Deborah James is Professor of Anthropology at the London School of Economics and Faculty Associate in the International Inequalities Institute. She is the author of Money From Nothing (Stanford, 2015).
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Description
Introduction: Why Redistribution? 1. Debt, Work, and Welfare 2. Redistribution or Debt? Rechanneling Financial Flows 3. How Much Is Enough? Battling Wage Deductions in the Courts 4. Funding Advice: Patchworks and Boundaries 5. Balancing the Books: Formats and Technologies Conclusion
"James reveals how work, welfare, and debt are not merely survival mechanisms but are woven into a larger tapestry of moral, familial, and financial interdependence. With a keen eye, James deftly challenges totalizing accounts of financialization and evocatively illuminates how financial and familial relationships interlock, people tack back and forth between calculative and relational forms of reason, and borrowing can be seen not as a beggar's supplication but a strategist's gambit, which while not always unequivocally successful nevertheless affirms agency in a world where we so frequently feel we have been stripped of it." -Bill Maurer, University of California, Irvine "In Clawing Back, discover how people creatively piece together wages, welfare, and debt to claim what they are owed. This provocative exploration urges us to radically rethink redistribution, highlighting the informal and everyday strategies people use to secure a fairer share in an increasingly and dramatically unequal world. An essential read for anyone interested in poverty, inequality, and justice." -Isabelle Guerin, French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development

