articleAmerican AnthropologistAug 20, 2005Closed access

Seeing Like an Oil Company: Space, Security, and Global Capital in Neoliberal Africa

Stanford University

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Abstract

In this article, I seek to identify a limitation in the analysis James Scott offers in Seeing Like a State (1998) by asking to what extent his account of the follies of schemes for planned improvement by states provides critical leverage on the present world of neoliberal global capitalism. Scott has claimed that a dynamic of standardization, homogenization, and grid making applies not only to developmentalist states but also equally to the contemporary world of downsized states and unconstrained global corporations. I contest that claim by tracing how recent capital investment in Africa has been territorialized, and some of the new forms of order and disorder that have accompanied that selectively…

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836
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16.86
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100%
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31
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Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Capitalism
  • CONTEST
  • Leverage (statistics)
  • Investment (military)
  • Economics
  • Economy
  • Political science
  • Sociology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Decent work and economic growth
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