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Bureaucratic Intimacies

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Human rights are politically fraught in Turkey, provoking suspicion and scrutiny among government workers for their anti-establishment left-wing connotations. Nevertheless, with eyes worldwide trai...
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  • 03 October 2017
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Human rights are politically fraught in Turkey, provoking suspicion and scrutiny among government workers for their anti-establishment left-wing connotations. Nevertheless, with eyes worldwide trained on Turkish politics, and with accession to the European Union underway, Turkey's human rights record remains a key indicator of its governmental legitimacy. Bureaucratic Intimacies shows how government workers encounter human rights rhetoric through training programs and articulates the perils and promises of these encounters for the subjects and objects of Turkish governance.

Drawing on years of participant observation in programs for police officers, judges and prosecutors, healthcare workers, and prison personnel, Elif M. Babül argues that the accession process does not always advance human rights. In casting rights as requirements for expertise and professionalism, training programs strip human rights of their radical valences, disassociating them from their political meanings within grassroots movements. Translation of human rights into a tool of good governance leads to competing understandings of what human rights should do, not necessarily to liberal, transparent, and accountable governmental practices. And even as translation renders human rights relevant for the everyday practices of government workers, it ultimately comes at a cost to the politics of human rights in Turkey.

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Price: $28.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Stanford Studies in Middle Eastern and Islamic Societies and Cultures
Publication Date: 03 October 2017
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503603172
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"To render Turkey a more palatable candidate for membership, the European Union imposed human rights training programs on its state workers, most notably its police. It is this disconcerting enterprise of democratic pedagogy ironically carried out as the government was harshly repressing its opposition that Elif Babül critically examines through a scrupulous and insightful ethnography."—Didier Fassin, author of Enforcing Order: An Ethnography of Urban Policing
Elif M. Babül is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Mount Holyoke College.
Introduction: Standards and Their Tinkering
1. Training Bureaucrats, Practicing for Europe
2. Human Rights, Good Governance, and Professional Expertise
3. Human Rights Education and Adult Learning
4. Translation and the Limits of State Language
5. Dramas of Statehood and Bureaucratic Ambiguity
Conclusion: Of Fragments and Violations