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Le HCR et la crise afghane : une bureaucratie internationale à l'épreuve
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ISBN: 9782811123741 2811123741 Year: 2022 Publisher: Paris: Karthala,

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Cet ouvrage propose une anthropologie politique du Haut Commissariat aux réfugiés (HCR). Agence onusienne ayant pour mission de veiller sur la prise en charge des réfugiés, le HCR est présent dans plus de 130 pays et s'occupe de quelque 80 millions de personnes. En emmenant le lecteur à travers les bureaux chargés du dossier afghan, au cours des années 2000, à Genève comme à Kaboul, l'auteure donne à voir le fonctionnement interne de cette organisation internationale : comment se déploie-t-elle à travers le monde ? Qui sont ses agents ? Comment le HCR exerce-t-il son pouvoir ? Ce livre montre également que la vision du monde nationale et étatocentrée de l'organisation l'amène en pratique à participer à des mécanismes de sédentarisation et d'illégalisation des personnes déplacées. Il met ainsi en lumière une impasse majeure de l'action contemporaine du HCR : l'agence s'efforce d'établir un type d'ordre ? sédentaire et centré sur l'État-nation ? qui est en fait à l'origine du « problème » qu'elle a pour mission de résoudre. En étudiant la prise en charge d'une population de réfugiés emblématique à partir d'un positionnement original, l'auteure, à la fois fonctionnaire de l'agence et anthropologue, mène un travail fin et ambitieux, qui articule plusieurs niveaux d'analyse : la micropolitique des pratiques, l'institution HCR et les rapports de pouvoir multi-scalaires qui façonnent son environnement. Giulia Scalettaris est maîtresse de conférences en science politique à l'Université de Lille. Elle travaille sur les politiques internationales d'asile, sur la base d'enquêtes ethnographiques au sein des institutions et aux interfaces institutionnelles. Parallèlement à son expérience universitaire, elle a collaboré avec plusieurs organisations internationales et ONG.


Book
Paternalism to Partnership : The Administration of Indian Affairs, 1786–2021
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Year: 2022 Publisher: University of Nebraska Press


Book
Paternalism to Partnership : The Administration of Indian Affairs, 1786–2021
Author:
Year: 2022 Publisher: University of Nebraska Press


Book
Every household its own government : improvised infrastructure, entrepreneurial citizens, and the state in Nigeria
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ISBN: 0691229910 Year: 2022 Publisher: Princeton, New Jersey ; Oxford : Princeton University Press,

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"An up-close account of how Nigerians' self-reliance in the absence of reliable government services enables official dysfunction to strengthen state powerWhen Nigerians say that every household is its own local government, what they mean is that the politicians and state institutions of Africa's richest, most populous country cannot be trusted to ensure even the most basic infrastructure needs of their people. Daniel Jordan Smith traces how innovative entrepreneurs and ordinary citizens in Nigeria have forged their own systems in response to these deficiencies, devising creative solutions in the daily struggle to survive.Drawing on his three decades of experience in Nigeria, Smith examines the many ways Nigerians across multiple social strata develop technologies, businesses, social networks, political strategies, cultural repertoires, and everyday routines to cope with the constant failure of government infrastructure. He describes how Nigerians provide for basic needs like water, electricity, transportation, security, communication, and education-and how their inventiveness comes with consequences. On the surface, it may appear that their self-reliance and sheer hustle render the state irrelevant. In reality, the state is not so much absent as complicit. Smith shows how private efforts to address infrastructural shortcomings require regular engagement with government officials, shaping the experience of citizenship and strengthening state power.Every Household Its Own Government reveals how these dealings have contributed to forms and practices of governance that thrive on official dysfunction and perpetuate the very inequalities and injustices that afflict struggling Nigerians"-- "In Nigeria, Africa's most populous and richest country in terms of per capita GDP, people say that "every household is its own local government." What they mean is that politicians and state institutions have not delivered-and cannot be trusted to ensure-even the most basic infrastructure. Nigeria is a place where, for many people, water must be purchased daily from vendors carting jerrycans filled from boreholes dug in wealthier neighbors' compounds. Small businesses rely on mini-generators for electricity because the national grid supplies power only sporadically. "Public transportation" depends mostly on networks of privately-owned buses and armies of independent motorcycle-taxi drivers. On the surface, it appears that Nigerians' self-reliance render the state irrelevant. In reality, all of these ostensibly private efforts to address infrastructural shortcomings involve regular state-society interaction. These dealings have contributed to forms and practices of state power and everyday citizenship that ironically thrive on official dysfunction and tragically perpetuate the very inequalities and injustices that struggling Nigerians most lament. This book examines the ways that Nigerians across multiple social strata have developed vibrant informal economies-businesses, social networks, political ties, cultural strategies, and daily habits-to cope with the constant failure of government-provided infrastructure. Based on years of ethnographic research-focusing in particular on the case study of Umuahia, a small city in Igbo-speaking southeastern Nigeria-and written in jargon-free prose, each chapter focuses on a different domain: water, electricity, transportation, communication, education, and security. Drawing on a myriad of examples of how ordinary citizens and small-scale entrepreneurs encounter and must deal with government officials, bureaucrats, regulators, and police as they try to cobble together essential infrastructure, Smith ultimately argues that the state is not so much absent as complicit"--

