Inspired by taxonomist Jack Goody's theorizing of 'ancient lists' as 'intellectual technologies', this book analyzes listing practices in modern and contemporary formations of power, and how they operate in the installation and securing of the milieus of circulation that characterize Michel Foucault's conception of governmentality. Propelling the list's role in the delimitation and policing of risky and threatening elements from out of history and into a contemporary analysis of power, this work demonstrates how assemblages of computer, statistical, and list technologies first deployed by the Nazi regime continue to resonate significantly in the segmenting and constitution of a critical classification of contemporary homo sapiens: the terrorist class, or homo sacer.
In: Jeremy Finn, Ben France-Hudson and Elizabeth Toomey "Damage, Destruction, Distress: Shared Ownership Debacles" (2016) 22 Canterbury Law Review 57 – 81.
In: "International business-government relations research 1945-2015: Concepts, typologies, theories and methodologies," Journal of World Business, 51(1), 2016: 10-22.