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ID092434
Title ProperGeneralised bio-political border? Re-conceptualising the limits of sovereign power
LanguageENG
AuthorVaughan-Williams, Nick
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article is a response to calls from a number of theorists in International Relations and related disciplines for the need to develop alternative ways of thinking 'the border' in contemporary political life. These calls stem from an apparent tension between the increasing complexity of the nature and location of bordering practices on the one hand and yet the relative simplicity with which borders often continue to be treated on the other. One of the intellectual challenges, however, is that many of the resources in political thought to which we might turn for new border vocabularies already rely on unproblematised conceptions of what and where borders are. It is argued that some promise can be found in the work of Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben, whose diagnosis of the operation of sovereign power in terms of the production of bare life offers significant, yet largely untapped, implications for analysing borders and the politics of space across a global bio-political terrain.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 35, No. 4; Oct 2009: p.729-749
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol. 35, No. 4; Oct 2009: p.729-749
Key WordsBio - Political Border ;  Sovereign Power ;  International Relations ;  Giorgio Agamben ;  Politics


 
 
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