Unmasking resilience as governmentality: towards an Afrocentric epistemology
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Politics
Abstract
This paper is a discussion of how indigenous Afrocentric epistemologies proffer critiques
and alternative to neoliberal discourses of resilience and what differences it
makes for the study of International Politics. There has been an epistemological shift
in recent times towards resilience as a form of governance aimed at enhancing the
agency and adaptive capacity of populations. This has necessitated the mainstreaming
and theorisation of local systems of ontology. Importantly, the current emphasis
privileges how societies absorb and manage natural exigencies of life. The underlying
assumption of this shift in the contemporary critical and policy discourse is that
indigenous forms of ‘‘knowledge’’ and indigeneity can enhance the ability of local
actors to navigate the uncertainties of a globalised world. I question this assumption
by highlighting the fact that the apparent epistemological interest in local ontology
is a crisis resolution strategy that has become necessary after the universal neoliberal
project faced crisis and rejection. Given this, the promotion of resilience epistemology
is meant to extend the reach of global actors into the deep recesses of
peripheral systems and to instruct how resistance can be reduced. This makes resilience
a technology or strategy of governmentality, a new emerging form of governance
agenda. Given that the globalisation crisis for neoliberalism has not abated,
the only insurance of Africa will be to formalise and own its ontology of resilience
strategies to insulate its populations from external pressures of disruption.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Foucault, Governmentality, Resilience, Afrocentricity, Indigeneity, Neoliberal governance