Description
Using the metaphor of the “state of exception,” this module explores the ways the US state has developed capacity by excluding specific groups of people while simultaneously exercising sovereignty over them. After an introduction to the political concept of the state of exception, the course covers four cases: the “Immigrant exception”; the “African American exception”; the “Native American exception”; and the “Insular exceptions (Puerto Rico, Guam, Cuba).” In each case, the state has exercised power over non-citizen subjects, using geographical or legal “exceptions” to avoid the rule of law. The course will examine how the state developed specific capacities to maintain separate and exceptional conditions, including definitional capacities, coercive capacities (e.g., border control), and “remote control” capacities (e.g., deportation regimes and guest-worker programs). The module will conclude with a consideration of the political legitimacy of this mode of state building.
Module deliveries for 2024/25 academic year
Last updated
This module description was last updated on 19th August 2024.
Ěý