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Journal ArticleDOI

Declarations of dependence: labour, personhood, and welfare in southern Africa

James Ferguson
- 01 Jun 2013 - 
- Vol. 19, Iss: 2, pp 223-242
TLDR
This article argued that such practices are an entirely contemporary response to the historically novel emergence of a social world where people, long understood (under both pre-capitalist and early capitalist social systems) as scarce and valuable, have instead become seen as lacking value, and in surplus.
Abstract
Dependence on others has often figured, in liberal thought, as the opposite of freedom. But the political anthropology of southern Africa has long recognized relations of social dependence as the very foundation of polities and persons alike. Reflecting on a long regional history of dependence ‘as a mode of action’ allows a new perspective on certain contemporary practices that appear to what we may call ‘the emancipatory liberal mind’ simply as lamentable manifestations of a reactionary and retrograde yearning for paternalism and inequality. Instead, this article argues that such practices are an entirely contemporary response to the historically novel emergence of a social world where people, long understood (under both pre-capitalist and early capitalist social systems) as scarce and valuable, have instead become seen as lacking value, and in surplus. Implications are drawn for contemporary politics and policy, in a world where both labour and forms of social membership based upon it are of diminishing value, and where social assistance and the various cash transfers associated with it are of increasing significance.

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On the political

TL;DR: On the Political by Chantal Mouffe, a globally recognized political author, presents a timely account of the current state of democracy, affording readers the most relevant and up-to-date information.
Journal Article

Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist Subject

Cynthia Nelson
- 01 Jul 2005 - 
TL;DR: Mahmood as discussed by the authors explores the conceptual challenges that women's involvement in the Islamist movement poses to feminist theory in particular and to secular-liberal thought in general through an ethnographic account of the urban women's mosque movement that is part of the Islamic Revival in Cairo, Egypt.
Journal ArticleDOI

Notes on a Southern urban practice

TL;DR: The authors argued that the emerging body of "theory from the South" must be simultaneously tied to the production of forms and theories of practice, and argued that it must be linked to the development of forms.
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’The Girl Effect’: Liberalism, Empowerment, and the Contradictions of Development

TL;DR: The authors examines the logic of this discourse and its stance towards kinship in the global South, situating it within the broader rise of gender equality and women empowerment as development objectives over the past two decades.
References
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Powers of Freedom: Reframing Political Thought

Nikolas Rose
TL;DR: Powers of Freedom as mentioned in this paper is an approach to the analysis of political power which extends Foucault's hypotheses on governmentality in challenging ways and argues that freedom is not the opposite of government but one of its key inventions and most significant resources.
Journal Article

Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist Subject

Cynthia Nelson
- 01 Jul 2005 - 
TL;DR: Mahmood as discussed by the authors explores the conceptual challenges that women's involvement in the Islamist movement poses to feminist theory in particular and to secular-liberal thought in general through an ethnographic account of the urban women's mosque movement that is part of the Islamic Revival in Cairo, Egypt.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Genealogy of Dependency: Tracing a Keyword of the U.S. Welfare State

TL;DR: The issue of welfare dependency has become a keyword of U.S. politics as mentioned in this paper, and politicians of diverse views regularly criticize what they term welfare dependency, which is referred to as "welfare dependency".
Journal ArticleDOI

Africa in the world: a history of extraversion

TL;DR: This article argued that Africa is neither more nor less than a part of the planet, and it is pointless to pretend that, to quote one French former colonial governor, it leads a "traditional existence shielded from the outside world, as though it were another planet" which passively absorbs the shock of having been made dependent on other parts of the world.