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BORDER VIOLENCE
(2)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
178062
Border violence and migrant subjectivities
/ Topak, Ozgun E
Topak, Ozgun E
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
This article draws on ethnographic fieldwork material from Greece to investigate the types of subjectivities migrants develop when they are confronted by the material border violence. It utilizes an aleatory materialist theory of subjectivity and mobilizes four analytical categories to illustrate the diversity of migrant subjectivities: abject, religious, nomadic, and dissident. The article further demonstrates that migrants might move from one category to another or belong to multiple categories at the same time. This article contributes to the critical literature that challenges the mainstream reductive representation of migrant subjectivity (either as victims or criminals) by developing an aleatory materialist framework and emphasizing the intersections and shifts among migrant subjectivity categories.
Key Words
Migrant
;
Subjectivities
;
Border Violence
;
Dissident
;
Nomadic
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2
ID:
093827
Corruption of politicians, law enforcement, and the judiciary i
/ Nagle, Luz E
Nagle, Luz E
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2010.
Summary/Abstract
Mexico is a failing state, languishing under a deeply entrenched system of political corruption that undermines the three branches of government and compromises Mexico's law enforcement and national security capabilities. This article explores the culture of corruption that pervades the state and frustrates the rule of law in Mexico, examining how the political elites, the judiciary, and police officials embrace corruption as a primary means for career advancement and for acquiring personal wealth. It is an examination of a country overwhelmed by a system of government and commerce that has grown dependent on corruption in order to function. But such a system cannot sustain itself indefinitely, and the signs of the Mexican state's collapse are becoming more apparent in the wake of unprecedented political and social violence at the hands of corrupt actors and Mexican drug lords.
Key Words
Drug trafficking
;
Mexico
;
Political Corruption
;
Security Threats
;
Border Violence
;
Bribery
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