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GENDER, ALIENATION, AND DIGNITY IN GLOBAL SLUMS by JOHANNA LUTTRELL A DISSERTATION Presented to the Department of Philosophy and the Graduate School of the University of Oregon in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy September 2013 DISSERTATION APPROVAL PAGE Student: Johanna Cathleen Luttrell Title: Gender, Alienation, and Dignity in Global Slums This dissertation has been accepted and approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in the Department of Philosophy by: Dr. Naomi Zack Co-Chairperson Dr. Cheyney Ryan Co-Chairperson Dr. Bonnie Mann Core Member Dr. Eileen Otis Institutional Representative and Kimberly Andrews Espy Vice President for Research and Innovation; Dean of the Graduate School Original approval signatures are on file with the University of Oregon Graduate School. Degree awarded September 2013 ii © 2013 Johanna Luttrell This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivs (United States) License. iii DISSERTATION ABSTRACT Johanna C. Luttrell Doctor of Philosophy Department of Philosophy September 2013 Title: Gender, Alienation, and Dignity in Global Slums This dissertation is a philosophical inquiry into the problem of the slums that develop in and around large cities in the Global South, considered in the context of globalization. I argue first that theories of global justice must consider this new human condition engendered by the global slums; second, that the language of alienation and dignity is crucial to conceptions of global poverty; third, that this alienation is in large part predicated on the exploitation of women’s labor; and finally, that this dignitarian response to alienation is a critical addition to the Capabilities Approach. iv CURRICULUM VITAE NAME OF AUTHOR: Johanna C. Luttrell GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADUATE SCHOOLS ATTENDED: University of Oregon, Eugene University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois DEGREES AWARDED: Doctor of Philosophy, 2013, University of Oregon Master of Arts, 2011, University of Oregon Bachelor of Arts, 2006, DePaul University AREAS OF SPECIAL INTEREST: Social and Political Philosophy Feminist Philosophy PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE: Graduate Teaching Fellow, the Savage Endowment for International Relations and Peace, 2011-2013 Graduate Teaching Fellow, Department of Philosophy and Department of Women and Gender Studies, 2007-2013 GRANTS, AWARDS, AND HONORS: Dissertation Fellowship, Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics, University of Oregon, 2011 Fellowship, Oregon University System- Sasakawa Young Leaders Fellowship Fund, University of Oregon, 2010 v PUBLICATIONS: Luttrell, Johanna. “John Berger”, The Encyclopedia of Global Justice, ed. Deen K. Chatterjee, Springer, 2010. 72-74. vi ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I wish to express sincere thanks to my co-chairs, Dr. Naomi Zack and Dr. Cheyney Ryan, for their inspiring mentorship. I also would like to thank the members of my committee, Dr. Eileen Otis and Dr. Bonnie Mann, for their clearheaded support and guidance. This project was made possible a dissertation fellowship from the Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics at the University of Oregon, as well as the Oregon University System- Sasakawa Young Leaders Fellowship Fund. vii I dedicate this work to my parents, Anthony and Jan Luttrell, for all their support during graduate school. viii TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter Page I. THE PICTURE OF POVERTY TODAY: URBAN SLUMS IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH ...................................................................................................................... 1 1.1. Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 1.2. Slums on a Global Scale ................................................................................ 4 1.3. Avoiding Being Killed: Port-au-Prince and São Paulo .................................. 17 1.4. Finding Work: Rio de Janiero and Nogales ................................................... 20 1.5. Gaining Respect: Mumbai ............................................................................. 24 1.6. A Response to Global Poverty ....................................................................... 27 II. WOMEN’S WORK AND ASSETS ...................................................................... 31 2.1. Overview ........................................................................................................ 31 2.2. Instrumentalizing Women’s Labor for Neoliberal Expansion ....................... 32 2.3. Exploiting Women’s Labor in the Global Economy: The Third Shift ........... 35 2.4. Getting Out of Poverty: Asset Accumulation ................................................. 47 2.5. Conclusion ................................................................................................. 50 III. JUSTICE, GLOBAL JUSTICE, AND POVERTY ............................................ 52 3.1. Overview .......................................................................................................... 52 3.2. Justice ............................................................................................................... 53 3.3. Global Justice: The State of Theory ................................................................. 55 ix Chapter Page 3.4. Political Contract Theory’s Response to Economic Liberalization ................. 56 3.5. Liberalism in Light of Globalization ............................................................... 61 3.6. The Blind Spot of Liberalism ......................................................................... 67 3.7. The Limits of the Contractarian Approach ..................................................... 69 3.8. David Hume: Justice as Contract for the Protection of Property .................... 80 3.9. Aristotle: Distributive Justice and the Suspicion of Profit ............................. 84 3.10. Contract and Virtue: Comparing Hume and Aristotle .................................. 89 3.11. John Stuart Mill: Justice as Sentiment that Precedes Law ............................ 90 3.12. Amartya Sen: Comparative Theories of Justice ............................................ 93 3.13. A Consolidated Vision of Justice Appropriate to the GSUS ........................ 95 3.14. A Responsibility for Justice .......................................................................... 97 3.15. Conclusion .................................................................................................... 100 IV. ALIENATION ...................................................................................................... 102 4.1. Overview ......................................................................................................... 102 4.2. A Definition of Alienation, in Light of the Urban Slums of the Global South ............................................................................................................. 103 4.3. Arendt as a Critical Reader of Marx ............................................................... 108 4.4. The Importance of the World .......................................................................... 115 4.5. Elaine Scarry on the Making of the World ..................................................... 126 4.6. Alienation as Critical to Theorizing Global Poverty ...................................... 135 V. DIGNITY ............................................................................................................... 148 x

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Favela: Four Decades of Living on the Edge in Rio de Janeiro. Oxford: Oxford UP, . five decades or so, has caused the burgeoning of new kinds of slums, the growth of squatter and informal housing all .. The concurrence among the groups was striking: among the things they like were people (most of
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