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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Cristiana Panella , Walter E. Little , Florence E. Babb, Florence E. Babb , Isabella Clough MarinaroPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.540kg ISBN: 9781793646309ISBN 10: 1793646309 Pages: 228 Publication Date: 06 May 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Risk and Hope: Daily Life Subversions of the Norm Part I Framing of Norms and Illegalities, Theoretical to Ethnographic Chapter 1: Anthropological Shades of Grey: Informal Norms and Becoming (Il)legal Chapter 2: Methodological Legalism Chapter 3: On Doing Fieldwork, Outspokenly: Ethics, Money and Antiquities Illegal Trade Part II Ethnographies of Illegalities and the Reframing of Norms and Margins Chapter 4: Street Economies, Illegality and Rights in Antigua Guatemala Chapter 5: Informal Economies, Illegal Subjects: Roma and Senegalese Traders in Rome Chapter 6: Repositioning the Edge: The Resilience of Wholesale Vegetable Markets in Benguet Upland Philippines Chapter 7: Frontier Justice: Making Norms, Negotiating Authority and Becoming Responsible in Northern Madagascar’s Artisanal Mining Sector Chapter 8: To Legally Beg or Illegally Work? Norms and Illegality Among Asylum Seekers in Hong KongReviewsNorms and Illegality enjoins legal and economic anthropologists to attend to the corporeality, hope, pain, risk, and ambiguity that mark human lives lived in the abject zones of 'illegal' activity. The contributors deftly explore the networks of complicity that make the vital moral economies of aspiration and value in these social worlds invisible to us. The volume's trenchant, compelling, and intimate ethnographic explorations of illicit activities and informal economies invite us to reevaluate our imbrications in systems of power when ethically reconsidering the politics of legitimacy.--Rosemary J. Coombe, York University Norms and Illegality: Intimate Ethnographies and Politics brings together anthropological studies from diverse urban settings focusing on the making of precarious livelihoods in 'in-between' spaces where extra-legal activities slip between norms and law, between toleration, permissiveness, and legal authority. Theoretical discussions and rich case studies provide inspiring insights into the cultures and politics of working on the edge, negotiating illegality and legality in ingenious ways.--Karen Tranberg Hansen, professor emerita, Northwestern University Norms and Illegality brings together anthropological studies from diverse urban settings focusing on the making of precarious livelihoods in 'in-between' spaces where extra-legal activities slip between norms and law, between toleration, permissiveness, and legal authority. Theoretical discussions and rich case studies provide inspiring insights into the cultures and politics of working on the edge, negotiating illegality and legality in ingenious ways.--Karen Tranberg Hansen, professor emerita, Northwestern University Norms and Illegality is a thought-provoking, timely, and brilliant collective work that challenges our conventional understanding of the limits between legal, illegal, and extralegal practices, and explores their articulation in a given moment and place. This is an important book that intelligently assembles significant theoretical insights with fresh ethnographic configurations of norms, illegality, and their margins. While entirely anthropological in spirit, it is a must-read for scholars across a wide range of academic disciplines and scholars interested in going beyond a legalistic understanding of illegality and extralegality.--Filippo M. Zerilli, University of Cagliari This is a fantastic volume. The editors propose an ambitious research agenda, which invites for a fundamental rethinking of ruling notions of norms and legality. This invitation is taken up in a series of fascinating chapters which delve into the lived realities of legality/illegality. It is rare to find a book which so successfully combines ethnographic thickness with conceptual depth. The book deserves a wide readership across the social and human sciences.--Bjorn Thomassen, Roskilde University Norms and Illegality enjoins legal and economic anthropologists to attend to the corporeality, hope, pain, risk, and ambiguity that mark human lives lived in the abject zones of 'illegal' activity. The contributors deftly explore the networks of complicity that make the vital moral economies of aspiration and value in these social worlds invisible to us. The volume's trenchant, compelling, and intimate ethnographic explorations of illicit activities and informal economies invite us to reevaluate our imbrications in systems of power when ethically reconsidering the politics of legitimacy.--Rosemary J. Coombe, York University Norms and Illegality: Intimate Ethnographies and Politics is a thought-provoking, timely, and brilliant collective work that challenges our conventional understanding of the limits between legal, illegal, and extralegal practices, and explores their articulation in a given moment and place. This is an important book that intelligently assembles significant theoretical insights with fresh ethnographic configurations of norms, illegality, and their margins. While entirely anthropological in spirit, it is a must-read for scholars across a wide range of academic disciplines and scholars interested in going beyond a legalistic understanding of illegality and extralegality.--Filippo M. Zerilli, University of Cagliari Norms and Illegality enjoins legal and economic anthropologists to attend to the corporeality, hope, pain, risk, and ambiguity that mark human lives lived in the abject zones of 'illegal' activity. The contributors deftly explore the networks of complicity that make the vital moral economies of aspiration and value in these social worlds invisible to us. The volume's trenchant, compelling, and intimate ethnographic explorations of illicit activities and informal economies invite us to reevaluate our imbrications in systems of power when ethically reconsidering the politics of legitimacy.--Rosemary J. Coombe, York University Author InformationCristiana Panella is senior researcher in social and cultural anthropology at the Royal Museum for Central Africa. Walter E. Little is full professor of anthropology at the University at Albany, SUNY. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |