Colonialismo, Pós-colonialismo e o Estado de bem-estar liberal

Auteurs-es

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.51359/2179-7501.2021.248445

Mots-clés :

classe, colonialismo, despossessão, imigração, estados de bem-estar

Résumé

Este artigo versa sobre as origens coloniais e raciais do estado de bem-estar social com uma ênfase particular no estado de bem-estar liberal do Reino Unido e dos Estados Unidos. Ambos são entendidos em termos da centralidade da condição mercantilizada da força de trabalho enquanto expressão da lógica das relações de mercado. Em contraste, argumentamos que, com um entendimento adequado das relações entre capitalismo e colonialismo, a venda de força de trabalho como uma mercadoria representa um movimento contrário à forma mercantilizada de trabalho representada pela escravidão. O colonialismo europeu é constitutivo ao desenvolvimento dos estados de bem-estar e suas formas de inclusão e exclusão, que permanecem racializadas até o século XXI.

Bibliographies de l'auteur-e

Gurminder Bhambra, Universidade de Sussex, Brighton, Reino Unido.

Universidade de Sussex Brighton/ Reino Unido).

John Holmwood, Universidade de Nottingham, Reino Unido.

Universidade de Nottingham (Reino Unido)

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Publié-e

2021-08-14