The empire's new clothes: Africa, liberal interventionism and contemporary world order
Zubairu Wai
Review of African Political Economy, 2014, vol. 41, issue 142, 483-499
Abstract:
This paper interrogates the current upsurge in humanitarian interventionism in Africa. Disagreeing with those who see it in altruistic terms, the paper argues that the increasing militarisation of world politics seen in the routinisation of interventions in Africa is a function of a neo-imperialist posture driven by a Western will to domination and desire to restructure the world in line with the ideological preferences of liberalism as the dominant ideological formation of contemporary imperialism. Supported by power-knowledge regimes of Western intellectual production, which provide the legitimating frame and moral justification for imperial interventions, this Western will to domination disguises its violent imperialist pretensions under the cloak of benevolence and altruism.
Date: 2014
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:taf:revape:v:41:y:2014:i:142:p:483-499
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DOI: 10.1080/03056244.2014.928278
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Review of African Political Economy is currently edited by Graham Harrison, Branwen Gruffydd Jones, Claire Mercer, Nicolas Pons-Vignon, Aurelia Segatti and Ray Bush
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