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  • Cited by 1
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
October 2022
Print publication year:
2022
Online ISBN:
9781009075848

Book description

Extrajudicial, extraterritorial killings of War on Terror adversaries by the US state have become the new normal. Alongside targeted individuals, unnamed and uncounted others are maimed and killed. Despite the absence of law's conventional sites, processes, and actors, the US state celebrates these killings as the realization of 'justice.' Meanwhile, images, narrative, and affect do the work of law; authorizing and legitimizing the discounting of some lives so that others – implicitly, American nationals – may live. How then, as we live through this unending, globalized war, are we to make sense of law in relation to the valuing of life? Adopting an interdisciplinary approach to law to excavate the workings of necropolitical law, and interrogating the US state's justifications for the project of counterterror, this book's temporal arc, the long War on Terror, illuminates the profound continuities and many guises for racialized, imperial violence informing the contemporary discounting of life.

Reviews

‘Discounting Life reveals the consequential weight of visual representation in the strategic discourses of counterterrorism after 9/11. Drawing on law, humanities and social science to probe key episodes in the War on Terror, Dr. Rajah examines the normalization of a complex politics of death with nuanced insight and originality.'

Carol J. Greenhouse - Arthur W. Marks '19 Professor of Anthropology, Princeton University

‘This extraordinary account of necropolitical law, forged in the heartlands of US colonialism, imperialism and slavery, and reanimated in the long War on Terror that begins well before 9/11, provides a new lens through which to analyze law's capacities to authorize the value of certain lives over others. A close reading of texts, images, and events unveils the mutually constitutive histories of racial violence and liberal legality that is both chilling and revelatory.'

Eve Darian-Smith - Professor of Global and International Studies, University of California, Irivine and author of Global Burning: Rising Antidemocracy and the Climate Crisis

‘In Discounting Life, Jothie Rajah argues that the cultural and media framing of the ‘long War on Terror' as the vanquishing of irrational, extraordinary, and exceptional enemies has led to the extension of US sovereignty to a planetary scale. Through an extension its ‘necropolitical law,' Rajah argues that the U.S. justifies its right to determine who may live and die not as an exception to legality but squarely in the context of its necropolitical legal calculus. A smart, well-researched, and powerful analysis of law's role in the long War on Terror, Discounting Life is necessary reading.'

Alex Lubin - Professor of African American Studies, The Pennsylvania State University

‘An astute investigation of state-sponsored killing under the banner of the War on Terror. Rajah shows the life-and-death stakes of modern state sovereignty. This gripping book brings the discounted lives of millions killed in the War on Terror back into the conversation about law, sovereignty, state power, and the exception. It is superb.'

Ian Hurd - Professor of Political Science and the Director of the Weinberg College Center for International and Area Studies at Northwestern University

‘This is a phenomenal work of scholarship. Through masterful and deeply original readings of law as expressed in photos, film, texts, and events, Jothie Rajah uncovers the coded law underlying the violence the US has unleashed around the world during its long War on Terror. Rigorous, erudite, and deeply creative, Discounting Life is a truly stunning book.'

Leti Volpp - Robert D. and Leslie Kay Raven Professor of Law, UC Berkeley

‘Rajah offers an incisive understanding of the interplay between legal texts and non-legal discourses that runs counter to predominant understandings of exceptionality.’

Samarjit Ghosh Source: International Affairs

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