Neoliberal Citizenship: Sacred Markets, Sacrificial Lives

Awards:   Winner of Shortlisted, 2023 Susan Strange Best Book Prize.
Author:   Luca Mavelli (Reader in Politics and International Relations, Reader in Politics and International Relations, University of Kent)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780192857583


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   15 February 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Neoliberal Citizenship: Sacred Markets, Sacrificial Lives


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Awards

  • Winner of Shortlisted, 2023 Susan Strange Best Book Prize.

Overview

With cosmopolitan illusions put to rest, Europe is now haunted by a pervasive neoliberal transformation of citizenship that subordinates inclusion, protection, and belonging to rationalities of value. Against the backdrop of four major crises - Eurozone, refugee, Brexit, and the COVID-19 pandemic - this book explores how neoliberal citizenship rewrites identities and solidarities in economic terms. The result is a sacralized market order in which those superfluous to economic needs and regarded as unproductive consumers of resources - be they undocumented migrants, debased citizens of austerity, or the elderly in care homes - are excluded and sacrificed for the well-being of the economy. Pushing biopolitical theorizing in novel directions through an investigation of the political economy of scarcity and the theology of the market, Neoliberal Citizenship reveals how a common thread connects the suspension of search-and-rescue missions in the Mediterranean, the punitive bailout of Greece, the widespread adoption of austerity measures, the normalization of racism, the celebration of resilience, and the fact that in Europe and North America, during the first wave of the pandemic, almost half of all COVID-19 deaths were care home residents. This thread is the sacralization of the market that, by making life conditional upon its economic and emotional value, turns 'less valuable' individuals into sacrificial subjects. Neoliberal Citizenship challenges established understandings of citizenship, brings to light new regimes of inclusion and exclusion, and advances critical insights on the future of neoliberalism in a post-COVID-19 world.

Full Product Details

Author:   Luca Mavelli (Reader in Politics and International Relations, Reader in Politics and International Relations, University of Kent)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 24.00cm
Weight:   0.606kg
ISBN:  

9780192857583


ISBN 10:   0192857584
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   15 February 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A rich contribution to the scholarship on neoliberalism, one that develops a powerful account of the neoliberalization of quotidian citizenship to illuminate Europe's management of migration and COVID. Mavelli's thesis on sacrificial citizenship is especially provocative. * Wendy Brown, UPS Foundation Professor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton * This is an absolutely essential read for making sense of pandemics and other recent challenges such as Europe's 'refugee crisis'. It demonstrates how the EU and other organisations combine a neoliberal belief in the sacredness of the market with practices determining the disposability of populations. A most compelling account of the construction of citizenship * Jonathan Joseph, Professor of Politics and IR, University of Bristol * Neoliberal Citizenship is an original, provocative, and timely intervention. Its unique emphasis on the emotional - as well as economic - dimensions of citizenship as a biopolitical technique of government is path-breaking. This book will leave an indelible impression on the field at-large and on readers individually; I urge you to read it * Nick Vaughan-Williams, Professor of International Security, University of Warwick. *


