Fr. 195.50

Hidden History of Crime, Corruption, and States

English · Hardback

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Description

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Renowned historical sociologist Charles Tilly wrote many years ago that "banditry, piracy, gangland rivalry, policing, and war-making all belong on the same continuum." This volume pursues the idea by revealing how lawbreakers and lawmakers have related to one another on the shadowy terrains of power over wide stretches of time and space. Illicit activities and forces have been more important in state building and state maintenance than conventional histories have acknowledged. Covering vast chronological and global terrain, this book traces the contested and often overlapping boundaries between these practices in such very different polities as the pre-modern city-states of Europe, the modern nation-states of France and Japan, the imperial power of Britain in India and North America, Africa's and Southeast Asia's postcolonial states, and the emerging postmodern regional entity of the Mediterranean Sea. Indeed, the contemporary explosion of transnational crime raises the question of whether or not the relationship of illicit to licit practices may be mutating once more, leading to new political forms beyond the nation-state.

List of contents










List of Figures

Introduction: Crime and Power in History

Renate Bridenthal

Chapter 1. Dirty Politics or "Harmonie?"  Defining Corruption in Early Modern Amsterdam and Hamburg

Mary Lindemann

Chapter 2. A Crisis of Charter and Right: Piracy and Colonial Resistance in Seventeenth-Century Rhode Island

Douglas R. Burgess, Jr.

Chapter 3. The First War on Drugs: Tobacco Trafficking, Criminality, and the Fiscal State in Eighteenth-Century France

Michael Kwass

Chapter 4. Befitting Bedfellows:  Yakuza and the State in Modern Japan

Eiko Maruko Siniawer

Chapter 5. Mobilizing Convict Bodies: Indian Convict Workers in Southeast Asia in the Early Nineteenth Century

Anand Yang

Chapter 6. The Underside of Overseas Chinese Society in Southeast Asia

Carl A. Trocki

Chapter 7. A Historical Perspective on State Engagement in Informal Trade on the Uganda-Congolese Border

Kristof Titeca

Chapter 8. The Narcobourgeoisie and State Making in Colombia: More Coercion, Less Democratic Governance

Nazih Richani

Chapter 9. Russia's Gangster Capitalism: Portent for Contemporary States?

Patricia Rawlinson

Chapter 10. Economic Crime and Neoliberal Modes of Government: The Example of the Mediterranean

Beatrice Hibou

Contributor Notes


About the author


Renate Bridenthal is Emerita Professor of History at Brooklyn College, The City University of New York.  She has co-edited and contributed to many publications including, Becoming Visible: Women in European History (1977, 1987,1998), When Biology Became Destiny: Women in Weimar and Nazi Germany (1984), The Heimat Abroad: The Boundaries of Germanness (2005), Interactions: Transregional Perspectives on World History (2005), and Seascapes: Littoral Cultures and Transoceanic Exchanges (2007).

Summary

Renowned historical sociologist Charles Tilly wrote many years ago that "banditry, piracy, gangland rivalry, policing, and war-making all belong on the same continuum." This volume pursues the idea by revealing how lawbreakers and lawmakers have related to one another on the shadowy terrains of power over wide stretches of time and space.

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