Smugglers and States: Negotiating the Maghreb at Its Margins

Author:   Max Gallien
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231212892


Pages:   360
Publication Date:   27 February 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Smugglers and States: Negotiating the Maghreb at Its  Margins


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Author:   Max Gallien
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
Imprint:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231212892


ISBN 10:   0231212895
Pages:   360
Publication Date:   27 February 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Note on Transliteration List of Abbreviations 1. On the Radar 2. Smuggling in North Africa: Stakes and Structures 3. Regulating Smuggling at the Border 4. Regulating Smuggling in the Borderlands 5. Smuggling Rents and Social Peace 6. Tunisia: Smugglers and Revolution 7. Morocco: Smugglers and Reform 8. The Valley and the Mountain: Lived Political Settlements Conclusion: Remaking the Maghreb Appendix 1: Studying Smuggling in North Africa Appendix 2: Interview Lists Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

Deeply researched, masterfully written, and persuasively argued, Smugglers and States turns the conventional wisdom about illicit trade on its head. In this truly pathbreaking book, Max Gallien makes a compelling case that smuggling is about state-making rather than state-weakening, that it can serve core state interests in order and stability, and that it is essential to our understanding of the political economy of North Africa. -- Peter Andreas, author of <i>Smuggler Nation: How Illicit Trade Made America</i> In this fascinating and detailed book Max Gallien calls into question much of the received wisdom on the place of smuggling in North Africa. It shows that far from being an activity on the margins of the state, it plays a much more integrated and important role in both politics and society. Essential reading for anyone interested not just in smuggling and North Africa but in the whole notion of ‘informal’ economies. -- Michael Willis, author of <i>Algeria: Politics and Society from the Dark Decade to the Hirak</i> Smugglers and States deftly exposes the informal social contract that has stabilized the crumbling formal societal bargains in two North African states, tracing the formal-informal regulatory orders linking traders, officials and police in the borderlands. The book examines the role of smuggling as a technique of governance that shores up livelihoods and political consent at the margins of the state, revealing how international pressures for border regulation to control migration and terrorism serve to distort and destabilize rather than contain political risks. -- Kate Meagher, author of <i> Identity Economics: Social Networks and the Informal Economy in Nigeria</i> Scholars have long pointed out that an illegal economy may be seen as legitimate by many, and that those who sponsor it may obtain significant political capital. In his terrific new book, Max unpacks another contradiction – namely, that even as smuggling undermines key aspects of statehood and creates critical dependence vulnerabilities for governments, it is also extensively embraced and regulated by some governments and their components. Based on impressive fieldwork, he details how and why that happens in cases frequently neglected by scholars of the Maghreb and of illegal economies overall, adding geographic, empirical, as well as conceptual value to analysis. -- Vanda Felbab-Brown, author of <i>The Extinction Market: Wildlife Trafficking and How to Counter It</i>


"Deeply researched, masterfully written, and persuasively argued, Smugglers and States turns the conventional wisdom about illicit trade on its head. In this truly pathbreaking book, Max Gallien makes a compelling case that smuggling is about state-making rather than state-weakening, that it can serve core state interests in order and stability, and that it is essential to our understanding of the political economy of North Africa. -- Peter Andreas, author of <i>Smuggler Nation: How Illicit Trade Made America</i> Scholars have long pointed out that an illegal economy may be seen as legitimate by many and that those who sponsor it may obtain significant political capital. In this terrific book, Gallien unpacks another contradiction—namely, that even as smuggling undermines key aspects of statehood and creates critical dependence vulnerabilities for governments, it is also extensively embraced and regulated by some governments and their components. Drawing on impressive fieldwork, he details how and why that happens in cases frequently neglected by scholars of the Maghreb and of illegal economies overall, adding geographic, empirical, and conceptual value to analysis. -- Vanda Felbab-Brown, author of <i>The Extinction Market: Wildlife Trafficking and How to Counter It</i> Smugglers and States deftly exposes the informal social contract that has stabilized the crumbling formal societal bargains in two North African states, tracing the formal-informal regulatory orders linking traders, officials, and police in the borderlands. This book examines the role of smuggling as a technique of governance that shores up livelihoods and political consent at the margins of the state, revealing how international pressures for border regulation to control migration and terrorism serve to distort and destabilize rather than contain political risks. -- Kate Meagher, author of <i> Identity Economics: Social Networks and the Informal Economy in Nigeria</i> In this fascinating and detailed book, Gallien calls into question much of the received wisdom on the place of smuggling in North Africa. He shows that, far from being an activity on the margins of the state, it plays a much more integrated and important role in both politics and society. Essential reading for anyone interested not just in smuggling and North Africa but in the whole notion of ""informal"" economies. -- Michael Willis, author of <i>Algeria: Politics and Society from the Dark Decade to the Hirak</i>"


Deeply researched, masterfully written, and persuasively argued, Smugglers and States turns the conventional wisdom about illicit trade on its head. In this truly pathbreaking book, Max Gallien makes a compelling case that smuggling is about state-making rather than state-weakening, that it can serve core state interests in order and stability, and that it is essential to our understanding of the political economy of North Africa. -- Peter Andreas, author of <i>Smuggler Nation: How Illicit Trade Made America</i>


Author Information

Max Gallien is a research fellow at the Institute of Development Studies and the International Centre for Tax and Development. He is a coeditor of the Routledge Handbook of Smuggling (2022).

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