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Reversing the Gaze

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'Reversing the Gaze’ is a £2.1 million, four-year project that studies political phenomena in Europe through concepts developed in and from the Global South. By ‘reversing our gaze’ – that is, studying Europe through the Global South, rather than analysing the South through ideal-types developed from Europe – it aims to generate new empirical insights into European politics, and new methodological and theoretical perspectives on conducting comparisons.

reflections of tree and sky on clear ball

Edinburgh Law School is the lead organisation for a case study on social welfare spending. This study asks: why does such a large volume of social welfare funds, collected and earmarked for the benefit of specific vulnerable groups, remain unspent and unallocated - in spite of the political promises made to those groups?

Beginning in India, where tens of billions of pounds remain unspent, the case develops theories to answer that question. It then “reverses the gaze” and applies those theories to Italy, to explore the underspending of billions of Euros of European Structural Funds. Through this comparison, the project explores how theories of the administrative state from the Global South might travel to the Global North.

Project team and affiliates

Dr Deval Desai, Principal Investigator, University of Edinburgh

Dr Sruthi Herbert, University of Edinburgh

Dr Christine Lutringer, Graduate Institute Geneva

Sapna Reheem Shaila, University of Edinburgh

Anna Rita Ceddia, Fondazione Bruno Visentini

Dr Himanshu Upadhyaya, Azim Premji University

Project fellows

Arjun Appadurai, New York University

Kim Lane Scheppele, Princeton School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University

Luciano Monti, LUISS Guido Carli, Rome

Shalini Randeria, Central European University

Is it possible to compare the political dimensions of people’s lives across the Global North and South? This question raises fundamental debates about the nature of comparison, and how it works. Is such comparison inevitably Eurocentric, carried out with implied (or even overt) reference to political ideals and concepts that were developed precisely to distinguish between the “West” and the “Rest”, the colonizer and the colonized? And if so, can something analytically productive be salvaged from the project of political comparison across the Global North and South?

The project uses a “conceptual laboratory” to test the analytic purchase of mid-level political concepts. This laboratory entails practices of reciprocal comparison (i.e. looking at Northern contexts through the Global South, and vice versa). The key critical theoretical assumption is the idea of “reversing the gaze”, or deploying concepts developed in the Global South to the North.

Three mid-level concepts derived from the Global South are applied to politics in Europe: “re-tribalisation”, “political society” and “the cunning state”. The European empirical case studies are Austria (right-wing populism), Italy (social welfare spending) and Switzerland (citizenship and migration).

The project’s approach will offer innovative and conceptually out-of-the-box perspectives to the cases, differing from those derived and developed exclusively within and against a European background. The project’s scholarly outcomes include potentially new perspectives on comparison; a critical engagement with “universal” concepts and the politics of conceptual travel; and practical visions on how to imbue the pursuit of knowledge with a concern for ethical and political issues.

Visit the ‘Reversing the Gaze’ website to learn more

‘Reversing the Gaze’ is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation’s Sinergia programme. The four-year project is led by a consortium at the University of Basel, the University of Zurich, and the University of Edinburgh. The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva, is a Swiss partner; international partners are based in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America.

Journal Special Issue:

Desai, D., S. Herbert and C. Lutringer (eds) (2022) The Puzzle of Unspent Funds. Political and Policy Implications of Fiscal Underspending, International Development Policy / Revue internationale de politique de développement, 14.1 (Geneva: Graduate Institute Publications).

Journal articles

Deval Desai, Sruthi Herbert and Christine Lutringer, “Introduction. Critical Issues Emerging from the Study of Unspent Funds”, International Development Policy | Revue internationale de politique de développement [Online], 14.1 | 2022, Online since 16 August 2022, connection on 18 August 2022

Deval Desai and Shalini Randeria, “Unfreezing Unspent Social Special-Purpose Funds for the Covid-19 Crisis: Critical Reflections from India”, 136 World Development (2020), 1-4

Book chapters

Deval Desai, Shalini Randeria and Christine Lutringer, “Redefining Vulnerability and State-Society Relationships During the Covid-19 Crisis: The Politics of Social Welfare Funds in India and Italy”, in Maduro, M.P., and Kahn, P. W. (eds.), Democracy in Times of Pandemic (2020), 182-195 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).

Blog posts

“Administrative Codes? Coding and Capital in the Global South” (review of Pistor, Code of Capital), Indian Journal of International Economic Law (April 2021).

