{"title":"Book Review: Communal Intimacy and the Violence of Politics: Understanding the War on Drugs in Bagong Silang","authors":"P. Kreuzer","doi":"10.1177/18681034231153898","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Steffen Bo Jensen’s and Karl Hapal’s “Communal Intimacy and the Violence of Politics” is an excellent in-depth study on the impact of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs on a local community living in barangay Bagong Silang at the northernmost edge of the National Capital Region of the Philippines. The authors focus on three interrelated questions (2): How did the violent campaign become so omnipresent, how will it end and with what consequences, and why did the urban poor areas bore the brunt of the killings? They do this in five empirical chapters for this Barangay that is not only a former resettlement site populated since the late 1970s by urban poor from Manila City, but also the most populous barangay of the Philippines with approximately 260,000 inhabitants. Conscious about this, the authors explicitly “refuse to explore the war or Duterte outside the context of Bagong Silang” (23). Jensen and Hapal argue that understanding how the campaign took hold and was implemented on the local level necessitates an exploration of “how violence and conflict animated communal life before the war, how local politics was carried out, and how the state, notably the police, conducted themselves” (4) in the years before Duterte. They are able to make good on this promise as their first stint of field research dates back to 2009. This allows them to link the pre-Duterte past with the Duterte-present of Bagong Silang. In the empirical chapters they analyse in detail, which aspects of the past became formative for the way the campaign was implemented and how practices of the past were transformed by the way the campaign unfolded in Bagong Silang. In the first chapter Jensen and Hapal unfold their central descriptive and analytical concept: communal intimacy. This is, first, an unavoidable condition of living together in a densely populated area. It also means having extensive knowledge of each other (11) and a specific “style of coping and morality” (18), that enables people to navigate their everyday life under such circumstances. It also forms the backbone of local politics and social control.","PeriodicalId":15424,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs","volume":"42 1","pages":"138 - 140"},"PeriodicalIF":2.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-02-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/18681034231153898","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"AREA STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Steffen Bo Jensen’s and Karl Hapal’s “Communal Intimacy and the Violence of Politics” is an excellent in-depth study on the impact of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs on a local community living in barangay Bagong Silang at the northernmost edge of the National Capital Region of the Philippines. The authors focus on three interrelated questions (2): How did the violent campaign become so omnipresent, how will it end and with what consequences, and why did the urban poor areas bore the brunt of the killings? They do this in five empirical chapters for this Barangay that is not only a former resettlement site populated since the late 1970s by urban poor from Manila City, but also the most populous barangay of the Philippines with approximately 260,000 inhabitants. Conscious about this, the authors explicitly “refuse to explore the war or Duterte outside the context of Bagong Silang” (23). Jensen and Hapal argue that understanding how the campaign took hold and was implemented on the local level necessitates an exploration of “how violence and conflict animated communal life before the war, how local politics was carried out, and how the state, notably the police, conducted themselves” (4) in the years before Duterte. They are able to make good on this promise as their first stint of field research dates back to 2009. This allows them to link the pre-Duterte past with the Duterte-present of Bagong Silang. In the empirical chapters they analyse in detail, which aspects of the past became formative for the way the campaign was implemented and how practices of the past were transformed by the way the campaign unfolded in Bagong Silang. In the first chapter Jensen and Hapal unfold their central descriptive and analytical concept: communal intimacy. This is, first, an unavoidable condition of living together in a densely populated area. It also means having extensive knowledge of each other (11) and a specific “style of coping and morality” (18), that enables people to navigate their everyday life under such circumstances. It also forms the backbone of local politics and social control.
Steffen Bo Jensen和Karl Hapal的《社区亲密关系与政治暴力》是对菲律宾总统罗德里戈·杜特尔特的禁毒战争对菲律宾首都地区最北端巴兰盖八公四郎当地社区的影响的深入研究。作者关注三个相互关联的问题(2):暴力运动是如何变得如此普遍的,它将如何结束,后果如何,为什么城市贫困地区首当其冲?他们在五章中对巴郎盖进行了实证研究,巴郎盖不仅是自20世纪70年代末以来由马尼拉市的城市穷人居住的前移民安置点,也是菲律宾人口最多的巴郎盖,约有26万居民。意识到这一点,作者明确“拒绝在八公四郎的背景之外探索战争或杜特尔特”(23)。Jensen和Hapal认为,要了解这场运动是如何在地方一级开展和实施的,就必须探索“战前暴力和冲突是如何激发社区生活的,地方政治是如何进行的,以及国家,尤其是警察,在杜特尔特之前的几年里是如何行事的”(4)。他们能够兑现这一承诺,因为他们的第一次实地研究可以追溯到2009年。这使他们能够将杜特尔特之前的过去与巴贡四郎的杜特尔特现在联系起来。在实证章节中,他们详细分析了过去的哪些方面对战役的实施方式形成了影响,以及过去的实践是如何随着战役在八公四郎的展开而改变的。在第一章中,詹森和哈帕尔展开了他们的中心描述和分析概念:公共亲密关系。首先,这是在人口稠密地区共同生活不可避免的条件。这也意味着对彼此有广泛的了解(11)和特定的“应对方式和道德”(18),使人们能够在这种情况下驾驭日常生活。它也构成了地方政治和社会控制的支柱。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, published by the GIGA Institute of Asian Studies (IAS) in Hamburg, is an internationally refereed journal. The publication focuses on current developments in international relations, politics, economics, society, education, environment and law in Southeast Asia. The topics covered should not only be oriented towards specialists in Southeast Asian affairs, but should also be of relevance to readers with a practical interest in the region. For more than three decades, the Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs (formerly Südostasien aktuell) has regularly provided – six times per year and in German - insightful and in-depth analyses of current issues in political, social and economic life; culture; and development in Southeast Asia. It continues to be devoted to the transfer of scholarly insights to a wider audience and is the leading academic journal devoted exclusively to this region. Interested readers can access the abstracts and tables of contents of earlier issues of the journal via the webpage http://www.giga-hamburg.de/de/publikationen/archiv.