In this big, bold, and brash book, Luca Mavelli explores what happens when liberal citizenship transforms into neoliberal citizenship. What happens when the market determines: who can and cannot be a member? how outsiders can be treated? who can and cannot call on the state for protection - and what kind? who lives and who dies? This is a book that transcends national, comparative, and global politics - just as neoliberalism does. Highly recommended. * Michael N. Barnett, University Professor of International Affairs and Political Science, Elliott School of International Affairs. * A rich contribution to the scholarship on neoliberalism, one that develops a powerful account of the neoliberalization of quotidian citizenship to illuminate Europe's management of migration and COVID. Mavelli's thesis on sacrificial citizenship is especially provocative. * Wendy Brown, , UPS Foundation Professor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and author of In the Ruins of Neoliberalism * Erudite and passionate, Mavelli brings to urgent attention the perverse and destructive contemporary forms of neoliberal rule. Charting the lives of those considered to be 'expendable', Mavelli highlights how large sections of populations are turned into sacrificial citizens irrespective of their formal citizenship status. He provides an authoritative exposition of the neoliberal 'creative destruction' of meaning, which reverses the grammar of solidarity to the effect that: 'helping the poor' becomes a way of perpetuating their debasement; rescuing migrants becomes a 'pull factor' that will cause more deaths; and prioritising the elderly risks the destruction of the economy and society. New forms of humanitarianism and solidarity are very much needed and this book will be a major contribution to this conversation. * David Chandler, Professor of International Relations, University of Westminster. * Europe is no longer the religiously and culturally homogenised territory that it once believed it was. Impacted by the end of the Cold War, globalisation, increasing immigration, and the regional rise of right-wing populism, today's Europe faces the future with fear and trepidation. Luca Mavelli has written a remarkable book which, stimulated by the 2015 'refugee crisis', took shape following the UK's 2016 Brexit vote. Mavelli explores the 'sacred' foundations of Europe's neoliberal citizenship. Also influenced by the Global Financial, Eurozone, and Covid-19 pandemic crises, Mavelli's book is an authoritative assessment of why, three decades after the Cold War, Europe is moulded by 'post-secularity' * Jeffrey Haynes, Emeritus Professor, London Metropolitan University. * This is an absolutely essential read for making sense of pandemics and other recent challenges such as Europe's 'refugee crisis'. It presents an original thesis about the development of neoliberal citizenship through various practices of governance which demonstrates how Europe combines a neoliberal belief in the sacredness of the market with biopolitical practices determining the sacrificial disposability of populations. This is a most compelling account of the construction of citizenship that will make a significant contribution to the field of politics and international relations. * Jonathan Joseph, Professor of Politics and IR, University of Bristol, and author of Varieties of Resilience * Neoliberal citizenship is often described in terms of economization and marketization. While he acknowledges such processes, Luca Mavelli provides us with a much more detailed and nuanced picture. Eloquently playing with the multiple meanings of 'value', he convincingly shows how neoliberal citizenship blurs the boundary between economy, morals, and politics to produce hierarchies of lives that often operate regardless of formal statuses of belonging. Undocumented migrants, dispossessed citizens, and elderly in care homes during the Covid-19 pandemic populate the pages of this theoretically compelling and politically engaged work, which is ultimately crisscrossed by the desire for a post-neoliberal idea of citizenship. A must-read book in the current planetary predicament! * Sandro Mezzadra, Professor of Political Theory, University of Bologna, and co-author of Border as Method * Neoliberal Citizenship is an original, provocative, and timely intervention. Synthesising interdisciplinary debates across political economy, migration, and security, Mavelli develops a powerful overarching argument about contemporary transformations in the concept and practice of citizenship. His unique emphasis on the emotional - as well as economic - dimensions of citizenship as a biopolitical technique of government is path-breaking. Of equal significance are the insights he offers into scarcity, the specificity of neoliberal life as the object of biopolitical care, and the multiplicity of regimes of differential inclusion. This book will leave an indelible impression on the field at-large and on readers individually; I urge you to read it. * Nick Vaughan-Williams, Professor of International Security, University of Warwick, and author of Vernacular Border Security *


