Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Conflicted Commitments

Race, Privilege, and Power in Solidarity Activism

by (author) Gada Mahrouse

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Jun 2014
Subjects
Developing Countries
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773592094
    Publish Date
    Jun 2014
    List Price
    $28.95

Library Ordering Options

Description

Conflicted Commitments analyzes a form of non-violent, direct transnational solidarity in which activists from the global North travel to support and protect people in the global South. Gada Mahrouse contends that this brand of activism is a compelling site of racialized power relations and is highly instructive for a nuanced understanding of systems of race. Mahrouse argues that the individuals who partake in this form of activism consciously deploy their white, western privilege to offer support and protection to those facing threats of violence. Moreover, given that this type of activism asserts itself as an exemplary form of anti-racist commitment, it illustrates that well-meaning practices can inadvertently reproduce racialized power structures that are embedded in imperial and colonial legacies. Mahrouse focuses on Palestine and Iraq in the post-9/11 era to contemplate the contemporary challenges that these regions pose for solidarity activism. By exploring how individual activists manage and negotiate their dominant positioning in these encounters, Mahrouse reflects more broadly on the ethics of social justice strategies in an increasingly transnational world. A detailed study of the racialized complexities and contradictions inherent in transnational solidarity activism, Conflicted Commitments makes a significant contribution to critical race and feminist studies.

About the author

Gada Mahrouse is associate professor at the Simone de Beauvoir Institute of Women's Studies at Concordia University.

Gada Mahrouse's profile page

Editorial Reviews

“Conflicted Commitments provides an accessible and innovative approach to exploring transnational activism and raises a number of important questions about the racialized and gendered patterns of power and solidarity that shape these encounters.” Nancy A. Naples, Department of Sociology, University of Connecticut