Structural violence: the makings of settler colonial impunity

This text explores the structural features of enduring social inequality in the US and other settler colonial societies. In it, philosopher Elena Ruíz tells the story of how epistemic techniques and conceptual schemes developed in antiquity to support the accumulation of wealth generated by the indu...

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Autor principal: Ruíz, Elena Flores (Autor)
Tipo de documento: Print Libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: New York, NY Oxford University Press [2024]
En:Año: 2024
Acceso en línea: Índice
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Disponibilidad en Tübingen:Disponible en Tübingen.
UB: KB 21 A 4256
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Sumario:This text explores the structural features of enduring social inequality in the US and other settler colonial societies. In it, philosopher Elena Ruíz tells the story of how epistemic techniques and conceptual schemes developed in antiquity to support the accumulation of wealth generated by the industrial slave system formed the backbone of the colonial project in the Americas. The book traces how these techniques developed through colonial occupation and into the 21st century, and how they affected gender-based violence. Ruíz uses insights from anticolonial thinkers and systems theory to give an account of today's social oppressions as built into the design of settler colonial social structures and portrays the self-repairing and intentional features of structural violence as central to the ecosystems of impunity in which systemic racism and gendered violence emerge
Notas:Includes bibliographical references (pages [301]-450) and index
Descripción Física:456 pages, 1 Illustration
ISBN:9780197634035
9780197634028