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      Denouncing Sovereignty: Claims to Liberty in Northeastern Central African Republic

      Comparative Studies in Society and History
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          This essay focuses on the northeastern borderlands of the Central African Republic (CAR), an area that though formally part of a state is mostly left to its own devices. It has no single sovereign, but many people participate in the sovereign prerogative of enacting violence in such a way as to claim a right to determine how to live. These dynamics are particularly visible in the area's contests over armed conservation, my ethnographic and historical topic here. These sovereign claims take the form of denunciation: rallying people to take extreme measures against another whose egregious acts threaten fundamental values. In northeastern CAR, the value frequently fought for through denunciation is negative liberty—freedom from molestation for those who carve space for themselves by denouncing. In addition to excavating denunciation as a dynamics of sovereignty, this paper shows that the values motivating sovereign struggles can include not just autonomy—whether devoted to a principle of order or anarchy, as others have explored—but can also be devoted to creating exceptions for those who denounce, such that they are able to participate in projects and access terrains that extend beyond their place of residence without having to consistently abide by others’ rules. Denunciation is thus a dynamics of sovereign claim-making that can shape and mobilize solidarities that are in flux, rather than those calcified by the violent, exceptional decision of a unitary sovereign. Denunciation foregrounds relational and processual aspects of sovereignty and in so doing invites new comparisons.

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          Most cited references35

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          Global Shadows

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            Africa in the world: a history of extraversion

            J-F Bayart (2000)
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              Fear of Small Numbers

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Comparative Studies in Society and History
                Comp Stud Soc Hist
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0010-4175
                1475-2999
                October 2018
                October 01 2018
                October 2018
                : 60
                : 4
                : 1066-1095
                Article
                10.1017/S0010417518000385
                fa27dc07-892c-41b9-b24b-a3a57582e04c
                © 2018

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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