Talks

Sruthi Herbert, ‘Workers Subsidising Welfare: Lessons from the redeployment of construction workers’ welfare funds in India’, Post-Pandemic Mobilisation and Management of Social Welfare Funds: Implications for Equity and Citizenship, Just Sustainable Futures in an Urbanising and Mobile World Conference, Development Studies Association, UCL London, June 2022

Sruthi Herbert, ‘Redefining citizenship: Lessons from the redeployment of construction workers’ welfare funds in India’, ECPR Joint Session on Citizenship and Legal Institutions, University of Edinburgh, April 2022

Sruthi Herbert, ‘Governing through non-control: The use of Special-purpose Social Welfare funds for pandemic relief in India’, Governing Through Contagion: Perspectives Across Time and Space Workshop, Centre for Asian Legal Studies (NUS Law), April 2022

Sruthi Herbert, ‘Expansion of welfare or the poor subsidising welfare? Post-pandemic use of Social Welfare Funds in India’, The state and social welfare in the 21st century Conference, Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Cambridge, April 2022

Christine Lutringer and Sruthi Herbert, Unspent Funds: Mobilisation and Accountability Post-COVID’, Research Colloquium, Fall Semester 2021: “Making concepts work”, 27 October 2021

Sruthi Herbert, Rather Misspent than Unspent? Examining the Use of Welfare Funds for Pandemic Relief in India, Work in Progress discussion, School of Law, University of Edinburgh, 11 October 2021

Deval Desai, “Reversing the gaze: Methodological reflections on studying India and Italy as ‘cunning states’”, SCRIPTS Theory Network Workshop on Post- and Decolonial Perspectives on Contestations of the Liberal Script, 9 September 2021

Deval Desai, Roundtable on Faculty Scholarship, Global Scholars' Academy, 18 August 2021

Sruthi Herbert, Rather Misspent than Unspent?: Examining the Use of Welfare Funds for Pandemic Relief in India, Law Schools Global League Summer Conference 2021, Edinburgh Law School, 21 July 2021

Deval Desai, Roundtable on Law, Covid, and Crisis, Edinburgh Legal Theory Festival, 2 June 2021

Deval Desai, “Reversing the Gaze: Building a Theory of Administrative State Forms from the Global South”, Amsterdam Center for International Law Public Lecture Series, 17 May 2021

Deval Desai, Public roundtable, International Law and Distribution, Glasginburgh 2021: International Law and Distribution, 14 May 2021

Deval Desai, Democracy in Times of Pandemic, South African Association of Political Studies and Johannesburg Institute for Advanced Study, 5 May 2021

Conference Panel

SruthI Herbert and Deval Desai, Convenors, Post-Pandemic Mobilisation and Management of Social Welfare Funds: Implications for Equity and Citizenship, Just Sustainable Futures in an Urbanising and Mobile World Conference, Development Studies Association, UCL London, June 2022

Workshops

Workshop: Decoloniality and the Politics of the Urban, hosted with The Geneva Graduate Institute and the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH) - 27 Oct 2022

Review Workshop for the IDP Journal Special issue on ‘The puzzle of unspent funds: Implications across developmental contexts’, 30 November  – 1 December 2021

  • Approximately US$4.2 billion of the Indian government’s US$22.6 billion spending as emergency relief due to the pandemic came from a vast pile of unspent social special-purpose funds.
     
  • The causes of the initial underspending are not only bureaucratic and technical, but also institutional and political.
     
  • The remobilisation of these funds to combat Covid-19 transforms state-society relations, in particular ideas about social vulnerability, state obligations, and good governance. 
     
  • It is possible to argue that “democracy is also being transformed by significant changes in the states fiscal arrangements and its political economy”, as revealed through these funds.  

Read more at:

About the series

This series of discussions and events engages with how we think, observe, and comprehend legal phenomena, practices, objects, relations in a comparative fashion. We are reminded that legal notions, and our understanding of them - such as “the rule of law”, “the state”, “bureaucracy”, or “rights” – cross many boundaries today: geographic, disciplinary, cultural, political, social, and more. At the same time, in comparative work, we demand some way of thinking about these notions such that they can be separated out and compared. How can we do both at once – or, indeed, should we?

Bringing a range of scholars from the disciplines of law, political science, international development, sociology, economics and anthropology, the series will explore the kinds of methodological reflexivity and sensitivity that can aid in, problematize, and challenge comparative work about big legal notions – particularly work that spans the Global North and South.

