“<i>Powerless by Design</i> is necessary reading for anyone concerned with the contemporary politics of human rights. Feher offers a lucid and incisive indictment of the humanitarian pretensions of the international community.”—Robert Post, University of California, Berkeley
“Extremely provocative and informative, this book should quickly become the center of political debate among liberal and left scholars and activists. The book deftly lays out the paradox of a discourse on human rights and international obligations that under certain political conditions undermines the very principles at stake”—Judith Butler, author of <i>The Psychic Life of Power: Theories in Subjection</i>
“Michel Feher is a keen and lucid analyzer of doctrines and hypocrisies, and in <i>Powerless by Design</i> he has given us a truly valuable analysis of the doctrines and hypocrisies of right now.”—Paul Berman, author of <i>A Tale of Two Utopias: The Political Journey of the Generation of 1968</i>
Exemplary of this new approach were Western responses to ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia and genocide in Rwanda. In order to avoid costly interventions, U.S. and European leaders traced these crimes to ancient tribal enmities and professed that the role of the international community should be limited to a humanitarian, impartial, and conciliatory engagement with all the warring parties. They thus managed to appear righteous but powerless, at least until NATO’s intervention in Kosovo. Faced with this doctrine, both the liberal and radical wings of the Western Left found themselves in an uneasy position. Liberals, while lured by their leaders’ humanitarianism were nonetheless disturbed by the dismal results of the policies carried out in the name of the international community. Conversely, anti-imperialist militants were quick to mock the hypocrisy of their governments’ helpless indignation, yet certainly not prepared to demand that Western powers resort to force.
Are we still in this “age of the international community”? Feher shows that with NATO’s intervention in Kosovo, both liberal and radical activists suddenly found their mark: the former welcomed the newfound resolve of their governments, while the latter condemned it as the return of the imperialist “new world order.” For Western leaders, however, the war against Serbia proved an accident rather than a turning point. Indeed, less than a year later, their indifference to the destruction of Chechnya by Russian troops suggested that the discursive strategy exposed in Powerless by Design might remain with us for quite some time.
A Puzzling Chiasm
A New Doctrine
A Radical Critique
1. Misguiding Definitions
2. Self-serving motives
3. Obfuscating policies
I. Humanitarianism
II. Diplomacy
III. Reconstruction
IV. Justice
4. Self-fulfilling prophecies
An Ambiguous Evolution
An Unsettling Message
An Emerging Polarization
Notes
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Michel Feher is Founding Editor and Publisher of Zone Books in New York. He most recently edited The Libertine Reader: Eroticism and Enlightenment in 18th-Century France.