Global Governance: An Heretical History Play
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Fleur E Johns
This article begins from an intuition that aspirations for governance on a global scale have been seeded among the historical habits of humanism, as well as among those economic and technological phenomena on which other scholars of globalization most frequently focus. It argues that Modern predilections for constitutionalizing, distinguishing, ranking, tempering and charting, and fearing that which resists such handling, are as significant to contemporary perceptions of globalization and its governance as any of the technological and economic developments said to underpin it. This argument is elaborated by interpolating some contemporary accounts of global governance with unlikely historical counterpoints drawn from the sixteenth century city-state of Venice: historical counterpoints that draw attention to the vital role of the foreign, the popular and the vulgar in building and defending centres of global governance. In so doing, this article aims to probe the ambiguous role that Modern political legacies play in contemporary scholarship. Transgressive potential is not, this article argues, exterior or opposed to monolithic accounts of global governance: it is there at their every inception.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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- Global Governance: An Heretical History Play
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Topics Article
- Do We Need a European Sales Law?
- Explaining Welfare-Based Torts
- Adapting Human Rights to Privatised Infrastructure Projects
- Frontiers Article
- From Lerotholi to Lando: Some Examples of Comparative Law Methodology
- Authors and Users in the Cyberspace: A Survey on Intellectual Property and the Internet from the Spanish (and European) Legal System
- Hegemonic Human Rights and African Resistance: Female Circumcision in a Broader Comparative Perspective
- Advances Article
- The Learned Hand Formula: The Case of the Netherlands
- Antitrust Claims: Why Exclude Them from The Hague Jurisdiction and Judgments Convention ?
- Global Governance: An Heretical History Play