Leaking panic as policy: Bordering, scaling, and forming in Austrian distributive politics

Andreas Streinzer (Corresponding author)

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

The article argues for a theoretical vocabulary to analyse how processes of demarcation and exclusion can be accompanied by a language of sharing. The article analyses how neo-nationalist and white supremacist exclusions in Austria were often justified by political panics about ‘leaking’. Leaking panic is a trope in which presumably hideous Others siphon resources from an imagined ‘us’, used for proposing targeted attacks at ‘them’ to secure warm and communal sharing among that imagined ‘us’. I bring this observation to a discussion of recent work in economic anthropology on sharing and its promise for transnational distribution. To theorise how imaginaries of sharing rest on constructions of the community of sharing and distribution, I propose to add bordering, scaling, and forming as auxiliary concepts. I take these theoretical instruments to investigate the cutting of welfare benefits for the children of transnational labourers in the name of ‘fairness for Austrian families’ and the protection of private foundations to defend them from foreign capital through the affectionate language of ‘Austrian family enterprises’. The discussion reveals the importance of understanding demarcation and categorisation to legitimise exclusions by rhetorics of sharing.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)195-216
Number of pages22
JournalAnthropological Theory
Volume25
Issue number2
Early online date13 Feb 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2025

Funding

The author would like to thank all who accompanied the writing and revisions of the article, from the participants of the workshop in Switzerland to the team of the Moralizations of Inequality project, Jelena Tosic, Marta Baski, Maria Lassak, and Katrin Kremmel who commented on two versions of this text. The author would also like to thank the editors of the Anthropological Theory for the trust and engagement, and the Swiss National Science Foundation who made this project possible. The author disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The Swiss National Science Foundation funded the ethnographic data generation with the project \u2018Europe\u2019s Un/Deserving. Moralizations of Inequality in Comparative Perspective\u2019 (MOI; Project number 192170).

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 504009 Ethnology
  • 504008 Ethnography

Keywords

  • Austria
  • bordering
  • Distribution
  • economic anthropology
  • scaling
  • sharing

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