欧盟与全球南方的贸易关系非殖民化?

IF 1.1 Q2 AREA STUDIES
Antonio Salvador M. Alcazar III, Camille Nessel, J. Orbie
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引用次数: 1

摘要

欧盟与前殖民地以及更广泛的“世界等级”的共同商业关系现在以慈善、非政治化做法、平等伙伴关系和价值观为基础,这助长了全球政治中关于欧盟的基本神话。打破这些公认预设的努力来自解释主义、后殖民主义、后发展主义、后结构主义和其他异端研究传统。然而,该学院在很大程度上不受那些在理论和实践中真正质疑和颠覆以欧洲为中心看待世界和理解欧盟作为世界舞台上“仁慈”贸易行为者的方式的知识的影响。在与现有的异端方法的对话中,本文询问我们如何打破关于欧盟与全球南方贸易关系的主导知识体系的殖民主义,即欧盟认为边缘的人民和地方,因此需要以发展的名义进行贸易干预。为此,我们提出了不同的“主题立场”,通过转向非殖民化思想,我们可以不假思索地重新思考我们了解欧盟贸易政策及其背后隐藏的欧洲中心主义的方式。我们大量借鉴了Meera Sabaratnam的工作,他在研究世界政治时的“非殖民化战略”,我们试图通过对欧盟对外贸易关系的三个不同“政策世界”的规范学术的批判性质疑来举例说明:《经济伙伴关系协定》,自由贸易协定中的普惠制和贸易与可持续发展章节。最后,我们反思了非殖民化选项及其引发的破裂,即欧盟的贸易政策是什么,以及维持欧盟作为贸易大国的“规范”和“地缘政治”叙事的殖民逻辑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Decolonising EU Trade Relations with the Global Souths?
That the European Union’s common commercial relations with ex-colonies and more broadly the ‘tiers monde’ now rest variously on benevolence, depoliticised practices, equal partnerships and values fuels reigning foundational myths about the EU in global politics. Efforts to disrupt these received presuppositions have come from interpretivist, postcolonial, post-development, post-structuralist and other heterodox research traditions. Yet the academy has been largely impervious to knowledges that genuinely question and subvert, in both theory and praxis, Eurocentric ways of seeing the world and understanding the EU as a ‘benevolent’ trade actor on the world stage. In dialogue with existing heterodox approaches, this article asks how we might puncture the coloniality of dominant knowledge regimes about EU trade relations vis-à-vis the global souths, i.e., peoples and places that the EU deems peripheral and, as such, in need of trade-related interventions in the name of development. To this end, we propose different ‘subject-positions’ with which to unthink and rethink our ways of knowing EU trade policy and the Eurocentrism lurking behind it by turning to decolonial thought. We borrow heavily from the work of Meera Sabaratnam whose ‘decolonising strategies’ in studying world politics we attempt to exemplify through a critical interrogation of the canonical scholarship around three distinct ‘policy worlds’ of EU external trade relations: Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs), Generalised Scheme of Preferences (GSP) and Trade and Sustainable Development (TSD) chapters in free trade agreements. Finally, we think reflexively about the decolonial option and the ruptures it triggers as to what EU trade policy is and the colonial logics sustaining ‘normative’ and ‘geopolitical’ narratives on/by the EU as a trade power.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
26 weeks
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