Keywords

Economic policy. --- Infrastructure (Economics) --- Nigeria --- Apprenticeship. --- Back office. --- Bathroom. --- Borehole. --- Bureaucrat. --- Capitalism. --- Civil service. --- Civil society. --- Collective action. --- Complaint. --- Computer Village. --- Corporate identity. --- Cottage Industry. --- Credit (finance). --- Cronyism. --- Crystal Clear (company). --- Cumulative effects (environment). --- Customer. --- Deputy commissioner. --- Economy. --- Electric power distribution. --- Electricity. --- Entrepreneurship. --- Everyday life. --- Facebook. --- Fuel. --- Governance. --- Government Office. --- Government. --- Grandparent. --- Grassroots. --- Handout. --- Headline. --- Home security. --- Hydroelectricity. --- Income. --- Infrastructure. --- Instance (computer science). --- Internet access. --- Jerrycan. --- John Templeton Foundation. --- Landline. --- Laundry detergent. --- Life expectancy. --- Livelihood. --- Mains electricity. --- Manufacturing. --- Markup (business). --- Mattress. --- Mechanic. --- Memorization. --- Metal gate. --- Military dictatorship. --- Mobile phone. --- Modernity. --- Multinational corporation. --- Municipal authority (Pennsylvania). --- NITEL. --- Nigerians. --- Online banking. --- Owerri. --- Plumbing. --- Police commissioner. --- Preschool. --- Primary school. --- Private school. --- Private university. --- Privatization. --- Public institution (United States). --- Public university. --- Refrigerator. --- Regulation. --- Room and board. --- Ruler. --- Salary. --- School meal. --- Secret society. --- Shelf life. --- Small business. --- Social science. --- Standby generator. --- State (polity). --- State capture. --- State formation. --- State-owned enterprise. --- Subcontractor. --- Subsidy. --- Task force. --- Teacher. --- Tertiary education. --- Their Lives. --- Total fertility rate. --- Traditional authority. --- Tuition payments. --- Uganda. --- Usage. --- Vendor. --- Vodacom. --- Wholesaling. --- Wiring (development platform).


Book
Seeking the bomb : strategies of nuclear proliferation
Author:
ISBN: 9780691223063 0691223068 9780691172613 9780691172620 Year: 2022 Publisher: Princeton : Princeton University Press,

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The first systematic look at the different strategies that states employ in their pursuit of nuclear weaponsMuch of the work on nuclear proliferation has focused on why states pursue nuclear weapons. The question of how states pursue nuclear weapons has received little attention. 'Seeking the Bomb' is the first book to analyze this topic by examining which strategies of nuclear proliferation are available to aspirants, why aspirants select one strategy over another, and how this matters to international politics.

Keywords

Nuclear nonproliferation. --- Nuclear arms control. --- Nuclear weapons control --- Arms control --- Nuclear weapons --- Export of nuclear materials --- Export of nuclear technology --- International control of nuclear energy --- Nonproliferation, Nuclear --- Nuclear energy --- Nuclear exports --- Nuclear proliferation --- Proliferation, Nuclear --- Nuclear arms control --- Nuclear-weapon-free zones --- International control --- Polemology --- Nuclear weapons. --- Atomic weapons --- Fusion weapons --- Thermonuclear weapons --- Weapons of mass destruction --- No first use (Nuclear strategy) --- Nuclear disarmament --- Nuclear warfare --- Government policy. --- Abdul Qadeer Khan. --- Agreed Framework. --- Airspace. --- Antenna (radio). --- Atal Bihari Vajpayee. --- Atomic Age. --- Axis of evil. --- Bait and bleed. --- Baruch Plan. --- Beijing. --- Bharat Karnad. --- Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. --- Center for International Security and Cooperation. --- Cold War. --- Commissioner. --- Communist Party of China. --- Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty. --- Disarmament. --- Doublethink. --- Escape velocity. --- Exothermic reaction. --- Experiment. --- Falklands War. --- Flexible response. --- German re-armament. --- Great Satan. --- Igor Kurchatov. --- Intention (criminal law). --- Interim. --- John Mearsheimer. --- Kinetic bombardment. --- Klaus Fuchs. --- Military dictatorship. --- Misinformation. --- Modernity. --- Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. --- Munir Ahmad Khan. --- Nobility. --- North Korean defectors. --- Nuclear Tipping Point. --- Nuclear disarmament. --- Nuclear proliferation. --- Nuclear sharing. --- Nuclear strategy. --- Nuclear umbrella. --- Nuclear warfare. --- Nuclear weapon. --- Operation Barbarossa. --- Pakistan and weapons of mass destruction. --- Pakistanis. --- Paramount leader. --- Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. --- Peaceful nuclear explosion. --- Plutonium. --- Post-Soviet states. --- Qasem Soleimani. --- Quebec Agreement. --- Ramp up. --- Reactor-grade plutonium. --- Ronen Sen. --- Saudis. --- Scott Sagan. --- Security assurance. --- Security studies. --- South Africa and weapons of mass destruction. --- Soviet Empire. --- Spark gap. --- Superiority (short story). --- Supply chain. --- Swedish nuclear weapons program. --- Tacit knowledge. --- Tactical nuclear weapon. --- Taepodong-2. --- The Indian Express. --- The Making of the Atomic Bomb. --- The Tragedy of Great Power Politics. --- Three Non-Nuclear Principles. --- Two-front war. --- NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION --- NUCLEAR WEAPONS --- NUCLEAR ARMS CONTROL AND DISARMAMENT

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