Tropes of War—creating a Model Precarious Labourer for US Military Bases

In the paper, authors Lough and Arsenijević tackle the phenomenon of precarious labour and the framework that nurtured it into existence while maintaining focus on the conception of the “model precarious labourer” in Bosnia and Herzegovina for US military bases in zones of conflict. The US military’...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joseph Lough, Damir Arsenijević
Format: Article
Language:Bosnian
Published: University of Tuzla, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences 2016-12-01
Series:Društvene i Humanističke Studije
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.dhs.ff.untz.ba/index.php/home/article/view/9
id doaj-20ce684efc3f473ca0ca832f3ad48d84
record_format Article
spelling doaj-20ce684efc3f473ca0ca832f3ad48d842020-11-25T02:18:38ZbosUniversity of Tuzla, Faculty of Humanities and Social SciencesDruštvene i Humanističke Studije 2490-36042490-36472016-12-0111 (1)16518411Tropes of War—creating a Model Precarious Labourer for US Military BasesJoseph Lough0Damir Arsenijević1International and Area Studies Academic Program University of California, BerkeleyUniversity of Tuzla Faculty of Humanities and Social SciencesIn the paper, authors Lough and Arsenijević tackle the phenomenon of precarious labour and the framework that nurtured it into existence while maintaining focus on the conception of the “model precarious labourer” in Bosnia and Herzegovina for US military bases in zones of conflict. The US military’s reliance on precarious labour has been shaped by global social, economic, and cultural imperatives and the authors trace its development alongside that of neoliberal capitalism or, more precisely, its authoritarian post-Fordist modality. In the late 1960s, the traditional Fordist modes of regulation started to exhibit increasing signs of weakness and decline which, by the early 1970s, generated enough concern for their reconceptualization to be set in motion, resulting in across-the-board social, legal, cultural, and economic regulatory adjustments referred to as post-Fordism. This comprehensive shift is among the most important factors shaping the meeting between precarious labourers from Bosnia and Herzegovina and US military personnel in Afghanistan as, having weathered the widespread privatization and deregulation of industry and public assets, it was but a small step for Americans to embrace the privatization and deregulation of war. The impact of the US neoliberal post-Fordist policy on former Yugoslavia and, in particular, Bosnia and Herzegovina could not have been more destructive, even going as far as causing its eventual destruction and disintegration. When US military contractors recruited precarious labourers in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the wages promised, although entirely unacceptable by US military personnel standards, seemed rather generous to the psychologically traumatized recruits from the most economically depressed nation in the entirety of Europe. Such a labourer—frightened, traumatized, and desperate— stands as the ideal prototypical worker contemplated under the post-Fordist regime of regulation and the authors, drawing on the findings of carried-out interviews, attempt to rationalize his psychological makeup. More strict enforcement of treaties, laws, and universally recognized human rights, the authors conclude, will have little or no impact on the circumstances of precarious labour so long as the regulatory regime governing conduct in zones of conflict is indistinguishable from the authoritarian post-Fordist regime that regulates conduct elsewhere in the world, war or no war.http://www.dhs.ff.untz.ba/index.php/home/article/view/9american studies in bosnia and herzegovinatropes of warbosnia and herzegovinaprecarious labourbosnian precarious labourerspost-fordismauthoritarian post-fordismneoliberal capitalism
collection DOAJ
language Bosnian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph Lough
Damir Arsenijević
spellingShingle Joseph Lough
Damir Arsenijević
Tropes of War—creating a Model Precarious Labourer for US Military Bases
Društvene i Humanističke Studije
american studies in bosnia and herzegovina
tropes of war
bosnia and herzegovina
precarious labour
bosnian precarious labourers
post-fordism
authoritarian post-fordism
neoliberal capitalism
author_facet Joseph Lough
Damir Arsenijević
author_sort Joseph Lough
title Tropes of War—creating a Model Precarious Labourer for US Military Bases
title_short Tropes of War—creating a Model Precarious Labourer for US Military Bases
title_full Tropes of War—creating a Model Precarious Labourer for US Military Bases
title_fullStr Tropes of War—creating a Model Precarious Labourer for US Military Bases
title_full_unstemmed Tropes of War—creating a Model Precarious Labourer for US Military Bases
title_sort tropes of war—creating a model precarious labourer for us military bases
publisher University of Tuzla, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
series Društvene i Humanističke Studije
issn 2490-3604
2490-3647
publishDate 2016-12-01
description In the paper, authors Lough and Arsenijević tackle the phenomenon of precarious labour and the framework that nurtured it into existence while maintaining focus on the conception of the “model precarious labourer” in Bosnia and Herzegovina for US military bases in zones of conflict. The US military’s reliance on precarious labour has been shaped by global social, economic, and cultural imperatives and the authors trace its development alongside that of neoliberal capitalism or, more precisely, its authoritarian post-Fordist modality. In the late 1960s, the traditional Fordist modes of regulation started to exhibit increasing signs of weakness and decline which, by the early 1970s, generated enough concern for their reconceptualization to be set in motion, resulting in across-the-board social, legal, cultural, and economic regulatory adjustments referred to as post-Fordism. This comprehensive shift is among the most important factors shaping the meeting between precarious labourers from Bosnia and Herzegovina and US military personnel in Afghanistan as, having weathered the widespread privatization and deregulation of industry and public assets, it was but a small step for Americans to embrace the privatization and deregulation of war. The impact of the US neoliberal post-Fordist policy on former Yugoslavia and, in particular, Bosnia and Herzegovina could not have been more destructive, even going as far as causing its eventual destruction and disintegration. When US military contractors recruited precarious labourers in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the wages promised, although entirely unacceptable by US military personnel standards, seemed rather generous to the psychologically traumatized recruits from the most economically depressed nation in the entirety of Europe. Such a labourer—frightened, traumatized, and desperate— stands as the ideal prototypical worker contemplated under the post-Fordist regime of regulation and the authors, drawing on the findings of carried-out interviews, attempt to rationalize his psychological makeup. More strict enforcement of treaties, laws, and universally recognized human rights, the authors conclude, will have little or no impact on the circumstances of precarious labour so long as the regulatory regime governing conduct in zones of conflict is indistinguishable from the authoritarian post-Fordist regime that regulates conduct elsewhere in the world, war or no war.
topic american studies in bosnia and herzegovina
tropes of war
bosnia and herzegovina
precarious labour
bosnian precarious labourers
post-fordism
authoritarian post-fordism
neoliberal capitalism
url http://www.dhs.ff.untz.ba/index.php/home/article/view/9
work_keys_str_mv AT josephlough tropesofwarcreatingamodelprecariouslabourerforusmilitarybases
AT damirarsenijevic tropesofwarcreatingamodelprecariouslabourerforusmilitarybases
_version_ 1724880781567852544