Abstract
Through fourteen in-depth interviews conducted in February 2013 with women from Boeung Kak Lake—a high-profile community under threat in Phnom Penh—this article argues that the occurrence of, and activism against, forced eviction is an embodiment of “intimate geopolitics.” The article demonstrates the manifold relationship that forced eviction reflects and ferments between homes, bodies, the nation-state, and the geopolitical transformation of Southeast Asia. Forced eviction is framed as a geopolitical issue, one that leads to innermost incursions into everyday life, one that has spurred on active citizenship and collective action evidencing the injustices of dispossession to diverse audiences, and one that has rendered female activists’ intimate relationships further vulnerable. In doing so, it charts how Boeung Kak Lake women have rewritten the political script in Cambodia by publicly contesting the inevitability accorded to human rights abuses in the post-genocide country.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1256-1272 |
Journal | Annals of the Association of American Geographers |
Volume | 104 |
Issue number | 6 |
Early online date | 12 Sept 2014 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2 Nov 2014 |
Keywords
- home
- Cambodia
- forced eviction
- women.
- activism