Good victims : the political as a feminist question / Roxani Krystalli.
Material type:
- 9780197764541

Item type | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | General Books | Main Library | 362.8808209861 KR-G (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 155591 |
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362.880820954 GA- Garrisoned minds women and armed conflict in South Asia | 362.88082095479 DA-W Women survivors of violence genesis and growth of a state support system | 362.880820973 FE- Female victims of crime reality reconsidered | 362.8808209861 KR-G Good victims : the political as a feminist question / | 362.880830954 SA-E Every child matters / | 362.8808694 IR-D Dalit women speak out caste, class, and gender violence in India | 362.880880565 EL- Elderly victim of crime |
"Victims do not merely exist; they are also made, not only through acts of violence during war, but also through acts of bureaucratic affirmation during "the-time-of-not-war-not-peace." In that spirit, I started turning my attention to how the agencies, professionals, and documents of the Colombian state and its transitional justice apparatus shape the politics of victimhood. I call this constellation of agencies, professionals, documents, and encounters "bureaucracies of victimhood" because the category of 'victim' defines not only the people who vie for recognition as such, but also the professional ecosystem that attends to them. Whole floors of bureaucratic buildings in Colombia were named "Victims" and professionals described themselves as working on the "Victims' Team." "Victims" was the word written onto business cards, printed onto high-visibility vests, and featuring on calendars, bookmarks, notebooks, and T-shirts. Victimhood, more than the broader frame of transitional justice, defined the day-to-day work of the bureaucratic encounters I studied"--
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