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Articles

The biopolitics of China’s “war on terror” and the exclusion of the Uyghurs

Pages 232-258
Received 06 Dec 2017
Accepted 13 Mar 2018
Published online: 22 Mar 2018
 

ABSTRACT

This article provides an overview of People’s Republic of China (PRC) counter-terrorism policies targeting Uyghurs since 2001 when the state first asserted that it faced a terrorist threat from this population. In reviewing these policies and their impact, it suggests that the state has gradually isolated and excluded Uyghurs from PRC society. Drawing on the writings of Michael Foucault, it articulates this gradual exclusion of Uyghurs as an expression of biopolitics where the Uyghur people as a whole have come to symbolize an almost biological threat to society that must be quarantined through surveillance, punishment, and detention. Rather than suggesting that these impacts of China’s “war on terror” coincide with the intent of state policy, the article argues that they are inevitable outcomes of labeling a given ethnic population as a terrorist threat in the age of the Global War on Terror.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes on contributor

Sean R. Roberts is the Director of International Development Studies and an Associate Professor of Practice at The George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs in Washington, DC. He has a Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology from the University of Southern California where he wrote his dissertation on the Uyghurs of Kazakhstan. He frequently publishes on the Uyghurs of both China and Central Asia, and he is presently writing a book-length manuscript on the self-fulfilling prophecy of Uyghur militancy.

 

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