Demographic Regulation and the State: Centering Gender in Our Understanding of Political Order in Early Modern European States

IF 5.9 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Michelle D’ARCY
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The literature on early modern state-building in Europe has focused on war as its main driver and therefore on states’ relationships with men. Feminist scholars have critiqued the Weberian conceptions this literature relies on as being gender biased. I suggest an alternative theoretical starting point for theories of early modern state-building: the political imperatives created by the demographic fluctuations of the Malthusian trap. Harnessing Foucault’s concept of biopower and its application to the construction of gender, I argue that population fluctuations incentivized demographic regulation, in particular of childbearing, in order to keep birth rates high and maternal and infant mortality low, implying that early modern European states were constituted through the construction and maintenance of gender regimes. I propose strategies for empirical investigation and argue that a more accurate account of early modern European state-building needs to incorporate demographic regulation and therefore requires gender to be at its center.
人口调节与国家:在我们对近代早期欧洲国家政治秩序的理解中以性别为中心
关于欧洲早期现代国家建设的文献关注的是战争作为其主要驱动力,因此关注的是国家与人的关系。女权主义学者批评这些文献所依赖的韦伯概念存在性别偏见。我为早期现代国家建设理论提出了另一种理论起点:马尔萨斯陷阱的人口波动所造成的政治必要性。利用福柯的生物权力概念及其在性别建构中的应用,我认为人口波动激励了人口调节,特别是生育,以保持高出生率和低母婴死亡率,这意味着早期现代欧洲国家是通过构建和维持性别制度而构成的。我提出了实证调查的策略,并认为对早期现代欧洲国家建设的更准确描述需要纳入人口调节,因此需要将性别置于其中心。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
5.90%
发文量
119
期刊介绍: American Political Science Review is political science''s premier scholarly research journal, providing peer-reviewed articles and review essays from subfields throughout the discipline. Areas covered include political theory, American politics, public policy, public administration, comparative politics, and international relations. APSR has published continuously since 1906. American Political Science Review is sold ONLY as part of a joint subscription with Perspectives on Politics and PS: Political Science & Politics.
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