In this big, bold, and brash book, Luca Mavelli explores what happens when liberal citizenship transforms into neoliberal citizenship. What happens when the market determines: who can and cannot be a member? how outsiders can be treated? who can and cannot call on the state for protection - and what kind? who lives and who dies? This is a book that transcends national, comparative, and global politics - just as neoliberalism does. Highly recommended. * Michael N. Barnett, University Professor of International Affairs and Political Science, Elliott School of International Affairs. * A rich contribution to the scholarship on neoliberalism, one that develops a powerful account of the neoliberalization of quotidian citizenship to illuminate Europe's management of migration and COVID. Mavelli's thesis on sacrificial citizenship is especially provocative. * Wendy Brown, UPS Foundation Professor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and author of In the Ruins of Neoliberalism * Erudite and passionate, Mavelli brings to urgent attention the perverse and destructive contemporary forms of neoliberal rule. Charting the lives of those considered to be 'expendable', Mavelli highlights how large sections of populations are turned into sacrificial citizens irrespective of their formal citizenship status. He provides an authoritative exposition of the neoliberal 'creative destruction' of meaning, which reverses the grammar of solidarity to the effect that: 'helping the poor' becomes a way of perpetuating their debasement; rescuing migrants becomes a 'pull factor' that will cause more deaths; and prioritising the elderly risks the destruction of the economy and society. New forms of humanitarianism and solidarity are very much needed and this book will be a major contribution to this conversation. * David Chandler, Professor of International Relations, University of Westminster. * Europe is no longer the religiously and culturally homogenised territory that it once believed it was. Impacted by the end of the Cold War, globalisation, increasing immigration, and the regional rise of right-wing populism, today's Europe faces the future with fear and trepidation. Luca Mavelli has written a remarkable book which, stimulated by the 2015 'refugee crisis', took shape following the UK's 2016 Brexit vote. Mavelli explores the 'sacred' foundations of Europe's neoliberal citizenship. Also influenced by the Global Financial, Eurozone, and Covid-19 pandemic crises, Mavelli's book is an authoritative assessment of why, three decades after the Cold War, Europe is moulded by 'post-secularity' * Jeffrey Haynes, Emeritus Professor, London Metropolitan University. * This is an absolutely essential read for making sense of pandemics and other recent challenges such as Europe's 'refugee crisis'. It presents an original thesis about the development of neoliberal citizenship through various practices of governance which demonstrates how the EU and other states and organisations combine a neoliberal belief in the sacredness of the market with biopolitical practices determining the sacrificial disposability of populations. This is a most compelling account of the construction of citizenship that will make a significant contribution to the field of politics and international relations. * Jonathan Joseph, Professor of Politics and IR, University of Bristol, and author of Varieties of Resilience * Neoliberal citizenship is often described in terms of economization and marketization. While he acknowledges such processes, Luca Mavelli provides us with a much more detailed and nuanced picture. Eloquently playing with the multiple meanings of 'value', he convincingly shows how neoliberal citizenship blurs the boundary between economy, morals, and politics to produce hierarchies of lives that often operate regardless of formal statuses of belonging. Undocumented migrants, dispossessed citizens, and elderly in care homes during the Covid-19 pandemic populate the pages of this theoretically compelling and politically engaged work, which is ultimately crisscrossed by the desire for a post-neoliberal idea of citizenship. A must-read book in the current planetary predicament! * Sandro Mezzadra, Professor of Political Theory, University of Bologna, and co-author ofBorder as Method * Neoliberal Citizenship is an original, provocative, and timely intervention. Synthesising interdisciplinary debates across political economy, migration, and security, Mavelli develops a powerful overarching argument about contemporary transformations in the concept and practice of citizenship. His unique emphasis on the emotional - as well as economic - dimensions of citizenship as a biopolitical technique of government is path-breaking. Of equal significance are the insights he offers into scarcity, the specificity of neoliberal life as the object of biopolitical care, and the multiplicity of regimes of differential inclusion. This book will leave an indelible impression on the field at large and on readers individually; I urge you to read it. * Nick Vaughan-Williams, Professor of International Security, University of Warwick, and author of Vernacular Border Security * This thought-provoking book, Luca Mavelli embarks on an intellectual journey that dissects the multifaceted transformations of citizenship within the frame- work of neo-liberalism...The book offers an intellectual tour de force and an original way to understand the transformation of citizenship. * Antonio Cerella, International Affairs * Neoliberal Citizenship carries significant theoretical implications for current research on neoliberalism, citizenship, borders and security. The book is organized around a logically structured narrative and an interdisciplinary engagement with numerous thinkers. * Ugo Gaudino, Capital & Class 48 *


