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Anthropology in the Margins of the State

Veena Das, +1 more
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TLDR
In this article, the authors explore how people perceive and experience the agency of the state, who is of, and not of, the state; and how practices at the margins shape the state itself.
Abstract
The very form and reach of the modern state are changing radically under the pressure of globalization. Featuring nine of the leading scholars in the field, this innovative exploration of these transformations develops an ethnographic methodology and theoretical apparatus to assess perceptions of power in three regions where state reform and violence have been particularly dramatic: Africa, Latin America, and South Asia. Rather than a geographic border, the term "margin" describes areas far from the centers of state sovereignty in which states are unable to ensure implementation of their programs and policies. Understanding how people perceive and experience the agency of the state; who is of, and not of, the state; and how practices at the margins shape the state itself are central themes. Drawing on fieldwork in Sierra Leone, Sri Lanka, Peru, Guatemala, India, Chad, Colombia, and South Africa, the contributors examine official documentary practices and their forms and falsifications; the problems that highly mobile mercenaries, currency, goods, arms, and diamonds pose to the state; emerging non-state regulatory authorities; and the role language plays as cultures struggle to articulate their situation. These case studies provide wide-ranging analyses of the relationship between states and peoples on the edges of state power's effective reign.

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Access and Property: A Question of Power and Authority

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that access and property regarding natural resources are intimately bound up with the exercise of power and authority, and that the process of seeking authorizations for property claims also has the effect of granting authority to the authorizing politico-legal institution.
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Mainstreaming Microfinance: Social Performance Management or Mission Drift?

TL;DR: In this article, a model that distinguishes between institutions' financial and social performance possibilities, preferences, and assessment systems is used to review findings from action research with an international sample of poverty oriented micro-finance institutions that suggest some simple steps for improved social performance management.
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Documents and bureaucracy

TL;DR: The authors surveys anthropological and other social research on bureaucratic documents and argues that documents are not simply instruments of bureaucratic organizations, but rather are constitutive of bureaucratic rules, ideologies, knowledge, practices, subjectivities, objects, outcomes, even the organizations themselves.
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The enforcement archipelago: Detention, haunting, and asylum on islands

TL;DR: The authors argue that islands are part of a broader enforcement archipelago of detention, a tactic of migration control, and trace patterns among distant and distinct locations through examination of sovereign and biopolitical powers that haunt asylum-seekers detained on islands.
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Pharmaceuticalization: AIDS Treatment and Global Health Politics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the political economy of pharmaceuticals that lies behind global AIDS treatment initiatives, revealing the possibilities and inequalities that come with a magic bullet approach to health care.
References
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Book

Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the logic of sovereignty and the paradox of sovereignty in the form of the human sacer and the notion of potentiality and potentiality-and-law.