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Poor people's lives and politics: The things a political ethnographer knows (and doesn't know) after 15 years of fieldwork

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2015

Javier Auyero*
Affiliation:
University of Texas-Austin, Sociology Department, 2501 University, Burdine Hall, Room 564, Austin, TX 78712, [email protected]

Abstract

This paper reflects on a decade and a half of ethnographic research on five different topics: patronage politics, the intricate relationship between clientelism and collective action, the role of clandestine connections in politics, urban marginality and environmental suffering, and poor people's waiting as a way of experiencing political domination. The paper examines the contributions that political ethnography can make to a better understanding of these themes and highlights areas for further empirical and theoretical work.

Type
Dossier on Urban Classes and Politics in the Neoliberal Era: Turkey in Comparison
Copyright
Copyright © New Perspectives on Turkey 2012

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