社论:专制、住房不稳定和废除

Ana Vilenica, E. McElroy, Michele Lancione, Samantha Thompson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在第2.1期(2020年5月)中,我们的编辑集体发表了“Covid-19和住房斗争:紧缩、灾难资本主义和不可能回归正常的(重新)因素”。论文以下面的挑衅结束:“必须使不可能回归正常的实践:一个探索的领域和一个斗争的领域。”这意味着我们需要考虑下一步该如何利用手头的资源”(RHJ Editorial Collective, 2020年,第25页)。两年后,我们通过这篇集体社论对这个问题进行了新的反思。我们写这篇文章的时候,新旧战争不断,使许多人的生活条件进一步恶化,法西斯政权的力量得到加强。此外,人们普遍迫切需要宣布大流行结束,并将其作为过去的一段插曲,从而为恢复“正常”铺平道路。这是什么正常的,太多的人似乎渴望?现在似乎特别清楚的是,正常仅仅意味着种族资本主义机器的再生产,继续通过暴力和掠夺积累利润。国家继续巩固权力,实施暴力,并对那些需要保护的人造成伤害。国家不是保护人民的家园和社区,而是将其保护和权力扩展到地主、私有财产和资本。在这种背景下,我们与不平等城市网络合作,决定将第4.1期激进住房杂志的重点放在持续的危机、残酷、住房不稳定和废除之间的联系上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial: Carcerality, housing precarity, and abolition
In Issue 2.1 (May 2020), our editorial collective published ‘Covid-19 and housing struggles: The (re)makings of austerity, disaster capitalism, and the no return to normal’. The paper ended with the following provocation: ‘It is imperative to make the impossibility of returning to normal a praxis: a terrain of inquiry and a terrain of struggle. This means that we need to think about what to do next with what we have at hand’ (RHJ Editorial Collective​​, 2020, p. 25). Two years later, we reflect on this question through this collective editorial with new clarity. We are writing at a point in which there are old and new wars further degrading the living conditions of many, bolstering the power of fascist regimes. Further, there is a widespread urgency to declare the pandemic over and as an episode of the past, thereby paving the way for a return to ‘normal’. What is this normal that too many seem to be longing for? It seems especially clear now that normal simply means the reproduction of a racial capitalist machine that continues to accumulate profit through violence and dispossession. The state has continued to consolidate power, enact violence, and inflict harm upon those who need protection. Rather than safeguard people’s homes and communities, the state extends its protection and power to landlords, private property, and capital. This is the context in which we, in collaboration with the Unequal Cities Network, have decided to focus our 4.1 Radical Housing Journal issue on the nexus of continuous crisis, carcerality, housing precarity, and abolition.
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