Bücher Wenner
Volker Kutscher liest aus "RATH"
18.11.2024 um 19:30 Uhr
Managing Ambiguity
How Clientelism, Citizenship, and Power Shape Personhood in Bosnia and Herzegovina
von Carna Brkovic
Verlag: Berghahn Books
Reihe: EASA Series Nr. 31
E-Book / EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


Speicherplatz: 2 MB
Hinweis: Nach dem Checkout (Kasse) wird direkt ein Link zum Download bereitgestellt. Der Link kann dann auf PC, Smartphone oder E-Book-Reader ausgeführt werden.
E-Books können per PayPal bezahlt werden. Wenn Sie E-Books per Rechnung bezahlen möchten, kontaktieren Sie uns bitte.

ISBN: 978-1-78533-415-3
Auflage: 1. Auflage
Erschienen am 01.07.2017
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 208 Seiten

Preis: 36,49 €

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung

Figures
Acknowledgments
Note on transliteration

Introduction

PART I: PERSONHOOD

Chapter 1. Creating Knowledge about Others: Locating, Knowing "by Sight", and Ethnography
Chapter 2. Favors Reproduce Social Personhood

PART II: CITIZENSHIP

Chapter 3. Local Community and Ethical Citizenship: Neoliberal Reconfigurations of Social Protection
Chapter 4. Pursuing Favors within a Local Community

PART III: POWER

Chapter 5. Managing Ambiguity in Social Protection
Chapter 6. Navigating Ambiguity: the Moveopticon

Conclusion: Morality, Interest, and Sociality in the Global Postsocialist Condition

Bibliography
Index



Why do people turn to personal connections to get things done? Exploring the role of favors in social welfare systems in postwar, postsocialist Bosnia and Herzegovina, this volume provides a new theoretical angle on links between ambiguity and power. It demonstrates that favors were not an instrumental tactic of survival, nor a way to reproduce oneself as a moral person. Instead, favors enabled the insertion of personal compassion into the heart of the organization of welfare.

Managing Ambiguity follows how neoliberal insistence on local community, flexibility, and self-responsibility was translated into clientelist modes of relating and back, and how this fostered a specific mode of power.



Carna Brkovic is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Graduate School for East and Southeast European Studies, Regensburg. She co-edited Negotiating Social Relations in Bosnia and Herzegovina and won the 2015 SIEF Young Scholar Prize.


andere Formate