Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti
Life in the Cracks is a rich ethnographic portrait of law, violence, and resistance in Haiti. In a contemporary context marked by international interference, global capitalism, and state collapse, Haitians face complex challenges that are largely ignored and misunderstood. By examining the most unexpected inflections of ordinary life, Life in the Cracks offers a well-grounded account of people’s experience of law in their lives. The book describes what it means to endure violence partly engendered by the law, and thus to live up to one’s disappointment with the law itself.

By not taking for granted the places where the law appears, Life in the Cracks asks legal anthropology to confront questions beyond law-making and law-application, dispute resolution, and social order. In everyday life’s textures of messy subtleties and contradictory movements that are never reconciled, Life in the Cracks reconsiders the place of law in human affairs. Motta reimagines how people cope with their disillusionments by reinventing relationships with each other. What had appeared questions of law and justice turn out to be questions of life and death. As life resists annihilation, Motta shows, many Haitians have found ways to breathe new life into the present and make the future worth fighting for.

Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti is available from the publisher on an open-access basis.

1147191127
Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti
Life in the Cracks is a rich ethnographic portrait of law, violence, and resistance in Haiti. In a contemporary context marked by international interference, global capitalism, and state collapse, Haitians face complex challenges that are largely ignored and misunderstood. By examining the most unexpected inflections of ordinary life, Life in the Cracks offers a well-grounded account of people’s experience of law in their lives. The book describes what it means to endure violence partly engendered by the law, and thus to live up to one’s disappointment with the law itself.

By not taking for granted the places where the law appears, Life in the Cracks asks legal anthropology to confront questions beyond law-making and law-application, dispute resolution, and social order. In everyday life’s textures of messy subtleties and contradictory movements that are never reconciled, Life in the Cracks reconsiders the place of law in human affairs. Motta reimagines how people cope with their disillusionments by reinventing relationships with each other. What had appeared questions of law and justice turn out to be questions of life and death. As life resists annihilation, Motta shows, many Haitians have found ways to breathe new life into the present and make the future worth fighting for.

Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti is available from the publisher on an open-access basis.

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Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti

Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti

by Marco Motta
Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti

Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti

by Marco Motta

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Overview

Life in the Cracks is a rich ethnographic portrait of law, violence, and resistance in Haiti. In a contemporary context marked by international interference, global capitalism, and state collapse, Haitians face complex challenges that are largely ignored and misunderstood. By examining the most unexpected inflections of ordinary life, Life in the Cracks offers a well-grounded account of people’s experience of law in their lives. The book describes what it means to endure violence partly engendered by the law, and thus to live up to one’s disappointment with the law itself.

By not taking for granted the places where the law appears, Life in the Cracks asks legal anthropology to confront questions beyond law-making and law-application, dispute resolution, and social order. In everyday life’s textures of messy subtleties and contradictory movements that are never reconciled, Life in the Cracks reconsiders the place of law in human affairs. Motta reimagines how people cope with their disillusionments by reinventing relationships with each other. What had appeared questions of law and justice turn out to be questions of life and death. As life resists annihilation, Motta shows, many Haitians have found ways to breathe new life into the present and make the future worth fighting for.

Life in the Cracks: Law, Violence, and Resistance in Haiti is available from the publisher on an open-access basis.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781531512446
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: 12/16/2025
Series: Thinking from Elsewhere
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Marco Motta is SNF Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lausanne. He is coeditor of Living with Concepts: Anthropology in the Grip of Reality (2021).

Table of Contents

Cast of Characters | vi

Prologue | xi

Introduction | 1

1 “We’re Holding On!”: A Chronicle | 39

2 The Silent Wars of the Ordinary | 66

3 The Many Faces of Peace | 92

4 Theatricalizing the Law | 130

5 Inner Forms of Corrosion | 156

6 The Murmuring Stream of Life | 187

Acknowledgments | 225

Acronyms | 231

Glossary | 235

Notes | 237

Reference | 263

Index | 287

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