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Biopolitical authority, objectivity and the groundwork of modern citizenship

Claire Blencowe
- 30 Apr 2013 - 
- Vol. 6, Iss: 1, pp 9-28
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TLDR
This paper argued that biological knowledges and economism create new groundworks of politics, citizenship and authority, and argued that authority is essentially an objectivist concept for coming to terms with the diversity of power.
Abstract
Authority is a powerful concept for coming to terms with the diversity of power. This article reframes the concept of ‘authority’ and articulates its continued relevance in a context of radical contingency and biopolitics. It argues that authority is essentially objectivist. Biopolitics is conceived as a historical process of constituting biological life and economic forces as objectivity. The paper addresses the question of whether biological-type relations destroy or foster capacities for politics. Arguing against Arendt’s diagnosis of the fate of authority in modernity, the article maintains that biological knowledges and economism create new groundworks of politics, citizenship and authority. This suggests that politics is instigated not simply through breaking given aesthetic orders (dissensus), but also through aesthetic productions of objectivity.

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Service user involvement, authority and the ‘expert-by-experience’ in mental health

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors re-examine the politics of engagement of the UK mental health service user and survivor movement by focusing upon the mental health "expert-by-experience".
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Authority, Power and Distributed Leadership

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore how the concept of social authority might be helpful in achieving this and suggest that the practice of distributed leadership is characterized by multiple authorities which are constructed in the interactions between people.

Making experts-by-experience : governmental ethnography of participatory initiatives in Finnish social welfare organisations

TL;DR: Meriluoto et al. as mentioned in this paper analyzed expertise-by-experience in Finnish social welfare organizations as part of the participatory practices presented as new democracy and investigated how a person with difficult experiences is made into an expert of one's own life and how the subjectivity thus created is connected to different possibilities and rationales of participation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Theory of Social and Economic Organization

TL;DR: A synthetic polyisoprene rubber latex produced by emulsifying a solution of polyisoperene rubber in an organic solvent with water and removing the solvent from the resulting oil-in-water emulsion is significantly improved with respect to mechanical stability, wet gel strength and dry film strength as mentioned in this paper.

The Subject and Power

TL;DR: The ideas which I would like to discuss here represent neither a theory nor a methodology as mentioned in this paper, but rather a history of different modes by which, in our culture, human beings are made subjects.
Book

The Theory of Social and Economic Organization

TL;DR: The Theory of Social and Economic Organization as mentioned in this paper is based on Weber's philosophical inquiries into the nature of authority and how it is transmitted, and identifies three types of authority: the charismatic, based on the individual qualities of a leader and reverence for them among his or her followers; the traditional based on custom and usage; and the rational-legal, according to the rule of objective law.
Book

The Human Condition

TL;DR: The Human Condition as mentioned in this paper is a classic in political and social theory, The Human Condition is a work that has proved both timeless and perpetually timely, it contains Margaret Canovan's 1998 introduction and a new foreword by Danielle Allen.
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.
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