Literature DB >> 21777123

The nobodies: neoliberalism, violence, and migration.

Linda Green1.   

Abstract

In this article I suggest placing structural vulnerability within a complex web of capitalist relations and tease out some of the forces and processes that now produce at an unprecedented rate disposable people who have been displaced and dislocated from their means of survival by a rapacious capitalism. I explore some of the multiple sites of the production and commodification of these "nobodies" to illuminate the intricate relationship between neoliberal economic policies and practices, state-sponsored violence, and international migration. These phenomena point us toward an understanding of the historical dimensions and the power dynamics of profiteering off the poor through the production of their vulnerabilities and the commodification of their very being.
Copyright © 2011 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21777123     DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2011.576726

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol        ISSN: 0145-9740


  4 in total

1.  "As Good As It Gets": Undocumented Latino Day Laborers Negotiating Discrimination in San Francisco and Berkeley, California, USA.

Authors:  James Quesada; Sonya Arreola; Alex Kral; Sahar Khoury; Kurt C Organista; Paula Worby
Journal:  City Soc (Wash)       Date:  2014-04-01

2.  Structural Vulnerability and Occupational Injury Among Latinx Child Farmworkers in North Carolina.

Authors:  Taylor J Arnold; Thomas A Arcury; Sara A Quandt; Dana C Mora; Stephanie S Daniel
Journal:  New Solut       Date:  2021-05-13

3.  Emotional Testimonies: An Ethnographic Study of Emotional Suffering Related to Migration from Mexico to Arizona.

Authors:  Rebecca Crocker
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2015-07-13

4.  Huichol Migrant Laborers and Pesticides: Structural Violence and Cultural Confounders.

Authors:  Jennie Gamlin
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2016-01-27
  4 in total

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