Governing Practices: Neoliberalism, Governmentality, and the Ethnographic Imaginary

Governing Practices: Neoliberalism, Governmentality, and the Ethnographic Imaginary

Governing Practices: Neoliberalism, Governmentality, and the Ethnographic Imaginary

Governing Practices: Neoliberalism, Governmentality, and the Ethnographic Imaginary

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Overview

Neoliberalism is among the most commonly used concepts in the social sciences. Furthermore, it is one of the most influential factors that have shaped the formation of public policy and politics.

In Governing Practices, Michelle Brady and Randy Lippert bring together prominent scholars in sociology, criminology, anthropology, geography, and policy studies to extend and refine the current conversation about neoliberalism. The collection argues that a new methodological approach to analyzing contemporary policy and political change is needed. United by the common influence of Foucault’s governmentality approach and an ethnographic imaginary, the collection presents original research on a diverse range of case studies including public-private partnerships, the governance of condos, community and state statistics, nanopolitics, philanthropy, education reform, and pay-day lending. These diverse studies add considerable depth to studies on governmentality and neoliberalism through a focus on governmental practices that have not previously been the focus of sustained analysis.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781487520618
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 09/26/2016
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Michelle Brady is a research fellow in the School of Social Science at the University of Queensland.
Randy K. Lippert is a professor in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology at the University of Windsor.

Table of Contents

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Contributors 


  1. Neoliberalism, Governmental Assemblages and the Ethnographic Imaginary
    Michelle Brady
  2. Part 1: Neoliberal subjectivities? Examining Resilience, Investment and Enterprise

  3. Creating Resilient Subjects: The Coexist project
    Wendy Larner and Simon Moreton
  4. Governing through Community in the Oil Sands Zone
    Sara Dorow
  5. Fixing Non-market Subjects: Governing land and population in the global south
    Tania Murray Li
  6. Part 2: Neoliberal Technologies and Politics

  7. Governing Emergent Technologies: Nanopower and nanopolitics. An ethnographic approach
    Rob Shields
  8. Neoliberal Numbers: Calculation and hybridization in Australian and Canadian official statistics
    Cosmo Howard
  9. Governing through Land: Neoliberal governmentalities in the British Columbia treaty process
    Akin Akinwumi and Nicholas Blomley
  10. Part 3: Neoliberal cities? Police and Ad Hoc Governance

  11. Urban Neoliberalism, Police and the Governance of Condo Life
    Randy K. Lippert
  12. Ad hoc Governance: Public authorities and North American local infrastructure in historical perspective
    Mariana Valverde
  13. Part 4: Neoliberal Welfare and Philanthropy

  14. Governing through Failure: Neoliberalism, philanthropy and education reform in Seattle
    Katharyne Mitchell and Chris Lizotte
  15. Exploring the Complexity and Contradictions of Poverty Governance: The case of pay-day lending in Australia
    Greg Marston
  16. Governmentalities, the Ethnographic Imaginary and Beyond
    Randy K. Lippert and Michelle Brady

What People are Saying About This

Janet Newman

"Governing Practices offers a welcome corrective to the tendency towards totalizing accounts of neoliberalism. It is an important volume that consolidates and pushes valuable forms of analysis and critique that have generally been confined to the margins, rather than the mainstream, of work on neoliberalism."

Stephen J. Collier

"Governing Practices is a fascinating collection of case-studies that break open taken-for-granted assumptions about what neoliberalism is."

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