Punitive Precarity and Lucrative Death: Legal Violence and its Production of a New Underclass in the Neoliberal State
Friday, 12 April 2024 | 14:30 to 16:30 EDT | Room 280N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, University of Toronto | In person
With Heewon Kim, Arizona State University
A variety of mutations of neoliberal, capitalist politics have been investigated across different parts of the globe, including many Asian countries. Particularly in South Korea, the market-state nexus has developed a distinctive form of legal violence for the past two decades to protect the capital, (re)establish sovereignty, and outlaw “the disobedient.” Marked by a punitive turn of neoliberal governance in 2007, the recent trend of lawsuits targeting labor unions and protestors reveals a new punitive technique of dispossession and death, which has been effectively enabled and deployed through the Korean juridical systems. Drawing on the analyses of 249 lawsuit cases and 3,138 pages of court judgments, this talk proposes a notion of punitive precarity to elucidate (a) exceptional legal mechanisms to punish the “social ills” employed by legal, government, and for-profit institutions; (b) a contemporary form of the subjugation of life to the power of death enforced by the imposition of liabilities and confiscation; and (c) legal violence as the performative and communicative technology that produces material and symbolic effects that spill over into the entire society. In doing so, this talk extends a poignant critique about the ways in which the state and state-sanctioned violence has proactively created a new underclass, legitimized by the law and legal systems.
Dr. Heewon Kim, a scholar-activist who works across borders, is Associate Professor in the Hugh Downs School of Human Communication at Arizona State University. She is a critical organizational scholar who focuses primarily on the areas of justice, participation and voice, power/knowledge, violence as well as burnout and resilience.
This event is presented by the Korean Office for Research and Education with support from the York Centre for Asian Research at York University and the Centre for the Study of Korea at the University of Toronto.
For more information: kore@yorku.ca.
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