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  1. The sumud within: Walid Daka’s abolitionist decolonization.Shai Gortler - 2022 - Contemporary Political Theory 21 (4):499-521.
    The texts of Walid Daka, a Palestinian political prisoner incarcerated since 1986, challenge the notion that colonial power ends with decolonization and expose the shortcomings of examining colonial prisons solely through the eliminatory prism of death and deprivation. Studying Daka’s texts, the article presents how the Israeli carceral system has managed to utilize prisoners’ hopes and longings – in their relations with one another, their political actions such as hunger strikes or their building of internal leadership hierarchies, and their affective (...)
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  • Developing Global Leaders: Insights From African Case Studies.Michel Foucault - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    “What characterizes the act of justice is not resort to a court and to judges; it is not the intervention of magistrates (even if they had to be simple mediators or arbitrators). What characterizes the juridical act, the process or the procedure in the broad sense, is the regulated development of a dispute. And the intervention of judges, their opinion or decision, is only ever an episode in this development. What defines the juridical order is the way in which one (...)
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  • Penal Theories and Institutions : Lectures at the Collège de France, 1971-1972.Michel Foucault - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    “What characterizes the act of justice is not resort to a court and to judges; it is not the intervention of magistrates. What characterizes the juridical act, the process or the procedure in the broad sense, is the regulated development of a dispute. And the intervention of judges, their opinion or decision, is only ever an episode in this development. What defines the juridical order is the way in which one confronts one another, the way in which one struggles. The (...)
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  • Custer’s Sins: Vine Deloria Jr. and the Settler-Colonial Politics of Civic Inclusion.David Myer Temin - 2018 - Political Theory 46 (3):357-379.
    While “inclusion” has been seen as a central mode of redressing ongoing injustices against communities of color in the US, Indigenous political experiences feature more complex legacies of contesting US citizenship. Turning to an important episode of contestation, this essay examines the relation between inclusion and the politics of eliminating Indigenous nations that was part of a shared policy shift toward “Termination” in the Anglo-settler world of the 1950s and 1960s. Through a reading of Indigenous activist-intellectual Vine Deloria Jr.’s Custer (...)
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  • Review of Jane J. Mansbridge: Beyond Adversary Democracy[REVIEW]Jane J. Mansbridge - 1982 - Ethics 93 (1):153-155.
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  • In LH Martin, H. Gutman & PH Hutton.M. Foucault - 1988 - In Michel Foucault, Luther H. Martin, Huck Gutman & Patrick H. Hutton (eds.), Technologies of the self: a seminar with Michel Foucault. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.
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  • Dissident Citizenship: Democratic Theory, Political Courage, and Activist Women.Holloway Sparks - 1997 - Hypatia 12 (4):74-110.
    In this essay, I argue that contemporary democratic theory gives insufficient attention to the important contributions dissenting citizens make to democratic life. Guided by the dissident practices of activist women, I develop a more expansive conception of citizenship that recognizes dissent and an ethic of political courage as vital elements of democratic participation. I illustrate how this perspective on citizenship recasts and reclaims women's courageous dissidence by reconsidering the well-known story of Rosa Parks.
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  • The Sexual Contract.Carole Pateman - 1988 - Ethics 100 (3):658-669.
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  • Interview with Carole Pateman by Steve On.Steve On - 2010 - Contemporary Political Theory 9 (2):239-250.
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  • The aesthetic and ascetic dimensions of an ethics of self-fashioning: Nietzsche and Foucault.Alan Milchman & Alan Rosenberg - 2007 - Parrhesia 2 (55):11.
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  • The Will to Empower: Democratic Citizens and Other Subjects.Barbara Cruikshank - 1999 - Cornell University Press.
    Combining knowledge of social policy and practice with insights from poststructural and feminist theory, the text demonstrates how democratic citizens and the political are continually recreated.
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  • On Prison Democracy: The Politics of Participation in a Maximum Security Prison.Christopher D. Berk - 2018 - Critical Inquiry 44 (2):275-302.
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  • Sublimation and Reification: Locke, Wolin and the Liberal Democratic Conception of the Political.Carole Pateman - 1975 - Politics and Society 5 (4):441-467.
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  • To Kill a Thief: Punishment, Proportionality, and Criminal Subjectivity in Locke's "Second Treatise".Andrew Dilts - 2012 - Political Theory 40 (1):58-83.
    This essay argues that the thief, a liminal figure that haunts the boundary of political membership and the border between the law of reason and the law of beasts, drives Locke’s accounts of the foundation of the commonwealth and the right to rebellion in the Second Treatise of Government. Locke’s political theory is best read through punishment as a theory of subject formation, which relies on an unstable concept of proportionality to produce this liminal figure in order to secure the (...)
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  • The the World of Freedom: Heidegger, Foucault, and the Politics of Historical Ontology.Robert Nichols - 2014 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    Martin Heidegger and Michel Foucault are two of the most important and influential thinkers of the twentieth century. Each has spawned volumes of secondary literature and sparked fierce, polarizing debates, particularly about the relationship between philosophy and politics. And yet, to date there exists almost no work that presents a systematic and comprehensive engagement of the two in relation to one another. _The World of Freedom_ addresses this lacuna. Neither apology nor polemic, the book demonstrates that it is not merely (...)
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