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Collective Action in Post-colonial Societies
Details
This book offers an exploration of collective action by bringing together the themes of sovereignty and solidarity in post-colonial societies in Africa and beyond. It does so against a common tradition of writing about collective action that assumes an opposition between the state as a legal framework of unity and social movements that express the aspirations of marginalized people. The book's examination of collective action resists this binary division. It states that sovereignty can be imagined beyond the confines of the law and consequently beyond the centrality of the state. Power therefore appears as a construct of forces and factors that signal or gesture to a complex but fascinating way of imagining collective action. These forces and factors open our eyes to the dynamics of life in post-colonial societies in ways that the understanding of sovereignty centred on law conceals. Brought into an intimacy with solidarity, sovereignty opens collective action to nuanced, complex and multiple configurations that surpass binary thinking. This is an innovative approach and of interest to students and scholars from across the social sciences.
Presents nuanced and complex ways of thinking about collective action from postcolonial societies Looks at the literature on social action in post-Apartheid nations and elsewhere Overcomes the binary of state power versus collective action
Autorentext
Sepetla Molapo has an eclectic academic background having studied theology, religious studies, development studies as well as sociology. He is currently associate professor in the department of religious studies and Arabic at the University of South Africa, Pretoria. Sepetla is an established researcher with extensive experience in teaching, postgraduate supervision, academic leadership and community engagement. He has had fellowships with universities in Europe and the United States of America.
Inhalt
Introduction.- Non-productive care at the borderlands (Sepetla Molapo, University of Pretoria).- Constitut(ionalis)ing sovereign responsibility (Juergen Schraten, Justus Liebig University).- Between universal humanism and the particularity of experience: Solidarity, sovereignty and their possible futures (Vito Laterza, University of Agder).- Languaging solidarity in an undergraduate classroom (Vangile Bingma, University of Pretoria).- The League of Commoners and economic solidarity in colonial Lesotho, 1910s-1950s (Sean Maliehe, National University of Lesotho).- Landscapes of intergenerational solidarities and conflict in South Africa: Disjuncture, intimacy and the return of the Sovereign Pater (Detlev Krige, University of Pretoria).- African personhood and its landscapes of solidarity (MphoTshivhase, University of Pretoria).- 'Unusual' solidarities: South Africa's social movements and the thornyissue of Palestinian Liberation (Maya Bhardwaj, University of Pretoria).- Solidarity in a post-migrant society: A case of Germany (Farah Hasan, Institute of Asian and African Studies, Humboldt University Berlin).- In search of a kingdom (Kereng Khotleng, University of the Witwatersrand).- Conclusion.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783031775468
- Genre Sociology
- Editor Sepetla Molapo
- Sprache Englisch
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Anzahl Seiten 161
- Größe H235mm x B155mm
- Jahr 2025
- EAN 9783031775468
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 978-3-031-77546-8
- Veröffentlichung 12.02.2025
- Titel Collective Action in Post-colonial Societies
- Untertitel Beyond the Binary of Sovereignty and Solidarity
- Herausgeber Springer Nature Switzerland