The first strand of discussions in the series will engage with the notion of the “rule of law”, from sociological studies of efforts to “promote” it in the Global South, to the use of comparative literature to reveal its colonial pasts and futures at the international level.

Past events

Configurations of the Indian welfare state through the pandemic

Date: Thursday 30 June 2022

Time: 10:00-11:30

Location: Edinburgh Law School and Online (via Zoom)

Speaker: Dr Reetika Khera, Associate Professor, Humanities & Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

About this seminar

The disruption caused by the Covid-19 pandemic demanded a transformation in the scale, scope, and operations of states. This, in turn, reshaped notions of citizenship and the state-citizen relationship. In this session, and in conversation with Dr Sruthi Herbert of the Reversing the Gaze project, Dr Reetika Khera will discuss how the pandemic has affected the financing and distribution of social welfare in India, as well as its democratic implications.

 Dr Reetika Khera is a Development Economist and Associate Professor at the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi. She has worked and written extensively on social policy in India, particularly regarding employment, inequality, and the impact of digital technologies on welfare.

 

Related Links

Identity Deception: A Critical History

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The project, ‘Identity Deception: A Critical History,’ asks when, if ever, it is appropriate to punish a person who engages in identity deception (pretending to be someone they are not).

Jamie Crewe, “False Wife” (2022) [video still]..jpg

Focussing in particular on intimate deceptions (deceiving another in order to induce intimacy, e.g., in the form of a romantic relationship, sexual encounter or marriage), the project looks at how the use of deception has been treated as a wrong that merits a legal response across the modern era (c. 1750 to the present).

The project examines civil and criminal responses to this conduct and focusses on identifying punitive and quasi-punitive responses across both spheres. It aims to construct a genealogy of the challenges that currently exist in debates about whether and how the law ought to respond to deceptively induced intimacy, including whether it is appropriate for the state to intervene, what kind of legal response is fitting, which kinds of deceptions ought to trigger a response and what kind of conduct should be considered ‘deceptive’.

The project aims to show how these challenges can only be fully understood, and therefore confronted, when situated against shifts in legal and popular understandings of intimacy, such as the cleaving apart of sex and marriage (and indeed romantic relationships more generally), the changing role of intimate relationships in self-construction, and the implications these changes have for expectations of interpersonal honesty and ‘authenticity'.

The project aims to transform and enrichen debates about how to conceptualise identity deception and how and when law ought to sanction this kind of conduct. This is not merely an academic exercise, however; these deliberations have important practical consequences for how law pursues justice. The project, therefore, aims to help shape how, and against whom, the law is applied in practice.

‘Identity Deception: A Critical History’ has been awarded funding as part of the AHRC Research Leadership Fellows scheme and led by Dr Chloë Kennedy.

Image credit: Jamie Crewe, “False Wife” (2022) [video still].jpg

Dr Chloë Kennedy, Senior Lecturer in Criminal Law

Dr Kelly Ann Couzens, Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Jamie Crewe, Artist

The Identity Deception project involves a creative strand, whose aim is not to create a direct illustration of the research and its outputs but, rather, to invite independent explorations of the topic and wider themes – such as selfhood, deception, and trust – and to think critically about some of the ways that law constructs and values identity and intimacy.

As part of this strand, the project is working closely with the University of Edinburgh Art Collection and has commissioned the award-winning artist Jamie Crewe.

Learn more about Jamie Crewe’s art

Learn more about the University of Edinburgh Art Collections 

'False Wife' by Jamie Crewe released on 08 April 2022 View details

'False Wife' by Jamie Crewe wins European Media Art Festival (EMAF) Award (24 April 2022) View details

EMAF Jury Statement:
"The International Jury presents the 2022 EMAF Award for Outstanding Media Art to False Wife by Jamie Crewe. From the first frame, and first beat, the viewer is unmoored from their seat and catapulted from the computer screen on your lap, to the dark corner of a club, to a brief respite in a meadow, and back again to your rigid cinema seat.

Given a 10 second countdown each time to prepare, in the vein of a poppers training video we melt together, enraptured, entangled by a folkloric shapeshifter, and nothing is the same again. Our skin, our identity peels away with each encounter completing the haptic onslaught started with ribcage rattling bass.

This is a work that inventively combines layers of manipulated images, sound and text imprinting them directly onto you at a breakneck speed. False Wife oscillates our boundaries between the individual and the collective, the body and the mind, the fixity of gender and the social contract of cinema."

