Authors: Janet Roitman
ISBN-13: 9780691118703, ISBN-10: 0691118701
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Date Published: September 2004
Edition: 1st Edition
Janet Roitman is a research fellow at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris.
"I very much enjoyed reading this book, both for its originality and the seminal way its author links vivid ethnography to sophisticated theoretical reflections. Janet Roitman worked in a very special area, the Chad basin, which is dominated by ongoing civil war, an almost complete informalization of the economy, and spectacular forms of smuggling. She admirably succeeds in showing that even in such an apparently chaotic context new patterns of control and regularity emerge that give terms like 'economy' a special tenor. The prose is highly accessible, not only because of its clarity of style but also because the author, in a very evocative way, constantly returns to the realities she examined during her fieldwork."--Peter Geschiere, University of Amsterdam, author of The Modernity of Witchcraft
"Janet Roitman's is a major and original voice. An unusually innovative, indeed subversive anthropology of economy and state, her book contains fascinating debates and engagements with a wide variety of issues that arise from the historical ethnography of an African region but are clearly of general interest."--Arjun Appadurai, New School University, author of Modernity at Large
The whole book is a sophisticated essay on how to bring such an area and problematic into focus: the question of regulatory authority in places where it has never been self-evident. As such, it opens up some very important analytical issues, not only for African studies but also for an anthropology of emergent economies worldwide.
Ch. 1 | Introduction : an anthropology of regulation and fiscal relations | 1 |
Ch. 2 | Incivisme fiscal | 23 |
Ch. 3 | Tax-price as a technique of government | 48 |
Ch. 4 | Unsanctioned wealth, or the productivity of debt | 73 |
Ch. 5 | Fixing the moving targets of regulation | 100 |
Ch. 6 | The unstable terms of regulatory practice | 129 |
Ch. 7 | The pluralization of regulatory authority | 151 |