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Insurgent Citizenship
A01=James Holston
Adverse possession
Ambiguity (law)
Author_James Holston
Ballot box
Brazilians
Capitalism
Category=JHBA
Category=JPA
Category=JPHV
Category=JPQB
Category=JPVH
Central government
Citizens (Spanish political party)
Citizenship
Citizenship of the United States
Civil and political rights
Consideration
Corruption
Criticism
Decree
Democratization
Dichotomy
Dictatorship
Election
Employment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnography
Eviction
Exclusion
Favela
Fraud
French nationality law
Household
Impunity
Institution
Insurgency
Jurisdiction
Land grant
Land law
Legalization
Legislation
Local government
Modernity
Nation state
Ownership
Paul Rabinow
Paulo
Payment
Politician
Politics
Precedent
Private property
Privatization
Procedural law
Provision (contracting)
Public sphere
Regulation
Representative democracy
Requirement
Residence
Right to property
Rule of law
Slavery
Social class
Social inequality
Social movement
Squatting
State (polity)
Statute
Suffrage
Tax
Title (property)
Urban planning
Urbanization
Voting
Wealth
Working class
Product details
- ISBN 9780691142906
- Weight: 567g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 26 Jul 2009
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Insurgent citizenships have arisen in cities around the world. This book examines the insurgence of democratic citizenship in the urban peripheries of Sao Paulo, Brazil, its entanglement with entrenched systems of inequality, and its contradiction in violence. James Holston argues that for two centuries Brazilians have practiced a type of citizenship all too common among nation-states--one that is universally inclusive in national membership and massively inegalitarian in distributing rights and in its legalization of social differences. But since the 1970s, he shows, residents of Brazil's urban peripheries have formulated a new citizenship that is destabilizing the old. Their mobilizations have developed not primarily through struggles of labor but through those of the city--particularly illegal residence, house building, and land conflict. Yet precisely as Brazilians democratized urban space and achieved political democracy, violence, injustice, and impunity increased dramatically.
Based on comparative, ethnographic, and historical research, Insurgent Citizenship reveals why the insurgent and the entrenched remain dangerously conjoined as new kinds of citizens expand democracy even as new forms of violence and exclusion erode it. Rather than view this paradox as evidence of democratic failure and urban chaos, Insurgent Citizenship argues that contradictory realizations of citizenship characterize all democracies--emerging and established. Focusing on processes of city- and citizen-making now prevalent globally, it develops new approaches for understanding the contemporary course of democratic citizenship in societies of vastly different cultures and histories.
James Holston is professor of anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of "The Modernist City" and the editor of "Cities and Citizenship".
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