At the Heart of the State: The Moral World of Institutions

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    Didier Fassin

    Publisher: Pluto Books

    Year: 2015

    Format: Paperback

    Size: 304 pages

    ISBN: 9780745335599

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An edited collection that explores all aspects of the state and its institutions.

The state is often regarded as an abstract and neutral bureaucratic entity. Against this common sense idea, At the Heart of the State argues that it is also a concrete reality with a morality, embodied in the work of its agents and inscribed in the issues of its time.

A political and moral anthropology, this book is the result of a five-year investigation conducted by ten scholars, based in France. It analyses, amongst other topics, the police, the court system, the prison apparatus, the social services and mental health facilities. Combining genealogy and ethnography, its authors show that these state institutions do not simply implement laws, rules and procedures: they mobilise values and affects, judgments and emotions. In other words, they reflect the morality of the state.

About the Author

Didier Fassin is the James D. Wolfensohn Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. He is the author of numerous books including The Will to Punish (2018), Life: A Critical Users Manual (2018), Prison Worlds: An Ethnography of the Carceral Condition (2016) and Enforcing Order: An Ethnography of Urban Policing.

Patrick Brown is the translator of At the Heart of the State (Pluto, 2015).

What People Are Saying

 

'Didier Fassin is one of the most imaginative social scientists of our time. This book should be considered not only as required reading for all scholars in the field, but also for all active citizens' - Pierre Rosanvallon, Professor of Modern and Contemporary History of Politics at the Collège de France
'An important collection of finely wrought case studies of various institutions through which the state interacts with its most precarious populations. A major contribution at the too rarely visited crossroads of political and moral anthropology' - Joel Robbins, Sigrid Rausing Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge
'This extraordinary collection delivers novel ethnographic questions and insights with regard to the literal and figurative dilemmas of alienation and incorporation within the contemporary state' - Carol J. Greenhouse, Arthur W. Marks '19 Professor of Anthropology and Department Chair at Princeton University
Table of Contents

Series Preface
Acknowledgements
Can States be Moral? Preface to the English Edition
Introduction: Governing Precarity - Didier Fassin
Part I: Judging
1. The Right to Punish: Assessing Sentences in Immediate Appearance Trials - Chowra Makaremi
2. Justice for Immigrants: The Work of Magistrates in Deportation Proceedings - Nicolas Fischer
3. In Search of Truth: How Asylum Applications are Adjudicated - Carolina Kobelinsky
Part II: Repressing
4. Maintaining Order: The Moral Justifications for Police Practices - Didier Fassin
5. Sanctioning behind Bars: The Humanisation of Retribution in Prison - Fabrice Fernandez
6. Assisting or Controlling? When Social Workers Become Probation Officers - Yasmine Bouagga
Part III: Supporting
7. Discipline and Educate: Contradictions within the Juvenile Justice System - Sébastien Roux
8. Listening to Suffering: The Treatment of Mental Fragility at a Home for Adolescents - Isabelle Coutant and Jean-Sébastien Eideliman
9. Profiling Job Seekers: The Counseling of Youths at an Employment Center - Sarah Mazouz
Conclusion: Raisons d’État - Didier Fassin
Glossary
Bibliography
List of Contributors
Index

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