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Avatars of Eurocentrism in the critique of the liberal peace

Sabaratnam, Meera

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Abstract

Recent scholarly critiques of the so-called liberal peace raise important political and ethical challenges to practices of postwar intervention in the global South. However, their conceptual and analytic approaches have tended to reproduce rather than challenge the intellectual Eurocentrism underpinning the liberal peace. Eurocentric features of the critiques include the methodological bypassing of target subjects in research, the analytic bypassing of subjects through frameworks of governmentality, the assumed ontological split between the ‘liberal’ and the ‘local’, and a nostalgia for the liberal subject and the liberal social contract as alternative bases for politics. These collectively produce a ‘paradox of liberalism’ that sees the liberal peace as oppressive but also the only true source of emancipation. However, the article suggests that a repoliticization of colonial difference offers an alternative ‘decolonizing’ approach to critical analysis through repositioning the analytic gaze. Three alternative research strategies for critical analysis are briefly developed.

Citation

Sabaratnam, M. (2013). Avatars of Eurocentrism in the critique of the liberal peace. Security Dialogue, 44(3), 259-278. https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010613485870

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jun 1, 2013
Deposit Date Sep 13, 2013
Publicly Available Date Mar 12, 2025
Journal Security Dialogue
Print ISSN 0967-0106
Electronic ISSN 1460-3640
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 44
Issue 3
Pages 259-278
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010613485870
Keywords colonial difference, culture, Eurocentrism, governmentality, liberal peace
Publisher URL http://sdi.sagepub.com/content/44/3/259

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