Sale Now on! Extra 5% off Sitewide

Statelessness and Contemporary Enslavement - 9780367358532

Routledge
SKU:
9780367358532
|
ISBN13:
9780367358532
$177.00
(No reviews yet)
Condition:
New
Usually Ships in 24hrs
Current Stock:
Estimated Delivery by: | Fastest delivery by:
Adding to cart… The item has been added
Buy ebook
Why have statelessness and contemporary enslavement become endemic since the 1990s? What is it about global political economic policies, protracted warfare, and migration rules and patterns, that have so systemically increased these extreme forms of vulnerability? Why have intellectual communities largely ignored or fundamentally rejected the concepts of statelessness and contemporary enslavement? This book argues that statelessness and enslavement are not aberrations or radical exceptions. They have been and are endemic to Euromodern state systems. While victims are discrete outcomes of similar processes of the racialized debasement of citizenship, stateless people share the predicament of those most likely to be enslaved and the enslaved, even when formally free, often face situations of statelessness. Gordon identifies forcible inclusion of semi-sovereign nations, extralegal expulsion of people who cannot be repatriated, and the concentrated erosion of the rights of full-fledged citizens as the primary modes through which people experience degrees of statelessness. She argues for the political value of seeing the connections among these discrete forms. With enslavement, she insists that while the centuries-long practice has taken on some new guises necessary to its profitability in the current global economy, what and who it involves has remained remarkably consistent. Rather than focusing on slavery as a radical and exceptional extreme of abuse or coercion, Gordon contends that we can understand contemporary slavery's specificity most usefully through considering its defining dimensions together with those of wage laborers and guest workers. Gordon concludes that appreciation of the situation of the stateless and of the enslaved should fundamentally orient our thinking about viable contemporary conceptions of consent and of the kinds of twenty-first-century political institutions that would make it harder for some to make the vulnerability of others so lucrative.


  • | Author: Jane Anna Gordon
  • | Publisher: Routledge
  • | Publication Date: December 10, 2019
  • | Number of Pages: 164 pages
  • | Language: English
  • | Binding: Hardcover
  • | ISBN-10: 0367358530
  • | ISBN-13: 9780367358532
Author:
Jane Anna Gordon
Publisher:
Routledge
Publication Date:
December 10, 2019
Number of pages:
164 pages
Language:
English
Binding:
Hardcover
ISBN-10:
0367358530
ISBN-13:
9780367358532