Lisa Lowe,
"The Gender of Sovereignty"
(page 4 of 7)
It should be clear that because the two dominant schools of American
political science select and value different objects and processes, and
ask different research questions of those objects and processes, they
have different investments in definitions of political order and
political change. The implications of their approaches for political
policy and action seriously differ, as well. Yet the academic
"dialogue" between neorealists and neoliberals collaborates in
reinscribing particular absences in political science research, just as
the apparently different philosophies of Hobbes and Locke constitute
together the origins of modern western political theory. Despite their
apparent opposition, the two approaches share a state-level focus
on international relations that refers to the liberal democratic
nation-state as its normative ideal type. This focus defines
"politics" in terms of states and excludes, on the one hand, the
"politics" of popular social movements or workers' struggles beneath the
level of the state or organizing transnationally, and on the other,
communist or socialist nonwestern states like China or Cuba, or those
newly independent nations in Africa, Asia or the Caribbean whose
narratives of political development diverge from the "modernization"
model based on states in Europe or North America. A shared definition of
"politics" as the activities of states and international regimes
obscures an understanding of how government, interest, and power affect
the lion's share of the non-elite world. The definition of sovereignty
as inhering exclusively in the nation-state itself effects a normative
notion of governance that obscures other modes of rule, as well as other
modes of politics that specifically counter that rule. State-centric
approaches presume an isomorphism of nation-state properties and
measure these increasingly standardized properties across nation-states
both old and new.[31]
In effect, neo-functionalist state-centrism
research effectively produces the conditions for "integration"
among developing countries of relatively equal size, with symmetries of
trade, level of development, governing institutions and ideologies, and
per capita income.[32]
In a sense, most political science continues to
be organized in relation to a "phantom" model of the nation-state, even
when it sets out to study how global interdependence challenges or
reinforces the power of the nation-state.
Political science that places nation-state sovereignty at the center
of its studies has left "understudied" a broad range of phenomena, from
sovereignty movements for self-determination by native indigenous
peoples, to multilateral solidarities or international non-governmental
organizations that have sponsored initiatives in the areas of human
rights, war crimes, world health and environmental protection, to
transnational extra-state activities like the so-called
"anti-globalization" movement.[33]
Native American, and indigenous
sovereignty movements in North America, Latin America, Australia and New
Zealand, are rarely studied by the mainstream discipline.[34] Political
science has also consistently disregarded the Bandung conference, which
in 1955 gathered a coalition of 29 states organized by Indonesia, Burma,
Ceylon, India, and Pakistan, representing more than half of the world's
population, promoting Afro-Asian economic and cultural cooperation and
opposing colonialism or neocolonialism by the United States or the
Soviet Union.[35]
The Bandung conference led to the organization of the
Non-Aligned Movement in 1961, which joined over one hundred states not
formally aligned with or against either Cold War power bloc in a
"declaration on promotion of world peace and cooperation," affirming
their moral and practical solidarity with one another in their pursuit
of independent sovereignty, territorial integrity, economic
independence, and peace within the Cold War context.[36]
Opening the
1955 conference, President Sukarno of Indonesia called for an end to
colonialism, not only "the classic form which we of Indonesia, and our
brothers in different parts of Asia and Africa, knew," but also stressed
that political economic domination by the U.S. and U.S.S.R. was
"colonialism... in modern dress" and warned of war's absolute powers of
destruction in an atomic age. Jawaharlal Nehru spoke about the
importance for Asian and African nations to stand for peace in an era in
which war between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. could destroy the world. The
Final Communiqué of the Conference underscored the need for developing
countries to become independent from the leading industrialized nations
by forging an alternative path to development, with lateral technology
exchanges among one another, and the establishment of regional training
and research institutes. Yet despite the powerful vision of African and
Asian anti-war and anti-colonial solidarity, the Bandung conference has
been virtually forgotten by 20th century political science, illegible
within its normative classifications. This "forgetting" of Bandung
exemplifies a persistent disinterest in the study of the formerly
colonized or developing world in U.S. political science, a "blindspot"
that continues to be reproduced within the discipline's concept of
globalization. Neither neorealist nor neoliberal approaches make visible
indigenous peoples, minority groups, women and children, and poor
migrant workers beneath the level of the state, or more to the point, in
neither approach are their deteriorating conditions within globalization
made a priority as objects of research.
Academic disinterest in the 1955 Bandung conference is commensurate
with both the powerlessness of the developing world in world governance,
and the complicity of social science research in the centralization of
U.S. interests. Both demonstrate the urgent need for alternative forms
of study, literacy, and interpretation, including feminist paradigms for
understanding the "politics" of globalized communities.[37] We must
relinquish the presumption that all societies in the modern world system
are organized in the same way, in order to take seriously the ample
evidence that modernization has been a violently uneven process that has
produced antagonisms and asymmetries in different regions and locales,
and that neither exploitation, nor the emergence of political subjects
and practices, can be thought of only in terms of a single uniform
collectivity, teleology, or narrative of development. In other words,
the practice and the terrain of the political must be redefined
and imagined differently in relation to different histories of uneven
material conditions.
I began my discussion by linking the neoconservative American foreign
policy of the U.S. war in Iraq with the anti-immigrant fortification of
the U.S-Mexican border. Mainstream ideas of nation-state sovereignty
used to justify contemporary militarism in Iraq and at the border
misrecognize and misrepresent the material practices of globalization,
and transnational "gender" is one significant index in which we may
"read" this incommensurability. Transnational gender disciplines
register the shift from the Cold War management of nation-states to a
biopolitical governmentality focused on bodies and populations.
An interdisciplinary feminist analysis can foreground the contradiction
between political isolationism and economic globalism, between
manipulations of racialized gendered labor in the production of an
alleged "immigration crisis" and the dependence of U.S. middle class
consumer society on male migrant labor and female manufacturing labor in
the export processing zones. Government-declared national "crises"
appear to authorize the state's monopoly on violence, and are used to
justify the disrespect of laws and liberal political bodies, and the
overriding of civil rights. Recent cross-border feminist projects on
the U.S.-Mexican border address these contradictions in a variety of
ways: from workplace struggles, to campaigns for environmental justice,
to the protection of migrant communities. These movements constitute
new forms of transnational politics that establish and practice an
alternative meaning of "sovereignty" in domains that the social sciences
have normally bracketed as "culture." By addressing issues of life and
death in the workplace, community, and border regions, these feminist
movements have named the power of the state in deciding who lives and
who dies; appealing to a transnational public sphere that includes both
Mexicans and U.S. Americans, these cross-border movements have redefined
social justice as the gendered exercise of sovereignty by the
border communities themselves to end the state's arbitrary power over
life. They have called for transformations in the responsibilities of
states and corporations on both sides of the border toward the legal,
economic, and environmental protection of border communities.
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