Cookies?
Library Header Image
LSE Research Online LSE Library Services

Everyday authoritarianism: class and coercion on housing estates in neoliberal Britain

Davey, Ryan and Koch, Insa Lee (2021) Everyday authoritarianism: class and coercion on housing estates in neoliberal Britain. Political and Legal Anthropology Review, 44 (1). 43 - 59. ISSN 1081-6976

[img] Text (PoLAR - 2021 - Davey - Everyday Authoritarianism Class and Coercion on Housing Estates in Neoliberal Britain) - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (175kB)

Identification Number: 10.1111/plar.12422

Abstract

In Britain, especially in the 2010s, neoliberal reform involved an extension of legal coercion into the domestic and community lives of marginalized citizens. On two postindustrial housing estates in Britain, working-class residents experience this “everyday authoritarianism” in areas that the liberal state typically constructs as private and purports to leave alone: the home and the intimate relations that frame it. Residents engage this legal coercion by adopting responses that range from defensive avoidance to co-opting officials to acts of vigilantism. By doing so, they negotiate the presence of an authority that is often out of sync with their own expectations for protection, and in some cases actively undermines their efforts to remain safe. Their pluralism can be framed neither in terms of an acceptance of state authority nor as a straightforward refusal to be governed. Rather, it reveals the contradictory ways in which marginalized citizens define their relationship to the state under contemporary conditions of class fragmentation. By adding detail on everyday life to meta-narratives of an authoritarian turn, this article theorizes the political potential and limits of people's daily engagements with the state for contesting the latter's authority. [class, coercion, liberal governance].

Item Type: Article
Official URL: https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journ...
Additional Information: © 2021 The Authors.
Divisions: Law
Subjects: J Political Science > JN Political institutions (Europe) > JN101 Great Britain
H Social Sciences > HN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform
H Social Sciences > HT Communities. Classes. Races
Date Deposited: 13 Jan 2022 10:42
Last Modified: 23 Nov 2024 08:03
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/113420

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics