Home SOS. Katherine Brickell

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      Table of Contents

      1  Cover

      2  List of Figures

      3  List of Abbreviations

      4  About the Author

      5  Series Editor’s Preface

      6  Acknowledgements

      7  Chapter One: Fire in the House Introduction Crisis Ordinaries of Domestic Violence and Forced Eviction The Survival Work of Domestic Violence and Forced Eviction The Gender‐Based Violences of Domestic Violence and Forced Eviction Converging Research Trajectories Overarching Methodological Approaches Structure of the Book

      8  Chapter Two: Conceptualising Domestic Crises Introduction Crisis Ordinary and Survival‐Work Bio‐necropolitics and Precarity Intimate War and Slow Violence Law and Lawfare Rights to Dwell Conclusion

      9  Chapter Three: National Trajectories of Crisis in Cambodia Introduction National Trajectories

      10  Chapter Four: Attrition Warfare, Precarious Homes, and Truncated Marriages Introduction Domestic Violence in Cambodia Forced Eviction in Cambodia Conclusion

      11  Chapter Five: Un(Invited) and (Un)Eventful Spaces of Resistance and Citizenship Introduction Legislating Against Domestic Violence Contesting Forced Eviction Conclusion

      12  Chapter Six: Intimate Wounds of Law and Lawfare Introduction The Law and Lawfare of Domestic Violence The Law and Lawfare of Forced Eviction Conclusion

      13  Chapter Seven: Dwelling in the Crisis Ordinary Introduction Inhabiting the Fire: Dwelling in the Crisis Ordinary Fanning the Fire: Political Geographies of Home Legislating the Fire: Towards a Feminist Legal Geographies Project Conclusion

      14  References

      15  Index

      16  End User License Agreement

      List of Illustrations

      1 Chapter 1Figure 1.1 SOS sign in Boeung Kak Lake, Phnom Penh, 2011.Figure 1.2 Orm’s sugar cane juice stall outside her home, Siem Reap, 2004....Figure 1.3 Exterior of Orm’s home, Siem Reap, 2004.Figure 1.4 Domestic violence law poster in Pursat Province, 2013.Figure 1.5 Slorkram river community before (26 March) and after (27 March) t...Figure 1.6 Audio‐taped tour of Boeung Kak by residents, 2013.

      2 Chapter 3Figure 3.1 The fall of Phnom Penh, 1975.Figure 3.2 Khmer Rouge women's unit harvesting rice.Figure 3.3 Elite Town III, Koh Pich, Phnom Penh, 2019.Figure 3.4 One park development built on the former Boeung Kake Lake, 2018....

      3 Chapter 4Figure 4.1 Kalliyan’s new house (right) next to her parents’ (left), Siem Re...Figure 4.2 The shattered brick line of an evicted house in BKL swallowed up ...Figure 4.3 Evidence of inundated homes, 2013.Figure 4.4 Interviewee’s photograph of their drowned home, 2013.Figure 4.5 Civica Royal Phnom Penh Golf Club, 2013.Figure 4.6 Vacant plots at Trapaing Anhchanh resettlement site, 2013.Figure 4.7 Typical makeshift housing at the Trapaing Anhchanh resettlement s...Figure 4.8 Chankrisna’s watch, 2014.

      4 Chapter 5Figure 5.1 Stopped ‘One Billion Rising’ cycling event, 2014.Figure 5.2 Boeung Kak women’s workshop, 2013.Figure 5.3 BKL women’s lotus‐wielding activism, 2012.Figure 5.4 Lotus flowers at the barricade line, 2012.Figure 5.5 SOS protest on the former BKL as US President Obama lands to atte...Figure 5.6 Tep Vanny with Hillary Clinton, Vital Voices Awards, Washington D...

      5 Chapter 6Figure 6.1 A typical commune office where local reconciliation takes place, ...Figure 6.2 Security guards at a protest in Phnom Penh, 2014.Figure 6.3 Phan Chhunreth in a ‘Stop Violence Against Women’ T‐shirt, 2014....Figure

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