Ghosts in the Delta: USAID and the historical geographies of Vietnam's "other' war

被引:8
作者
Attewell, Wesley [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Dept Geog, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, Canada
来源
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE | 2015年 / 47卷 / 11期
关键词
counterinsurgency; USAID; Vietnam; development; police; governmentality; bio; necropolitics;
D O I
10.1068/a140114p
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This paper will provide historical and geographical nuance to Eyal Weizman's concept of the humanitarian present' through an interrogation of the United States Agency for International Development's (USAID) entanglement in Cold War counterinsurgency. Specifically, it focuses on Cold War Vietnam, where USAID, through its Offices of Rural Affairs and Public Safety, spearheaded the other' war for rural hearts and minds' through two distinct, yet related, suites of spatial interventions. First, it sought to indirectly conduct the conduct' of the South Vietnamese people by providing technical assistance and commodity support to the Strategic Hamlet and Revolutionary Development programs. USAID's counterinsurgency programming, however, was not only traversed by a will to improve': it was also marked by a will to police'. Here, I am specifically referring to the central role that USAID's Office of Public Safety played in helping the government of South Vietnam establish a functioning National Police whose internal security' mandate eventually encompassed both a biopolitics of population control as well as a necropolitics of neutralization. Over the course of this essay I will theorize these two tracks of counterinsurgency programming as the Janus faces of a broader war-police' nexus geared towards catalyzing the fabrication of a modern social order in the Vietnamese countryside.
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页码:2257 / 2275
页数:19
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