ABSTRACT

The contributors to this volume examine the actual workings and on-the-ground effects of contemporary political economic shifts in the Global South, and implications for reconfiguring social networks, conceptions and practices of governance, and burgeoning social movements.

How do various groups in the Global South respond to and manage chronic states of insecurity and precarity concomitant with contemporary globalization processes? While drawing on diverse ethnographic viewpoints in the Philippines, the authors analyze the impact of these processes through the conceptual framework of "emergent sociality," a purported connectedness among individuals fostered through interactions, copresence, and conviviality within a community over a long duration. In so doing, the case studies in this volume suggest, illuminate, and debate insecurities that may be commonly shared among populations in the Philippines and throughout the Global South.

This anthology will be of great interest to students and scholars of cultural anthropology, globalization and Philippines society.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

Emergent sociality, or what comes after “the social”?

chapter 2|26 pages

Post-authoritarian sociality and urban governmentality

A socialized housing project in the Philippines

chapter 3|28 pages

Neoliberalizing subaltern political socialities

Community barricade and the diverse grassroots struggles for adequate housing in the Sitio San Roque slum

chapter 4|27 pages

Disaster, discipline, drugs, and Duterte

Emergence of new moral subjectivities in post-Yolanda Leyte

chapter 5|16 pages

Learning to leave

Filipino families and the making of the global Filipino nurse

chapter 6|29 pages

Diasporic socialities and long-distance love stories

Transnational volunteerism and making the ideal Filipino citizen

chapter 7|13 pages

Two dimensions of “the social”

Oppression and solidarity in tourism development of Boracay Island

chapter 8|22 pages

Rearraying available resources to secure livelihoods

Continuities and change in livelihood strategies in a rural village in Ilocos, Philippines

chapter 9|22 pages

Kinship as the “safe space” in the precarious Muslim Mindanao

A story of the Maranao youth living in double-peripheries