Gender and race in the European security strategy: Europe as a 'force for good'?

被引:22
|
作者
Stern, Maria [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Gothenburg, Sch Global Studies, SE-40530 Gothenburg, Sweden
[2] Swedish Inst Int Affairs, Stockholm, Sweden
关键词
European identity; European security; gender; postcolonialism; race; NORMATIVE POWER EUROPE; DEVELOPMENT NEXUS; EU; FEMINIST; UNION; LIFE;
D O I
10.1057/jird.2010.7
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
Taking Robert Kagan's imagery of US-Mars and Europe-Venus as a point of departure, this article probes into how the naturalised reproduction of Europe in the text of the European Security Strategy (ESS) discursively occurs through intermeshing gendered and racialised discourses. The article therefore offers a narrative that has been largely silenced in conversations about the EU as a global security actor. By paying attention to embedded 'sticky' gendered and racialised signs in the text of the ESS, the article argues that the delineations drawn to secure Europe in the text of the ESS also engender `Europe' as multiply masculine by dividing the world into sharp spatio-temporal distinctions. Echoing Europe's colonial past, the ESS represents its 'Others' as both feminised and subordinate. In this sense, the article argues that the European project of security-development as written in the ESS is both civilising (normative) and violently exclusionary - in contradistinction to many contemporary depictions of Europe as a normative power and a harbour of tolerance. The gendered and colonial grammar of these spatial and temporal distinctions work to naturalise a certain (re)production of 'Europe', yet haunt the secure Europe and the better world promised in the strategy. Journal of International Relations and Development (2011) 14, 28-59. doi:10.1057/jird.2010.7
引用
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页码:28 / 59
页数:32
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