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Producing Victimhood: Landmines, Reparations, and Law in Colombia

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This research theorizes Colombia's 2011 Victims’ and Land Restitution Law (the Victims’ Law) as a biopolitical program that intends to foster the lives of conflict-affected populations through providing an array… Click to show full abstract

This research theorizes Colombia's 2011 Victims’ and Land Restitution Law (the Victims’ Law) as a biopolitical program that intends to foster the lives of conflict-affected populations through providing an array of reparation measures. Based on fieldwork with internally displaced landmine victims in Colombia's Magdalena Medio region, I highlight how the Victims’ Law constitutes the identity of which populations count as “victims” worthy of reparations, how such parameters are contested, and how landmine survivors’ sense of themselves as “victims” is mediated via their experiences with the Victims’ Law and the reparation programs it provides. In particular, I highlight the possibilities and limitations of reparation measures that hinge on small-scale business incubation programs for landmine victims to show how a legally recognized victimhood category presupposes “self-responsible” neoliberal subjects who must confront contexts of conflict and state neglect.

Keywords: victims law; law; landmines reparations; producing victimhood; victimhood landmines; victimhood

Journal Title: Antipode
Year Published: 2018

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