The Temporal Politics of Inevitability: Mass Death during the COVID-19 Pandemic

IF 2.4 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Katharine M Millar, Yuna Han, Martin J Bayly
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Many international phenomena, from complex, interconnected processes to specific catastrophes, have been deemed “inevitable” by elites, policymakers, and scholars. Yet existing scholarship treats “inevitability” as an objective fact to be assessed retrospectively, rather than an expression of politics and contestation. To see the “politics of inevitability,” we argue, requires attention to the underlying politics of time through which inevitability is narrated and naturalized. Drawing upon the “temporal turn” in IR, we identify three constitutive practices of inevitability: problem definition, designations of agency and responsibility, and distribution throughout a political community. Empirically, we illustrate our argument through a discourse analysis of how mass death was produced as “inevitable” (or not) during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. The politics of inevitability does not cause the outcomes that are deemed inevitable, but through narrating time in a particular way, it provides the conditions in which certain policy choices become imaginable and/or desirable. This has vital implications for the ways that other future events are cast as inevitable, including climate change, war, and future pandemics.
不可避免的时间政治:COVID-19 大流行期间的大规模死亡
许多国际现象,从复杂的、相互关联的过程到具体的灾难,都被精英、政策制定者和学者认为是“不可避免的”。然而,现有的学术研究将“必然性”视为一个需要回顾评估的客观事实,而不是政治和争论的表达。我们认为,要理解“必然性的政治”,需要关注时间的潜在政治,必然性通过这种政治被叙述和自然化。根据国际关系中的“时间转向”,我们确定了三种必然性的构成实践:问题定义,机构和责任的指定,以及整个政治社区的分配。从经验上讲,我们通过对欧洲第一波COVID-19大流行期间大规模死亡是如何“不可避免”(或不是)产生的话语分析来说明我们的论点。不可避免的政治不会导致被认为是不可避免的结果,但通过以一种特定的方式叙述时间,它提供了某些政策选择变得可以想象和/或可取的条件。这对其他未来事件被视为不可避免的方式具有重要意义,包括气候变化、战争和未来的流行病。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
7.70%
发文量
71
期刊介绍: International Studies Quarterly, the official journal of the International Studies Association, seeks to acquaint a broad audience of readers with the best work being done in the variety of intellectual traditions included under the rubric of international studies. Therefore, the editors welcome all submissions addressing this community"s theoretical, empirical, and normative concerns. First preference will continue to be given to articles that address and contribute to important disciplinary and interdisciplinary questions and controversies.
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