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CRITICAL ASIAN STUDIES 2018-06 50, 2 (9) answer(s).
 
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ID:   159157


biopolitics of China’s “war on terror” and the exclusion of the Uyghurs / Roberts, Sean R   Journal Article
Roberts, Sean R Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article provides an overview of People’s Republic of China (PRC) counter-terrorism policies targeting Uyghurs since 2001 when the state first asserted that it faced a terrorist threat from this population. In reviewing these policies and their impact, it suggests that the state has gradually isolated and excluded Uyghurs from PRC society. Drawing on the writings of Michael Foucault, it articulates this gradual exclusion of Uyghurs as an expression of biopolitics where the Uyghur people as a whole have come to symbolize an almost biological threat to society that must be quarantined through surveillance, punishment, and detention. Rather than suggesting that these impacts of China’s “war on terror” coincide with the intent of state policy, the article argues that they are inevitable outcomes of labeling a given ethnic population as a terrorist threat in the age of the Global War on Terror.
Key Words Terrorism  China  Biopolitics  Uyghurs  Islam 
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2
ID:   159153


Engaging North Korea: an interview with Tony Namkung / Gray, Kevin   Journal Article
Gray, Kevin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract K.A. “Tony” Namkung has been intimately involved for many years in fostering dialogue between the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), the Republic of Korea (ROK), Japan, and the United States. These have included unofficial (Track II) and official discussions, as well as assistance to humanitarian and other not-for-profit organizations working in the DPRK. As part of his efforts, Dr. Namkung has made more than seventy trips to the DPRK. He is currently a member of the National Committee on North Korea (NCNK).
Key Words Interview  Engaging North Korea  Tony Namkung 
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3
ID:   159156


Everyday authoritarianism: a political anthropology of Singapore / Ibrahim, Nur Amali   Journal Article
Ibrahim, Nur Amali Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Observers of Singapore agree that its state is authoritarian. Complicating such accounts of Singaporean authoritarianism, this paper shows authoritarianism is not simply state-driven or top-down as commonly assumed but involves diffuse governing processes. The paper describes a recent high-profile case involving Amos Yee, an eighteen-year-old blogger who made a video mocking Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s founding prime minister, shortly after Lee’s death in 2015. The teenager was incarcerated for the video, but only after ordinary citizens filed police reports and subjected him to online and physical abuse, suggesting that the people were acting as the state’s partners in punishment. Yee’s case shows that authoritarianism can have an everyday dimension and that it can be reproduced by ordinary citizens who punish fellow citizens perceived to be acting in adversarial manners towards the nation-state. The everyday authoritarianism of recent years is a reassertion of patriotism – a response to the insecurities caused by the rapid movement of people, capital, and ideas in the neoliberal economy. Everyday authoritarianism helps explain the longevity of Singaporean state authoritarianism, how it has managed to withstand multiple democratic challenges, and why it may survive long after Lee Kuan Yew, its chief architect, is dead.
Key Words Authoritarianism  Singapore  Neoliberalism  Populism 
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4
ID:   159154


From the workplace to the household: migrant labor and accumulation without dispossession / Jakobsen, Thomas Sætre   Journal Article
Jakobsen, Thomas Sætre Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Working class studies on China commonly use the lens of proletarianization to understand class formation among peasant workers who move into cities to work in China’s manufacturing sector. However, in the decade since the 2008 global financial crisis, proletarianization is an increasingly fading possibility for the Chinese peasantry, as urban labor markets remain saturated. Instead of peasants being transformed into proletariats, new patterns of class formation have emerged, where the interconnections between agrarian and urban remain central to peasant-workers living without dispossession. The Marxist feminist centering of practices and social arrangements of social reproduction, i.e. workforce maintenance, provides a welcome point of departure for redrawing some of our class maps in the shadow of the 2008 global economic crisis. This contribution draws on multi-sited ethnographic research among migrant workers toiling in the petty-commodity workplaces of Kunming, and in the adjacent countryside of Yunnan Province, to document the fluid class formation among families living on labor’s frontier. Through examining different experiences of workforce reproduction for families and migrant laborers as they move in and out of the workforce and household self-provisioning for subsistence, alternative imaginations for the possibilities of subsistence autonomy emerge.
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5
ID:   159159


Speaking truth to power: editors’ perspectives on the first twenty years of the Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars / Avery, Bryant   Journal Article
Avery, Bryant Journal Article
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Key Words Asian Scholars 
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6
ID:   159158


This stillness, this lack of incident: making conflict visible in West Papua / Philpott, Simon   Journal Article
Philpott, Simon Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines how the ongoing conflict in West Papua between state security forces and Papuan independence activists is made visible in activist social media postings in their attempts to draw attention to the violence, abuses, and problems in Indonesia’s easternmost province. The use of social media may provide new avenues for raising awareness about the conflict and its consequences. However, a social media strategy that contrasts the innocence and justness of the Papuan people with the violence and barbarity of other Indonesian peoples and the state risks entrenching established tropes which may serve to discourage broader support for West Papuan pleas for justice and independence.
Key Words Indonesia  West Papua  Affect  Twitter 
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7
ID:   159160


Tradition and transitions / Fenton, Thomas P   Journal Article
Fenton, Thomas P Journal Article
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Key Words Tradition  Transitions 
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8
ID:   159155


Vanishing natives and Taiwan’s settler-colonial unconsciousness / Hirano, Katsuya; Veracini, Lorenzo   Journal Article
Veracini, Lorenzo Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article approaches Taiwan history through the optic of settler-colonial studies, a comparative scholarly field that has consolidated in recent years [see Wolfe, Patrick. (1999). Settler Colonialism and the Transformation of Anthropology. London: Cassell; Elkins, Caroline, and Pedersen Susan (eds.). (2005). Settler Colonialism in the Twentieth Century: Projects, Practices, Legacies. London: Routledge; Pateman, Carole. (2007). “The Settler Contract.” In Contract and Domination, edited by Carole Pateman and Charles W. Mills, 35–78. Cambridge, MA: Polity Press; Belich, James. (2009). Replenishing the Earth: The Settler Revolution and the Rise of the Anglo-World, 1783–1939. Oxford: Oxford University Press; Banivanua-Mar, Tracey, and Penelope Edmonds (eds.). (2010). Making Settler Colonial Space. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan; Veracini, Lorenzo. (2010). Settler Colonialism: A Theoretical Overview. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan; Bateman, Fiona, and Lionel Pilkington (eds.). (2011). Studies in Settler Colonialism: Politics, Identity and Culture. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan.] The article focuses on uncovering the multiple layers of Taiwan’s settler-colonial past lying beneath dominant historical narratives. It is important to note that processes of profound historiographical transformation are already underway and that our intervention aims to contribute to a revision that is already happening. What we offer is a transnational framework and its language.
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9
ID:   159161


Your trip to China is canceled: a remembrance / Kagan, Richard C   Journal Article
Kagan, Richard C Journal Article
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Key Words Trip to China 
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