In this big, bold, and brash book, Luca Mavelli explores what happens when liberal citizenship transforms into neoliberal citizenship. What happens when the market determines: who can and cannot be a member? how outsiders can be treated? who can and cannot call on the state for protection - and what kind? who lives and who dies? This is a book that transcends national, comparative, and global politics - just as neoliberalism does. Highly recommended. * Michael N. Barnett, University Professor of International Affairs and Political Science, Elliott School of International Affairs. * A rich contribution to the scholarship on neoliberalism, one that develops a powerful account of the neoliberalization of quotidian citizenship to illuminate Europe's management of migration and COVID. Mavelli's thesis on sacrificial citizenship is especially provocative. * Wendy Brown, UPS Foundation Professor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and author of In the Ruins of Neoliberalism * Erudite and passionate, Mavelli brings to urgent attention the perverse and destructive contemporary forms of neoliberal rule. Charting the lives of those considered to be 'expendable', Mavelli highlights how large sections of populations are turned into sacrificial citizens irrespective of their formal citizenship status. He provides an authoritative exposition of the neoliberal 'creative destruction' of meaning, which reverses the grammar of solidarity to the effect that: 'helping the poor' becomes a way of perpetuating their debasement; rescuing migrants becomes a 'pull factor' that will cause more deaths; and prioritising the elderly risks the destruction of the economy and society. New forms of humanitarianism and solidarity are very much needed and this book will be a major contribution to this conversation. * David Chandler, Professor of International Relations, University of Westminster. * Europe is no longer the religiously and culturally homogenised territory that it once believed it was. Impacted by the end of the Cold War, globalisation, increasing immigration, and the regional rise of right-wing populism, today's Europe faces the future with fear and trepidation. Luca Mavelli has written a remarkable book which, stimulated by the 2015 'refugee crisis', took shape following the UK's 2016 Brexit vote. Mavelli explores the 'sacred' foundations of Europe's neoliberal citizenship. Also influenced by the Global Financial, Eurozone, and Covid-19 pandemic crises, Mavelli's book is an authoritative assessment of why, three decades after the Cold War, Europe is moulded by 'post-secularity' * Jeffrey Haynes, Emeritus Professor, London Metropolitan University. * This is an absolutely essential read for making sense of pandemics and other recent challenges such as Europe's 'refugee crisis'. It presents an original thesis about the development of neoliberal citizenship through various practices of governance which demonstrates how the EU and other states and organisations combine a neoliberal belief in the sacredness of the market with biopolitical practices determining the sacrificial disposability of populations. This is a most compelling account of the construction of citizenship that will make a significant contribution to the field of politics and international relations. * Jonathan Joseph, Professor of Politics and IR, University of Bristol, and author of Varieties of Resilience * Neoliberal citizenship is often described in terms of economization and marketization. While he acknowledges such processes, Luca Mavelli provides us with a much more detailed and nuanced picture. Eloquently playing with the multiple meanings of 'value', he convincingly shows how neoliberal citizenship blurs the boundary between economy, morals, and politics to produce hierarchies of lives that often operate regardless of formal statuses of belonging. Undocumented migrants, dispossessed citizens, and elderly in care homes during the Covid-19 pandemic populate the pages of this theoretically compelling and politically engaged work, which is ultimately crisscrossed by the desire for a post-neoliberal idea of citizenship. A must-read book in the current planetary predicament! * Sandro Mezzadra, Professor of Political Theory, University of Bologna, and co-author ofBorder as Method * Neoliberal Citizenship is an original, provocative, and timely intervention. Synthesising interdisciplinary debates across political economy, migration, and security, Mavelli develops a powerful overarching argument about contemporary transformations in the concept and practice of citizenship. His unique emphasis on the emotional - as well as economic - dimensions of citizenship as a biopolitical technique of government is path-breaking. Of equal significance are the insights he offers into scarcity, the specificity of neoliberal life as the object of biopolitical care, and the multiplicity of regimes of differential inclusion. This book will leave an indelible impression on the field at large and on readers individually; I urge you to read it. * Nick Vaughan-Williams, Professor of International Security, University of Warwick, and author of Vernacular Border Security *


In this big, bold, and brash book, Luca Mavelli explores what happens when liberal citizenship transforms into neoliberal citizenship. What happens when the market determines: who can and cannot be a member? how outsiders can be treated? who can and cannot call on the state for protection - and what kind? who lives and who dies? This is a book that transcends national, comparative, and global politics - just as neoliberalism does. Highly recommended. * Michael N. Barnett, University Professor of International Affairs and Political Science, Elliott School of International Affairs. * A rich contribution to the scholarship on neoliberalism, one that develops a powerful account of the neoliberalization of quotidian citizenship to illuminate Europe's management of migration and COVID. Mavelli's thesis on sacrificial citizenship is especially provocative. * Wendy Brown, UPS Foundation Professor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and author of In the Ruins of Neoliberalism * Erudite and passionate, Mavelli brings to urgent attention the perverse and destructive contemporary forms of neoliberal rule. Charting the lives of those considered to be 'expendable', Mavelli highlights how large sections of populations are turned into sacrificial citizens irrespective of their formal citizenship status. He provides an authoritative exposition of the neoliberal 'creative destruction' of meaning, which reverses the grammar of solidarity to the effect that: 'helping the poor' becomes a way of perpetuating their debasement; rescuing migrants becomes a 'pull factor' that will cause more deaths; and prioritising the elderly risks the destruction of the economy and society. New forms of humanitarianism and solidarity are very much needed and this book will be a major contribution to this conversation. * David Chandler, Professor of International Relations, University of Westminster. * Europe is no longer the religiously and culturally homogenised territory that it once believed it was. Impacted by the end of the Cold War, globalisation, increasing immigration, and the regional rise of right-wing populism, today's Europe faces the future with fear and trepidation. Luca Mavelli has written a remarkable book which, stimulated by the 2015 'refugee crisis', took shape following the UK's 2016 Brexit vote. Mavelli explores the 'sacred' foundations of Europe's neoliberal citizenship. Also influenced by the Global Financial, Eurozone, and Covid-19 pandemic crises, Mavelli's book is an authoritative assessment of why, three decades after the Cold War, Europe is moulded by 'post-secularity' * Jeffrey Haynes, Emeritus Professor, London Metropolitan University. * This is an absolutely essential read for making sense of pandemics and other recent challenges such as Europe's 'refugee crisis'. It presents an original thesis about the development of neoliberal citizenship through various practices of governance which demonstrates how the EU and other states and organisations combine a neoliberal belief in the sacredness of the market with biopolitical practices determining the sacrificial disposability of populations. This is a most compelling account of the construction of citizenship that will make a significant contribution to the field of politics and international relations. * Jonathan Joseph, Professor of Politics and IR, University of Bristol, and author of Varieties of Resilience * Neoliberal citizenship is often described in terms of economization and marketization. While he acknowledges such processes, Luca Mavelli provides us with a much more detailed and nuanced picture. Eloquently playing with the multiple meanings of 'value', he convincingly shows how neoliberal citizenship blurs the boundary between economy, morals, and politics to produce hierarchies of lives that often operate regardless of formal statuses of belonging. Undocumented migrants, dispossessed citizens, and elderly in care homes during the Covid-19 pandemic populate the pages of this theoretically compelling and politically engaged work, which is ultimately crisscrossed by the desire for a post-neoliberal idea of citizenship. A must-read book in the current planetary predicament! * Sandro Mezzadra, Professor of Political Theory, University of Bologna, and co-author ofBorder as Method * Neoliberal Citizenship is an original, provocative, and timely intervention. Synthesising interdisciplinary debates across political economy, migration, and security, Mavelli develops a powerful overarching argument about contemporary transformations in the concept and practice of citizenship. His unique emphasis on the emotional - as well as economic - dimensions of citizenship as a biopolitical technique of government is path-breaking. Of equal significance are the insights he offers into scarcity, the specificity of neoliberal life as the object of biopolitical care, and the multiplicity of regimes of differential inclusion. This book will leave an indelible impression on the field at large and on readers individually; I urge you to read it. * Nick Vaughan-Williams, Professor of International Security, University of Warwick, and author of Vernacular Border Security *


