
- English
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About this book
Ong traces how these and other neoliberal exceptions to business as usual are reconfiguring relationships between governing and the governed, power and knowledge, and sovereignty and territoriality. She argues that an interactive mode of citizenship is emerging, one that organizes people—and distributes rights and benefits to them—according to their marketable skills rather than according to their membership within nation-states. Those whose knowledge and skills are not assigned significant market value—such as migrant women working as domestic maids in many Asian cities—are denied citizenship. Nevertheless, Ong suggests that as the seam between sovereignty and citizenship is pried apart, a new space is emerging for NGOs to advocate for the human rights of those excluded by neoliberal measures of human worthiness.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Neoliberalism as Exception, Exception to Neoliberalism
- I. Ethics in Contention
- II. Spaces of Governing
- III. Circuits of Expertise
- IV. The Edge of Emergence
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index