Fiscal Disobedience

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A01=Janet Roitman
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Author_Janet Roitman
Banditry
Black market
Boycott
Capital flight
Category=KC
Central African Republic
Chad Basin
Civil disobedience
Colonialism
Commercial policy
Commodity fetishism
Consumer protection
Crime
Currency
Decentralization
Decolonization
Dilapidation
Disenchantment
E. P. Thompson
Economic rent
Economics
Economy
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Eric Hobsbawm
Exaction
Extended family
Fixing
Fraud
French Colonial
Hard currency
Historical region
Ideal type
Imperialism
Insolvency
Jizya
Just price
Ken Saro-Wiwa
Legalization
Liberalization
Looting
Middle East
Moral economy
Nativism (politics)
Necessity
Neoliberalism
Peon
Police action
Political economy
Politique
Price controls
Public expenditure
Regional integration
Rubber stamp (politics)
Salary
Scarcity
Slave raiding
Slavery
Sokoto Caliphate
Sovereignty
Structural adjustment
Subversion
Surplus value
Tax
Tax collector
The Affluent Society
Theft
Unequal exchange
War
War economy
Warfare
Wealth

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691118703
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Oct 2004
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Fiscal Disobedience represents a novel approach to the question of citizenship amid the changing global economy and the fiscal crisis of the nation-state. Focusing on economic practices in the Chad Basin of Africa, Janet Roitman combines thorough ethnographic fieldwork with sophisticated analysis of key ideas of political economy to examine the contentious nature of fiscal relationships between the state and its citizens. She argues that citizenship is being redefined through a renegotiation of the rights and obligations inherent in such economic relationships. The book centers on a civil disobedience movement that arose in Cameroon beginning in 1990 ostensibly to counter state fiscal authority--a movement dubbed Operation Villes Mortes by the opposition and incivisme fiscal by the government (which for its part was eager to suggest that participants were less than legitimate citizens, failing in their civic duties). Contrary to standard approaches, Roitman examines this conflict as a "productive moment" that, rather than involving the outright rejection of regulatory authority, questioned the intelligibility of its exercise. Although both militarized commercial networks (associated with such activities trading in contraband goods including drugs, ivory, and guns) and highly organized gang-based banditry do challenge state authority, they do not necessarily undermine state power. Contrary to depictions of the African state as "weak" or "failed," this book demonstrates how the state in Africa manages to reconstitute its authority through networks that have emerged in the interstices of the state system. It also shows how those networks partake of the same epistemological grounding as does the state. Indeed, both state and nonstate practices of governing refer to a common "ethic of illegality," which explains how illegal activities are understood as licit or reasonable conduct.
Janet Roitman is a research fellow at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris.