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Governing Cultures: Anthropological Perspectives on Political Labor, Power, and Government PDF

247 Pages·2012·2.7 MB·English
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G overning Cultures 99778811113377000099221100__0011__pprreevviiiiii..iinndddd ii 77//1166//22001122 77::4411::4400 PPMM This page intentionally left blank 99778811113377000088883311__0011__pprreexx..iinndddd vvii 77//2200//22001122 1111::2244::3399 AAMM G overning Cultures Anthropological Perspectives on Political Labor, Power, and Government Edited by Kendra C oulter and William R. S chumann 99778811113377000099221100__0011__pprreevviiiiii..iinndddd iiiiii 77//1166//22001122 77::4411::4411 PPMM GOVERNING CULTURES Copyright © Kendra Coulter and William R. Schumann, 2012. All rights reserved. First published in 2012 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN® in the United States—a division of St. Martin’s Press LLC, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Where this book is distributed in the UK, Europe and the rest of the world, this is by Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited, registered in England, company number 785998, of Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS. Palgrave Macmillan is the global academic imprint of the above companies and has companies and representatives throughout the world. Palgrave® and Macmillan® are registered trademarks in the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe and other countries. ISBN: 978–1–137–00921–0 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Governing cultures : anthropological perspectives on political labor, power, and government / edited by Kendra Coulter and William R. Schumann. p. cm. ISBN 978–1–137–00921–0 (alk. paper) 1. Political anthropology. 2. Government policy. 3. Legislative power. I. Coulter, Kendra, 1979– II. Schumann, William R. GN492.G67 2012 306.2—dc23 2012010456 A catalogue record of the book is available from the British Library. Design by Newgen Imaging Systems (P) Ltd., Chennai, India. First edition: September 2012 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed in the United States of America. 99778811113377000099221100__0011__pprreevviiiiii..iinndddd iivv 77//1166//22001122 77::4411::4411 PPMM Contents Acknowledgments vii 1 Government Matters: Intellectual Labor and the Work of Governing 1 Kendra Coulter and William R. Schumann 2 Navigating the Illegible State: The Political Labor of Government in Mexico 21 Tara A. Schwegler 3 A Project of Governing and its Contradictions: Maternal-Infant Care in Highland Ecuador 47 A. Kim Clark 4 Governing Beef: Program Implementation, Unintended Consequences, and BSE Control in Alberta 69 Alan Smart and Josephine Smart 5 Selling Clear Red Water: The Identity Politics of Governing in the National Assembly for Wales 9 3 William R. Schumann 6 Legislative Authenticity and the Politics of Recognition: Being a Ma¯ori Member of the New Zealand Parliament 1 11 Ilana Gershon 7 Gendering Government: Political Labor and the Production of Policy and Political Culture 137 Kendra Coulter 8 The Work of Being Governed: From the Welfare State to the “Big Society” in Britain 159 Susan Brin Hyatt 99778811113377000099221100__0011__pprreevviiiiii..iinndddd vv 77//1166//22001122 77::4411::4411 PPMM vi Contents 9 The Will To End Hunger in the Age of Security: Food Security, National Security, and Community- Based Food Security in the United States 183 D avid V. Fazzino II 10 The Work of Governing 209 J ohn Clarke List of Contributors 2 33 Index 2 35 99778811113377000099221100__0011__pprreevviiiiii..iinndddd vvii 77//1166//22001122 77::4411::4411 PPMM A cknowledgments A s first-time editors and junior scholars interested in propelling anthropological analyses of government, the compilation of this book was itself a kind of political work. Through sessions at the Canadian Anthropology Society Annual Meetings in 2008 and 2009, and many, many discussions in person, on the phone, and via email, we worked through the struggles and possibilities of charting new ground in the anthropology and ethnography of politics. We are pleased with the result and hope this book will inspire future research, debate, and political action. Like all political work, intellectual labor is a collective endeavor. We are grateful to each of the contributors for their thoughtful work and dedication to this volume, and to advancing anthropological con- tributions to the study of government and politics. We thank Thomas Wilson for his encouragement and guidance in the early stages of this project. The capable workers at Palgrave Macmillan, particularly Robyn Curtis, are acknowledged with gratitude. I extend an enthusiastic thank you to my coeditor, Billy Schumann, for his sincere commitment, insightful contributions, and abundantly good humor. It was a pleasure to work with such a dedicated scholar and genuine person who managed to laudably balance commitment to his family with the large workload of coediting this book. Yet I still want to thank Billy’s family for their patience as we toiled with each stage of this project. The encouragement and insights of Kim Clark, John Clarke, Gavin Smith, Krystyna Sieciechowicz, Richard Lee, and Marjorie Griffin Cohen were greatly appreciated as I researched gov- ernment and grappled with how anthropologists can best articulate and analyze the production of politics. I owe my mother, Rebecca Priegert Coulter, immense thanks for a lifetime of personal and intellectual guidance, and for instilling in me a desire to bravely and boldly chart new ground, while always learning from history. I also 99778811113377000099221100__0011__pprreevviiiiii..iinndddd vviiii 77//1166//22001122 77::4411::4411 PPMM viii Acknowledgments want to acknowledge the nonhuman members of my family, Buster, Macey, and Solidarity (Kozzie), whose joy and love have been indis- pensable, especially when the human world of scholarly and political work becomes most trying. To John Drew I say a very loving thank you, for his unwavering support of my work, my hopes, my mind, and my heart, and for bringing me immeasurable happiness. KENDRA COULTER I would like to acknowledge the effort and vision of my coeditor, Kendra Coulter, who has consistently met and exceeded the demands of this project. I thank Jessie, Garland, and Brecon, without whom I would not have the inspiration to be a teacher and scholar. I also thank my family and friends who have always been a source of sup- port. Finally, I am gratefully and forever indebted to Pat Beaver who has been a mentor and friend at every step of my intellectual journey. WILLIAM R. SCHUMANN 99778811113377000099221100__0011__pprreevviiiiii..iinndddd vviiiiii 77//1166//22001122 77::4411::4411 PPMM 1 G overnment Matters Intellectual Labor and the Work of Governing Kendra Coulter and William R. Schumann G overnments matter. Governments initiate, manage, reconstruct, and/or retract vital public services such as health care, education, environmental protection, and social welfare. Governments influ- ence employment, labor relations, investment, and development. Governments affect projects of war and peace. Governments define and enforce the terms of citizenship and immigration, and shape how cultural ideals of belonging, value, and morality are reproduced and practiced. Yet none of these projects are complete or entirely uni- fied. Governments are also sites of struggle, possibility, contradiction, and compromise, and governing is always dependent on the complex interactions of social actors operating across legal, institutional, and cultural domains. Accordingly, this collection demonstrates how anthropologists can and do enhance our understanding of governing, principally by advancing ethnographically grounded analyses of the ideas and prac- tices of those who govern. The chapters unpack the work of govern- ing to illuminate how governments are produced, reproduced, and contested in local and state-level bureaucracies; in local, regional, and national parliaments; and in other multisited, multileveled govern- ing contexts. Through anthropological lenses, the social action and strategic inaction that justify, modify, and reproduce political power and social divisions are revealed. The contributors explore govern- ment work as negotiated within and across various social, political, and economic terrains, and through social, political, and economic discourses. To borrow from parallel discussions about ethnographic 99778811113377000099221100__0022__cchh0011..iinndddd 11 77//1166//22001122 77::4422::0066 PPMM

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Governments are more than formal political institutions, they are places of work for thousands of women and men, and powerful social, cultural, and economic sites that shape the lives of all people. This collection demonstrates how anthropologists can enrich our understandings of government by explo
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