Political vs. Everyday Forms of Governance in Uzbekistan: The Illegal, Immoral, and Illegitimate

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Abstract

Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in Uzbekistan, this article looks at the way official state narratives are challenged by silent, unorganized, often unawares, gestures of resistance at the bottom of a society. Footing on a framework suggested by Scott’s definition of infrapolitics (2012), we propose to incorporate informal practices in a definition of informality that is more inclusive, and better explains the anatomy of a modern state, whose functioning rests on a combination of formal and informal practices. We suggest that this everyday dimension is of particular importance here when trying to understand the governance trajectories as it allows to look critically, and from a broader perspective, at situations where individual and state perception of events, but also individual and state morality, diverge. By doing this, we propose that governance in transition states and societies may be regarded as a space where formal institutions and citizens (or informal institutions) compete for power and resources and thereby produce informal, alternative “legal orders” and mechanisms that regulate public life in a given area. We will suggest that such a space of informal negotiation is vital in contexts where collective mobilization and public articulation of social claims is not a preferred, or even available, strategy for citizens.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationInformality, Labour Mobility and Precariousness: Supplementing the State for the Invisible and the Vulnerable
EditorsAbel Polese
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Pages223-247
ISBN (Print)978-3-030-82498-3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022 Jan 1

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Law and Society
  • International Migration and Ethnic Relations

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