08.08.2025
Necropolitics
Contextual Focus:
A recent incident in Gaza, where a civilian was killed while seeking humanitarian aid, has brought global focus back to the concept of necropolitics — a theory that scrutinizes how political power governs life and death.
Definition:
Necropolitics, a term introduced by political theorist Achille Mbembe, explores the extent to which sovereign power can decide who is allowed to live and who is consigned to death, either directly or through neglect. It builds upon Michel Foucault’s concept of biopolitics, shifting attention from the regulation of life to the management of death.
Core Idea:
Unlike biopolitics, which is concerned with improving and managing life through institutions, necropolitics deals with systems that normalize death, abandonment, and suffering — often targeting the most vulnerable.
Necropolitics is not merely about death — it is about whose lives are deemed expendable in political and administrative decision-making. In the Indian context, it offers a sharp analytical tool to examine systemic injustices and the failure of state institutions to uphold constitutional morality. Addressing such power dynamics is crucial to ensuring a just, inclusive, and humane governance framework.