A rich contribution to the scholarship on neoliberalism, one that develops a powerful account of the neoliberalization of quotidian citizenship to illuminate Europe's management of migration and COVID. Mavelli's thesis on sacrificial citizenship is especially provocative. * Wendy Brown, UPS Foundation Professor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and author of In the Ruins of Neoliberalism * Europe is no longer the religiously and culturally homogenised territory that it once believed it was. Impacted by the end of the Cold War, globalisation, increasing immigration, and the regional rise of right-wing populism, today's Europe faces the future with fear and trepidation. Luca Mavelli has written a remarkable book which, stimulated by the 2015 'refugee crisis', took shape following the UK's 2016 Brexit vote. Mavelli explores the 'sacred' foundations of Europe's neoliberal citizenship. Also influenced by the Global Financial, Eurozone, and Covid-19 pandemic crises, Mavelli's book is an authoritative assessment of why, three decades after the Cold War, Europe is moulded by 'post-secularity' * Jeffrey Haynes, Emeritus Professor, London Metropolitan University * This is an absolutely essential read for making sense of pandemics and other recent challenges such as Europe's 'refugee crisis'. It presents an original thesis about the development of neoliberal citizenship through various practices of governance which demonstrates how Europe combines a neoliberal belief in the sacredness of the market with biopolitical practices determining the sacrificial disposability of populations. This is a most compelling account of the construction of citizenship that will make a significant contribution to the field of politics and international relations. * Jonathan Joseph, Professor of Politics and IR, University of Bristol, and author of Varieties of Resilience * Neoliberal Citizenship is an original, provocative, and timely intervention. Synthesising interdisciplinary debates across political economy, migration, and security, Mavelli develops a powerful overarching argument about contemporary transformations in the concept and practice of citizenship. His unique emphasis on the emotional - as well as economic - dimensions of citizenship as a biopolitical technique of government is path-breaking. Of equal significance are the insights he offers into scarcity, the specificity of neoliberal life as the object of biopolitical care, and the multiplicity of regimes of differential inclusion. This book will leave an indelible impression on the field at-large and on readers individually; I urge you to read it. * Nick Vaughan-Williams, Professor of International Security, University of Warwick, and author of Vernacular Border Security *


Author Information

Luca Mavelli is a Reader in Politics and International Relations at the University of Kent. He is the author of Europe's Encounter with Islam: The Secular and the Postsecular, and the co-editor of Towards a Postsecular International Politics and The Refugee Crisis and Religion. His articles have appeared in some of the leading journals of politics and international relations. His work has been funded by the UK Economic and Social Research Council and the British Council.

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