Speaking engagements

Cheating death? Upload, sexual consent, and the criminal law
Online, hosted by Gikii and the Legal Institute of the University of Iceland (6-7 July 2022) View event

CLRNN 3: Consent and Deception Project - Consultation Launch
Online, hosted by the Criminal Law Reform Now Network (CLRNN) (08 December 2021) View event 

Rediscovering Feminist Histories
Online, Being Human: A Festival of the Humanities (18 November 2021) View event

Criminalizing Deceptive Sex 
Online, hosted by the Crimsoc, Lawyers without Borders and Women in Law (29 October 2021) 

Inducing Intimacy: Deception, Consent and Law
Online, hosted by the Oxford Jurisprudence Discussion Group, Oxford University (13 May 2021) View event

Personal Lives and Public Laws: Intimacy, Deception and the State
Online, hosted by the Virtual Workshop on the Political Turn(s) in Criminal Law Thinking (7 May 2021) View event

Inducing Intimacy: A History of Transforming Wrongs
Online, hosted by the Criminal Law Discussion Group, University of Oxford (8 March 2021) View event

Inducing Intimacy: critical lessons from law and history
Online, hosted by Cardiff University (10 February 2021) View event

Trust and Identity Network Sex Seminars - 'Sex, Marriage, Trust and Identity: A Brief History of Transforming Wrongs'
Online, (27 November 2020) View event

Law School Staff Seminar Series - 'Sexual Wrongs and Civil Laws: A Brief History of Seduction'
Online, Hosted by Edinburgh Law School (25 November 2020) View event

Lying and identity
Online, hosted by Lancaster University (9 June 2020) View event

The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue: Counterfeit Cash and Criminal Law in 19th C Scotland
Online, hosted by Oxford Legal History Forum (18 February 2020) View event

Bracton Centre for Legal History Research Summer Symposium 2020
Online, hosted by University of Exeter (3 July 2020) View event

Criminalising Deceptive Sex
Online, hosted by Lindsay Farmer, Antony Duff, Sandra Marshall (14 May 2020) View event

Identity Deception: A Critical History
Online, hosted by British Academy (18 May 2020) View event

Workshop on Consent
University of Surrey (16 September 2019) View event

Ethics seminar series
(9 October 2019) View event

Criminalising Deceptive Sex: Sex, Identity and Recognition
University of Warwick (22 November 2019) View event

Events Organised

Modern Histories of Consent, Intimacy and Law (17-18 June 2021)

Identity and Criminal Responsibility in Comparative Historical Perspective: A Roundtable
American Society for Legal History Annual Meeting (Postponed to 2021) View event

Trust and Identity Network Sex Seminars (Organiser)
Online, (20 - 27 November 2020) View events

Identity workshop
Online, hosted by British Academy (18 May 2020) View event

Books

Inducing Intimacy: Consent, Deception and the Law 
Cambridge University Press. View the book

Policy Paper

Sex, Selfhood and Deception
Kennedy, Chloë. In: CLRNN3: Reforming the Relationship between Sexual Consent, Deception and Mistake - Consultation (December 2021) View consultation paper

Blog posts

A Brief History of Seduction (Dr Chloe Kennedy, History / Sexuality / Law, 29 April 2021)

Sex, Identity and Recognition: Re-thinking ‘Rape by Deception’ (Dr Chloë Kennedy, Inherently Human, 7 February 2019)

Book chapters

Counterfeit currency and the Criminal Law in commercializing Scotland.
Kennedy, Chloë. Stair Miscellany VIII. 2020. View chapter

Journal articles

Criminalising deceptive sex : Sex, identity and recognition.
Kennedy, Chloë. In: Legal Studies, (Published, March 2021).  View article

Digital Media

Presentation - Sex, Selfhood and Deception
Kennedy, Chloë. Criminal Law Reform Now Network (CLRNN) 3: Consent and Deception Project - Consultation Launch, 08.12.2021 Watch the presentation

Podcast - Beyond Consent 
Kennedy, Chloë. The Age of Consent 03.12.2021. (Spotify) Listen to podcast

Podcast - Deceptive Sex
Kennedy, Chloë. Talking Research, 20.01.2021. (Spotify) Listen to podcast

Artwork - False Wife
Jamie Crewe, 08 April 2022 View artwork

Related Links

Crime, Justice and Society Seminars

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