Necropower in North America, 1st ed. 2021
The Legal Spatialization Of Disposability And Lucrative Death

Coordinator: Estévez Ariadna

Language: English

126.59 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Necropower in North America
Publication date:
249 p. · 14.8x21 cm · Paperback

126.59 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Necropower in North America
Publication date:
249 p. · 14.8x21 cm · Hardback
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-à-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.
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. The Management Of Death In North America: From The Necropolitical Governmentalization Of The State To The Rule Of Law.- Chapter 3. From Gore Capitalism to snuff politics: necropolitics in the USA-Mexican Border.- Chapter 4. The North American Race Apparatus: Management of Undesirable Lives in the United States.- Chapter 5. Of Race As Space: Distinguishing Between Autonomous Bodies And Occupied Bodies In The Murder Of George Floyd.- Chapter 6. Getting away with murder: unpacking epistemic mechanisms of necropower and disposability in North America.- Chapter 7. Contested Necrocapitalism: Indigeneity Vs. Extractivism In Northern Canada.- Chapter 8. The Emergence Of Necrosecurity: On The Extra-Legality Of The Rule Of Law And The Death Of The Willful Subject.- Chapter 9. Necropolitics and International Migration in Mexico.
Ariadna Estévez is Professor at the Centre for Research on North America of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). She teaches human rights, forced migration, and biopolitical and necropolitical research methodologies at UNAM's Faculty of Political and Social Sciences; human rights critical perspectives at the Instituto de Estudios Críticos 17; and human rights from a feminist perspective at the Instituto Simone de Beauvoir. She is the author of Necropolitical Wars and Asylum Biopolitics in North America (2018) and Human Rights, Migration and Social Conflict: Towards a Decolonized Global Justice (2012).
Explores necropolitics in relation to migration controls, the security apparatus, capitalism, and extraction Foregrounds the nexus between racialization and the production of disposability Offers state-of-the-art case studies of production of disposability within liberal democracies, focusing on North America and transnational dynamics