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To Punish, Parent, or Palliate: Governing Urban Poverty through Institutional Failure

DSEID
DSEID-001-3020410
DOI
10.1177/00031224221116145
Journal
American Sociological Review
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Published
2022-10
Status
metadata_only

Abstract

Studies of poverty governance typically emphasize the punitive subjugation or paternalistic disciplining of the poor. Much work combines elements of these approaches, and recent studies depict relations between institutions as premised on collaboration or burden shuffling. Despite the precarity of poor people’s existence, the role of life itself in governance is conspicuously absent in this literature. Using an ethnographic case study of a syringe exchange program serving unhoused people who inject drugs in Los Angeles, this article theorizes palliative governance to describe forms of regulation that neither punish nor parent, but simply try to keep very poor subjects alive through a series of stopgap measures. Rather than collaborate or burden shuffle, exchange workers supplement, contest, and co-opt other governing institutions. An analysis of palliative governance broadens our understanding of how institutions interact with subjects and each other, while revealing the paradoxical ways states both expose and protect bare life.

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Metadata

Title
To Punish, Parent, or Palliate: Governing Urban Poverty through Institutional Failure
Delta ID
DSEID-001-3020410
Authors
Anthony DiMario
Abstract source
crossref
Source URL
None
Access
closed_or_uncertain
Licence
unknown
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Record history

WhenEventFieldOldNew
2026-06-18 19:37:53.011249+00:00identifier_assignedDSEIDDSEID-001-3020410