No go world : How fear is redrawing our maps and infecting our politics / Ruben Andersson
Language: eng Publication details: Berkeley : University of California Press, 2019Description: 337 p. : ill. ; 23 cmISBN:- 9780520294608
- 306.2
- JA 76 A552n 2019
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Ciencias Sociales | Ciencias Sociales (3er. Piso) | JA 76 A552n 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000132687 |
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JA 76 A258 2007 African American perspectives on political science / | JA 76 A283i 2007 Identidad y opción : dos formas de entender la política / | JA 76 A541 2010 Les Anciens dans la pensée politique contemporaine / | JA 76 A552n 2019 No go world : How fear is redrawing our maps and infecting our politics / | JA 76 B154r 1970 Las reglas del juego político / | JA 76 B154s 2001 Stratagems and spoils : a social anthropology of politics / | JA 76 B341i 1998 Introduction a la sociologie politique / |
List of Figures List of Maps Preface Introduction: Into the Danger Zone PART 1: THE STORY OF THE MAP 1. The Timbuktu Syndrome 2. Remoteness Remapped 3. The Tyranny of Distance Interlude: The Drone, the Web, and the World of Mirrors PART 2: CONTAGION 4. Wolves at the Door 5. The Snake Merchants 6. Where the Wild Things Are Conclusion: Danger Unmapped Acknowledgments Power of Narration, Narration of Power: An Anthropological Appendix Notes Works Cited Index
War-torn deserts, jihadist killings, trucks weighted down with contraband and migrants - from the Afghan-Pakistan borderlands to the Sahara, images of danger depict a new world disorder on the global margins. With vivid detail, Ruben Andersson traverses this terrain to provide a startling new understanding of what is happening in remote "danger zones." Instead of buying into apocalyptic visions, Andersson takes aim at how Western states and international organizations conduct military, aid, and border interventions in a dangerously myopic fashion, further disconnecting the world's rich and poor. Using drones, proxy forces, border reinforcement, and outsourced aid, risk-obsessed powers are helping to remap the world into zones of insecurity and danger. The result is a vision of chaos crashing into fortified borders, with national and global politics riven by fear. Andersson contends that we must reconnect and snap out of this dangerous spiral, which affects us whether we live in Texas or Timbuktu. Only by developing a new cartography of hope can we move beyond the political geography of fear that haunts us.
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