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ZANOTTI, LAURA (7) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   140848


Biopolitical and disciplinary peacebuilding: sport, reforming bodies and rebuilding societies / Zanotti, Laura; Stephenson, Max ; Schnitzer, Marcy   Article
Zanotti, Laura Article
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Summary/Abstract The peacebuilding political rationality established in the first years of the current century broadened the target of such efforts from state institutions to populations and adopted an array of disciplinary and biopolitical techniques aimed at changing individuals and the ways they live together. This article explores international organization discourses on sport and peacebuilding and argues that the broad consensus on sport as a peacebuilding strategy is most fruitfully explored in light of the intensification of the biopolitical and disciplinary trajectories of the liberal peace.
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2
ID:   098756


Cacophonies of aid, failed state building and NGOs in Haiti: setting the stage for disaster, envisioning the future / Zanotti, Laura   Journal Article
Zanotti, Laura Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The January 2010 earthquake in Haiti was a catastrophe not only for the loss of life it caused, but also because it destroyed the very thin layer of state administrative capacity that was in place in the country. This article argues that the fragility of the Haitian state institutions was exacerbated by international strategies that promoted NGOs as substitutes for the state. These strategies have generated a vicious circle that, while solving immediate logistical problems, ended up weakening Haiti's institutions. However, the article does not call for an overarching condemnation of NGOs. Instead, it explores two cases of community-based NGOs, Partners In Health and Fonkoze, that have contributed to creating durable social capital, generated employment and provided functioning services to the communities where they operated. The article shows that organisations that are financially independent and internationally connected, embrace a needs-based approach to their activities and share a long-term commitment to the communities within which they operate can contribute to bringing about substantial improvement for people living in situations of extreme poverty. It concludes that in the aftermath of a crisis of the dimension of the January earthquake it is crucial to channel support towards organisations that show this type of commitment.
Key Words Haiti  NGO  Aid  Disaster  Failed State  Cacophonies 
Envisioning 
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3
ID:   129484


Governmentality, ontology, methodology: re-thinking political agency in the global world / Zanotti, Laura   Journal Article
Zanotti, Laura Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Some critical international relations scholars have adopted theories of governmentality both as a heuristic framework for exploring modalities and functions of power and as a descriptive tool to explore the oppressive effects of global liberalism. I argue that, as a descriptive tool, much governmentality literature remains rooted in the same substantialist ontology and epistemology as the liberal discourses it seeks to criticize. This ontological orientation especially has a bearing on conceptualizations of political agency, which remain confined to the liberal struggle of power and freedom. I suggest that reimagining political agency calls for a reorganization of the ontological and epistemological framework of international relations in non-substantialist ways. The analysis maps non-substantialist positions across disciplinary lines. By treating power and subjects as deeply imbricated, non-substantialist ontologies examine political engagements as processes of hybridization aimed at producing practical effects in specific contexts.
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4
ID:   067822


Governmentalizing the post-cold war international regime: the UN debate on democratization and good governance / Zanotti, Laura   Journal Article
Zanotti, Laura Journal Article
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Publication 2005.
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5
ID:   084020


Imagining democracy, building unsustainable institutions: the UN peacekeeping operation in Haiti / Zanotti, Laura   Journal Article
Zanotti, Laura Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract This article employs theoretical tools devised by Michel Foucault to explore the political rationale, technologies of government, and unintended consequences of UN efforts at statebuilding and democratization in the context of the peacekeeping operation in Haiti. It aims to offer an empirically oriented contribution to the study of the modalities of international intervention in the post-Cold War period and the effects of transplanting institutional models. The article shows that the UN's political imaginary can be traced back to the texts that guided the reform of punishment institutions in Classical Europe. The United Nations saw its effort at statebuilding as centered upon making local institutions disciplined, visible, and centralized. The failure of the UN to achieve its stated goals is appraised in the contingent modalities of the encounter between an ethnocentric political imaginary that takes for granted that modalities of government can be transplanted with benign effects and local conditions of extreme poverty. The article concludes that, while purporting to build an independent, democratic, and well-functioning state, unreflectively imported political models foster disorder and dependence. They also reinforce the instruments of control and conditionality in the hands of international actors, thus fostering the carceralization of international spaces.
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6
ID:   068276


Taming chaos: a foucauldian view of UN peacekeeping, democracy and normalization / Zanotti, Laura   Journal Article
Zanotti, Laura Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
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7
ID:   093880


UN integrated peacekeeping operations and NGOs: reflections on governmental rationalities and contestation in the age of risk / Zanotti, Laura   Journal Article
Zanotti, Laura Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract In the first decade of the new millennium, with the adoption at the UN of the 'responsibility to protect' as the organizing concept for intervention, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) emerge as increasingly important partners in international peacekeeping operations. Postmodernist analysts of liberal international security have critically addressed the growing role of international interventionism as well as NGOs. The literature, however, has overstated the effectiveness of liberal biopolitical rationalities in successfully inscribing all political actors, to include NGOs, into their script. Based upon the exploration of discourses of UN reform and integrated peacekeeping, this article argues that, while in the post-Cold-War world international security is reconceptualized in biopolitical terms and calculating rationalities are deployed, the implementation of the biopolitical liberal script is ridden with ambiguities, indecisions and stumbling blocks. International liberal mechanisms for governing disorder produce not only effects of domination and control but also spaces for political appropriation and contestation by NGOs and civil society.
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