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Items
Details
Author
Title
Governing (through) rights / Bal Sokhi-Bulley.
Published
Oxford ; London : Hart Publishing, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc ; Portland, OR : Hart Publishing, 2016.
Call Number
K3240 .S65 2016
ISBN
9781849467391 (hardback ; alk. paper)
1849467390 (hardback ; alk. paper)
1849467390 (hardback ; alk. paper)
Description
x, 171 pages ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)945804290
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Available in Other Form
Online version: Sokhi-Bulley, Bal. Governing (through) rights. Oxford ; Portland, Oregon : Hart Publishing, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2016 9781509903832 (DLC) 2016015641
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
vii
pt. I
Government (Through) Rights
1.
Introduction
3
I.
Problem of Government (Through) Rights
3
II.
Governmentality as a Methodology
6
A.
Methodology: A (Critical) Attitude
6
B.
Governmentality as a Critical Attitude
9
III.
Chapters
12
2.
Governing (Through) Agencies: The EU and Rights in EUrope
15
I.
Tactic One: Expertise
19
A.
Complexity of the Assemblage
19
B.
Expertise as Pastoral Power
22
II.
Tactic Two: Indicators
25
A.
Rights of the Child Indicators
26
B.
Measuring Child `Justice'
29
C.
Measuring Everything
32
III.
Tactic Three: A Rights-based Approach
34
A.
Rights-based Approach to Migration
35
B.
Empowered: FRA, Frontex and the EU
37
C.
`Left Behind': The Migrant
41
IV.
Conclusion
44
3.
Governing (Through) Non-Governmental Actors: The Global Human Rights Architecture and the International NGO
47
I.
Global Human Rights Architecture
50
II.
International Non-Governmental Organisation
53
III.
Experts, Narrators and Scrutinisers: Human Rights Watch
56
A.
Expertise: Government Through Rights
56
B.
Narration: Governing Rights
62
(i).
How to Do Rights
62
(ii).
What Human Rights Are
66
(iii).
Extractive Relationships
71
C.
Scrutiny: Self-Government
75
IV.
Conclusion
78
pt. II
Resisting Government (Through) Rights
4.
Resisting Rights with Responsibility
83
I.
New Politics of Community
85
A.
Ethic of Responsibility as a Resistance to Rights
85
B.
Community and/or Society
87
II.
Responsibilising Youth: National Citizen Service
91
A.
Opportunity to Say Yes (to Cohesion)
94
B.
Code of Conduct (For a More Responsible Society)
96
C.
Guided Reflection (Towards Being More Engaged)
98
D.
Responsibilised Youth
101
III.
Responsibilising Community: Community Rights
104
A.
Community and Society
104
B.
Community Rights
106
(i).
Opportunity versus Rights
106
(ii).
Uses of Community Rights
108
IV.
Conclusion: Active Citizenship
113
5.
Counter-Conduct as Right and as Ethics
116
I.
Counter-Conduct
118
II.
Performing Struggle as Right and as Ethics
121
A.
Riots: London and Ferguson
121
B.
How to Label the Enigma: Counter-Conduct
125
(i).
What is Being Countered
125
(ii).
Specificity of the Riot
130
(iii).
Crisis
132
C.
Ethos of the Enigma: Parrhesia
134
III.
Conclusion
138
6.
Conclusion: A Permanent State of Dissatisfaction
140
I.
Rights as/and Governmentality
141
A.
Intervening in the Discourse---Something `Unfamiliar'?
141
B.
Acknowledging the Limits of Governmentality
143
II.
Transformation: Towards an Ethic of Discomfort
144
A.
Diagnosis Becomes Endemic
144
B.
Counter-Narratives
148
Bibliography
150
Index
167