
In the Name of Humanity
The Government of Threat and Care
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In the Name of Humanity
The Government of Threat and Care
About this book
The editors argue that ideas about humanity find concrete expression in the governing work that operationalizes those ideas to produce order, prosperity, and security. As a site of governance, humanity appears as both an object of care and a source of anxiety. Assertions that humanity is being threatened, whether by environmental catastrophe or political upheaval, provide a justification for the elaboration of new governing techniques. At the same time, humanity itself is identified as a threat (to nature, to nation, to global peace) which governance must contain. These apparently contradictory understandings of the relation of threat to the category of humanity coexist and remain in tension, helping to maintain the dynamic co-production of governance and humanity.
Contributors. Arun Agrawal, Joao Biehl , Didier Fassin, Allen Feldman, Ilana Feldman, Rebecca Hardin, S. Lochann Jain, Liisa Malkki, Adriana Petryna, Miriam Ticktin, Richard Ashby Wilson, Charles Zerner
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Government and Humanity
- When Humanity Sits in Judgment: Crimes against Humanity and the Conundrum of Race and Ethnicity at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
- Children, Humanity, and the Infantilization of Peace
- Narrative, Humanity, and Patrimony in an Equatorial African Forest
- Inhumanitas: Political Speciation, Animality, Natality, Defacement
- “Medication is me now” : Human Values and Political Life in the Wake of Global AIDS Treatment
- Environment, Community, Government
- The Mortality Effect: Counting the Dead in the Cancer Trial
- Inequality of Lives, Hierarchies of Humanity: Moral Commitments and Ethical Dilemmas of Humanitarianism
- The Politics of Experimentality
- Stealth Nature: Biomimesis and the Weaponization of Life
- Bibliography
- Contributors
- Index