
The New War on the Poor: The Production of Insecurity in Latin America
John Gledhill
When viewed from the perspective of those who suffer the consequences of repressive approaches to public security, it is often difficult to distinguish state agents from criminals. The mistreatment by police and soldiers examined in this book reflects a new kind of stigmatization.
The New War on the Poor links the experiences of labour migrants crossing Latin America’s international borders, indigenous Mexicans defending their territories against capitalist mega-projects, drug wars and paramilitary violence, Afro-Brazilians living on the urban periphery of Salvador, and farmers and business people tired of paying protection to criminal mafias. John Gledhill looks at how and why governments are failing to provide security to disadvantaged citizens while all too often painting them as a menace to the rest of society simply for being poor.
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About John Gledhill
Reviews for The New War on the Poor: The Production of Insecurity in Latin America
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Gledhill shows that behind the discourses of "war" against drug traffickers hides a war against the poor. He brilliantly articulates two new ethnographies of Mexico and Brazil, providing insight into the trans-nationalization of criminal networks in the Americas.
Alejandro Isla, Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences , Argentina
Drawing on decades of field research in Mexico and Brazil, Gledhill pries apart recent processes of "securitization" from the ostensibly similar notion of human security. Equal parts searing critique and sensible call to action, this book speaks truth to powerful actors.
Charles R. Hale, University of Texas at Austin
Sweeping and compelling, John Gledhill takes us inside the wars that states wage on inconvenient populations. The result is a powerful critique of contemporary global capitalism.
Daniel Goldstein, author of Outlawed: Between Security and Rights in a Bolivian City
A powerful analysis that uncovers the relationship between securitization, neoliberal views of development, and repressive intervention. The book will interest – and inspire – a wide readership concerned with suffering and inequality.
Dimitrios Theodossopoulos, University of Kent
Drawing on his own extensive fieldwork, and with a passionate sense of justice, Gledhill shows how contemporary news stories on Latin America – violent drug trafficking, dramatic electoral battles, and the excitement of emerging markets – are best viewed as scenes in a broader canvas of predation, which in recent years has rendered a bitter irony: that security policy is tending to undermine the security of many Latin Americans, and especially the most vulnerable.
Trevor Stack, University of Aberdeen
Displaying his hallmark combination of deep ethnography and expansive theory, Gledhill compellingly lays out how the contradictions of neoliberal capital accumulation and securitization affect the livelihoods and politics of ordinary people in violence-ridden Brazil and Mexico, and, above all, how these people struggle to build spaces of popular sovereignty and dignity.
Wil G. Pansters, Utrecht University/University of Groningen