ID | 120000 |
Title Proper | Dancing life into being |
Other Title Information | genetics, resilience and the challenge of complexity theory |
Language | ENG |
Author | Rosenow, Doerthe |
Publication | 2013. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | A variety of scholars in critical security studies have recently argued that new modes of neoliberal world order are influenced by the emergence of complexity theory in the sciences, which manifests itself, for example, in the discourse of resilience. By contrast, this article aims to point at the number of governmental discourses and practices in which 'old' understandings of order are persistent. What will be argued is that such a set of practices can be found in the regulation of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), in which the dominant approaches and strategies still rely on an understanding of life that is bound to a more traditional episteme that expresses the desire for predictable management with clearly controllable effects. The article then moves on to discourses of resilience to show how they are equally characterized by this episteme. In unravelling the struggle that exists between 'old' and 'new' epistemes, the article aims to elaborate on the potential of complexity discourses for challenging particular governmental rationales, manifested in both the resilience context and the GMO controversy. |
`In' analytical Note | Security Dialogue Vol. 43, No.6; Dec 2012: p.531-547 |
Journal Source | Security Dialogue Vol. 43, No.6; Dec 2012: p.531-547 |
Key Words | Governmentality ; Resilience ; Resistance ; Complexity Theory ; Genetically Modified Organisms |