复制征服者的南非:阿扎尼亚人对辅助生殖和再生育技术的立宪主义批判

IF 0.7 0 PHILOSOPHY
Phronimon Pub Date : 2024-02-23 DOI:10.25159/2413-3086/14906
Ilana Le Roux
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于辅助生殖技术和生殖基因技术的使用、监管和发展的讨论以权利讨论为主,主要关注这些技术如何在当前的自由人权框架内实现或侵犯个人或群体的权利。在有关基因和生殖技术伦理的全球讨论中,南非作为非洲的代表发挥了突出作用;这无疑归功于南非拥有被许多人称为 "世界上最进步的宪法之一"。一种流行的观点以 1996 年宪法和现行人权准则的合法性为前提,主张放宽对这些技术的限制,以便有效行使和实现受宪法保护的权利。在本文中,我将从阿扎尼亚哲学传统(Azanian Philosophical Tradition)所支持的宪法废除主义角度探讨这些技术的使用。通过将 1996 年宪法理解为征服的宪法化,我思考了这些技术在征服者南非服务于(全球)白人至上主义和定居者统治的方式。文章认为,在一个以生物逻辑为秩序的世界中,这些技术有效地(重新)生产了征服者所设想的社会;这就提出了一个问题,即这些技术是否真的可以用于征服后的南非。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reproducing the Conqueror’s South Africa: An Azanian Critique of the Constitutionalist Endorsement of Assisted Reproductive and Reprogenetic Technologies
Discussions on the use, regulation, and development of assisted reproductive and reprogenetic technologies are dominated by rights discourse, primarily paying attention to how these technologies can give effect to or violate individual or group rights within the current liberal human rights framework. South Africa has played a prominent role as Africa’s representative in this global discussion pertaining to the ethics of genetic and reproductive technologies; undoubtedly attributable to it having what is described by many as “one of the most progressive constitutions in the world.” One popular perspective presupposing the legitimacy of the 1996 constitution and prevailing human rights norms, argues for the relaxation of restrictions on these technologies to allow for the effective exercise and realisation of constitutionally protected rights. In this article I explore the use of these technologies from a constitutional abolitionist perspective espoused by the Azanian Philosophical Tradition. By understanding the 1996 constitution as the constitutionalisation of conquest, I contemplate the ways in which these technologies function in service of (global) white supremacy and settler domination in conqueror South Africa. The article argues that in a world ordered by bio-logic, these technologies effectively (re)produce the society envisioned by the conqueror; begging the question as to whether these technologies can indeed be used in service of a post-conquest South Africa.
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Phronimon
Phronimon PHILOSOPHY-
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