A long view of liberal peace and its crisis

Main author: Rampton, David
Other authors: Nadarajah, Suthaharan
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-22353
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description The ‘crisis’ of liberal peace has generated considerable debate in International Relations. However, analysis is inhibited by a shared set of spatial, cultural and temporal assumptions that rest on and reproduce a problematic separation between self-evident ‘liberal’ and ‘non-liberal’ worlds, and locates the crisis in presentist terms of the latter’s resistance to the former’s expansion. By contrast, this article argues that efforts to advance liberal rule have always been interwoven with processes of alternative order-making, and in this way are actively integral, not external, to the generation of the subjectivities, contestations, violence and rival social orders that are then apprehended as self-evident obstacles and threats to liberal peace and as characteristic of its periphery. Making visible these intimate relations of co-constitution elided by representations of liberal peace and its crisis requires a long view and an analytical frame that encompasses both liberalism and its others in the world. The argument is developed using a Foucauldian governmentality framework and illustrated with reference to Sri Lanka.
format Journal Article
author Rampton, David
author_facet Rampton, David
Nadarajah, Suthaharan
authorStr Rampton, David
author_letter Rampton, David
author2 Nadarajah, Suthaharan
author2Str Nadarajah, Suthaharan
title A long view of liberal peace and its crisis
publisher Sage
publishDate 2016
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/22353/