000 | 01568nab a2200253 4500 | ||
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003 | OSt | ||
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007 | cr aa aaaaa | ||
008 | 220729b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
100 |
_aDoshi,Sapana _950364 |
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245 | _aTowards a critical geography of corruption and power in late capitalism/ | ||
260 |
_bSage, _c2019. |
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300 | _aVol 43, issue 3, 2019: (436-457 p.). | ||
520 | _aCorruption politics have received little attention in human geography. We offer a critical geography of corruption as an alternative to economistic framings that take corruption as an objective set of deviant practices mostly besetting states in the Global South. Instead, we theorize corruption as a historically shifting, subjective discourse about the abuse of entrusted power. Geographic and cognate disciplinary approaches reveal how corruption narratives become politicized and yoked to symbolic, material, and territorial regimes of power. We suggest that recent theories of urban informality provide a revealing lens into the ethico-politics and territorial struggles of contemporary capitalism across the North and South. | ||
650 |
_aaccumulation by dispossession, _950365 |
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650 |
_a corruption discourse, _950366 |
||
650 |
_aland grabs, _950367 |
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650 |
_apopulism, _950368 |
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650 |
_aterritory, _950239 |
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650 |
_aurban informality _950369 |
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773 | 0 |
_012579 _916491 _dLondon: Sage Publication Ltd, 2019. _tProgress in human geography/ _x 03091325 |
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856 | _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0309132517753070 | ||
942 |
_2ddc _cART |
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999 |
_c12605 _d12605 |