TY - CHAP
T1 - Strategies of Overcoming Precarity
T2 - The Case of Somali Transnational Community Ties, Spaces and Links in the United Arab Emirates
AU - Farah, Abdulkadir Osman
PY - 2020/12/9
Y1 - 2020/12/9
N2 - An increasing number of people around the world live in precarity (Neilson 2015). Those most affected by precarity include people forcefully displaced by conditions of wars and poverty. Though precarity seems not a directly globally organized process, critical studies associate precarious conditions with pre-vailing global hegemonic neoliberal systems (Harris and Scully 2015). Some regions, countries and people suffer more than others. For instance, in lesser democratic countries in the Middle East and Africa precarity have historically operated under authoritarian organisations from colonial to post-colonial periods.Over the past two decades, the notion of precarity has become an important concept to explore and articulate the nature of uncertainty faced by millions of people in all aspects of social, political, and economic life (Allen 2009; Casas-Cortes 2014; Standing 2011; Schierup and Jørgensen 2016). Etymological-ly, according to Casas Cortes (2014: 207), The term precarity is derived “(...) from the Latin root prex or precis, meaning “to pray, to plead,” and it commonly implies risky or uncertain situations.” The conceptual origin of precarity can be traced back to Pierre Bourdieu’s (1963) work on colonial Algeria and later in France in which he described it as a new system of class dominance resulting from the restructuring of the global economy producing new forms of vulner-abilities. In its more recent iteration, the concept gained momentum in Guy Standing’s (2011) proposition The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class. Standing explains the ‘precariat’ as a potentially emerging global class that could be-come a ‘dangerous class’ following recent intense political populist polarisa-tions often exploiting ethnic cleavages.
AB - An increasing number of people around the world live in precarity (Neilson 2015). Those most affected by precarity include people forcefully displaced by conditions of wars and poverty. Though precarity seems not a directly globally organized process, critical studies associate precarious conditions with pre-vailing global hegemonic neoliberal systems (Harris and Scully 2015). Some regions, countries and people suffer more than others. For instance, in lesser democratic countries in the Middle East and Africa precarity have historically operated under authoritarian organisations from colonial to post-colonial periods.Over the past two decades, the notion of precarity has become an important concept to explore and articulate the nature of uncertainty faced by millions of people in all aspects of social, political, and economic life (Allen 2009; Casas-Cortes 2014; Standing 2011; Schierup and Jørgensen 2016). Etymological-ly, according to Casas Cortes (2014: 207), The term precarity is derived “(...) from the Latin root prex or precis, meaning “to pray, to plead,” and it commonly implies risky or uncertain situations.” The conceptual origin of precarity can be traced back to Pierre Bourdieu’s (1963) work on colonial Algeria and later in France in which he described it as a new system of class dominance resulting from the restructuring of the global economy producing new forms of vulner-abilities. In its more recent iteration, the concept gained momentum in Guy Standing’s (2011) proposition The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class. Standing explains the ‘precariat’ as a potentially emerging global class that could be-come a ‘dangerous class’ following recent intense political populist polarisa-tions often exploiting ethnic cleavages.
KW - Transnationalism
KW - Transnational connections
KW - Precarity
KW - Strategies
KW - Nation-State
KW - Transnational communities
UR - https://brill.com/view/book/9789004443204/BP000007.xml
U2 - 10.1163/9789004443204_008
DO - 10.1163/9789004443204_008
M3 - Book chapter
T3 - Studies in Critical Social Sciences
SP - 124
EP - 147
BT - Coercive Geographies
PB - Brill
ER -