<p>âOnly Jenny Edkins has the breadth of curiosity and knowledge to reveal relationships between the post-disaster politics of the Grenfell fire and the international responses to famine. This is a book for our times.â <br /><br /> Cynthia Enloe, author of <i>The Big Push: Exposing and Challenging Persistent Patriarchy<br /><br /><br /> </i>âJenny Edkins takes us on a transformative journey into the subtleties of a politics without certainty. Powered by a quiet anger at the injustices of this world, her essays artfully resurrect modes of life that would âotherwise vanish without a trace.â This book exemplifies what it means to slowly, hopefully, on day-to-day terms, undo a patently colonial world.â <br /><br /> Himadeep Muppidi, Betty G.C. Cartwright Professor of Political Science & International Studies, Vassar College<br /><br /><br /> âIn this carefully written book Edkins draws together strands of inquiry across her career to expose the ethical tensions of pursuing justice on behalf of a universalised, unprovincialised subject -- the "We". Traversing multiple topics and various scales of analysis, Edkins argument provokes intimate and difficult questions for the academic committed to studying political change.â <br /><br />Robbie Shilliam, Professor of International Relations, Johns Hopkins University</p>
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