Frontlines and interstices in the global war on terror


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Publication Details

Output typeJournal article

Author listBhatt C

PublisherWiley

Publication year2007

JournalDevelopment and Change (0012-155X)

Volume number38

Issue number6

Start page1073

End page1093

Number of pages21

ISSN0012-155X

eISSN1467-7660

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Open access statusclosed


Abstract

In the context of the 'global war on terror' and related debates about development and the new imperialism, this essay looks at the involvement of religious absolutist militias in humanitarian aid following the Kashmir earthquake in 2005. By analysing how organizations which are considered 'terrorist' are simultaneously working with and fighting against US 'Empire', the essay considers the form of the Pakistani 'development' state, its geostrategic importance and how this relates to a religious absolutist militia infrastructure. The transformation of (often violent) religious right groups since the 1990s into development and welfare agencies is considered within the broader context of new 'hypergovernance' processes unleashed within 'Empire'. Some general comparisons are also made between the processes of juridical hypergovernance that international humanitarian and human rights NGOs initiate in the 'South', and those created by violent groups of the religious right. Both reflect contending strategies for the management of populations by bodies having ambitions on a planetary scale.


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Last updated on 2025-01-07 at 00:44