprived populations and policing of ethnic minorities, in
particular Mexican immigrants, indigenous peoples, and African Am
erican communities.
This book uses human rights as part of a constructivist methodology
designed to establish a causal relationship between human rights
violations and different types of social and political conflict in
Europe and North America.
This book demonstrates how human rights instruments and values have
brought different movements together in the struggle against free
trade. Estevez employs a specifically Latin American definition of
human rights, thus challenging Eurocentric and Western discourses.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R346
Discovery Miles 3 460
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R346
Discovery Miles 3 460
|