Lisa Lowe,
"The Gender of Sovereignty"
(page 2 of 7)
"Small states often welcome international regimes as barriers to
arbitrary abuse of power by the strong. But regimes can be equally
valuable to great powers, such as the United States, that want to
create, but are unable to dictate, the terms of a stable world
environment," observed Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye in 1985.[6]
Recalling key debates in political science will help us make sense of
this contemporary contradiction in which the U.S. militarism employed to
command the current global economy appears to hark back to political
policies of an earlier isolationist nation. In briefly tracing the
neorealist and neoliberal debates in political science, I argue that
even in their disagreements, the two approaches actually confirm a
normative notion of nation-state sovereignty, obscuring the effects of
global governance for most of the world's population. Ultimately, I
direct my discussion towards the exploration of feminist political forms
that practice alternative notions of sovereignty. Where might we "read"
these practices that are rendered illegible within the studies that
privilege the normative politics of the western nation-state?
The liberal tradition defines sovereignty as the right of the state
to exercise jurisdiction over its citizens, maintain internal order, and
defend its territory.[7]
Sovereignty rests on an internal principle, not
on the lineage of a dynasty or aristocracy, and in the concept of the
nation-state, the political sovereignty of the state is broadened
through constitutional enfranchisement and legitimized through a common
national culture.[8]
In principle, civil society integrates national
culture, economy, and social order, and the distinction between civil
society and the state is crucial to the emergence of the rational public
sphere in which citizens speak and debate within the rule of law.[9]
Yet this principle understates the degree to which control over the means of
violence has proven to be the defining characteristic of state
sovereignty. Indeed, the more effectively a state monopolizes the
use of force, the less frequent the state may resort to actual
violence. Political science in the United States adopted this liberal
definition of sovereignty, and the democratic nation-state has been
presumed to be the ideal type, or the model of statehood, for
participation in the international interstate system.[10]
The result is
that there is an underestimation of the contradictions within the
nation-state, on the one hand, and between imperial nation-states and
the formerly colonized world, on the other.
With respect to the contradictory inequalities within the nation, the
state declares the universal extension of rights to all citizens, yet
U.S. history has shown that access to rights has always been unevenly
distributed, requiring social movements to call upon the state to
establish liberties for subjects who are guaranteed rights in theory.
Conceiving the state as grantor of rights, emancipatory and
democratizing politics have often struggled to reform the state. For
example, workers struggles in the 1940s, and civil rights movements for
women and racialized minorities in the 1960s and 70s, are examples of
popular efforts to extend equal rights and to make the state accountable
for political liberties promised in theory.[11]
When rights have been
suspended or curtailed in times of national security—as the rights of
Japanese Americans relocated to internment camps during World War II, or
the rights of U.S. citizens imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay during the U.S.
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq—struggles for justice on behalf of those
denied civil rights have addressed the state. The growth of national
industries exacerbated inequalities of property and political
representation, and labor movements and trade unions have called upon
the state to create certain controls on the "liberties" of factory
owners and corporate profits. Of course, tensions between capital and
labor have grown exponentially with the neoliberal globalization of the
U.S. economy. The internationalization of production not only broke
links between domestic producers and domestic labor, but transnational
corporate imperatives aimed at reducing labor costs drives corporations
to shift production to labor markets in the poorest countries, with the
lowest wages and the fewest taxes and regulations.
The focus on the nation-state as the normative political unit also
leaves unstudied the historical and structural inequalities between
imperial nation-states and the nations of the formerly colonized world,
most of which gained independence through decolonization movements in
the mid-20th century. During the centuries of European rule, colonial
administrations in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean
extracted profits through imposed forms of economy, politics, religion,
language and culture, justifying rule through a "civilizing mission."[12]
Colonialism included the capture and import of Africans for slave
labor on colonial plantations, the destruction of indigenous peoples and
brutal suppression of the colonized cultures, and the imposition of
European education and social administration. Throughout the nineteenth
century, native anti-colonial movements sought to establish
self-governing nations independent of their British, French, Dutch and
Spanish colonizers.[13]
Anti-colonial movements in most of the former
colonies in Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean articulated their
independence by the mid-20th century by becoming new states on the
international stage.
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