Date: 2018
Type: Article
International organizations and the performativity of measuring states discipline through diagnosis
International organizations law review, 2018, Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 168-201
VAN DEN MEERSSCHE, Dimitri, International organizations and the performativity of measuring states discipline through diagnosis, International organizations law review, 2018, Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 168-201
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/60026
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
This article explores how the World Bank's engagement with governance reform has sparked a practice of measuring, ranking and diagnosing countries based on an epistemically constructed ideal-type of the modern state. With Foucault, I define this praxis of normalisation as a 'transnational discipline of diagnosis'. The contribution of the article is both empirical and doctrinal. On an empirical level, it weaves together an innovative assemblage of three different technologies in the Bank's epistemic governance praxis: the axiomatic dimension (World Development Reports) the statistical dimension (Worldwide Governance Indicators) and the diagnostic dimension (Systematic Country Diagnostics). On a doctrinal level, drawing on critical sociology and performativity theory, the article categorises this epistemic praxis as a world-making socio-political enterprise. It thereby rejects both the categorisation of epistemic power as a mode of public authority (to be integrated in a public law framework), as well as the respresentationalist idioms that inform ideology critique.
Additional information:
Published online: 01 May 2018
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/60026
Full-text via DOI: 10.1163/15723747-01501006
ISSN: 1572-3739; 1572-3747
Publisher: Brill Nijhoff
Keyword(s): International organisations World bank Governance Performativity Socio-legal methodology Transnational authority Indicators Public authority Law
Succeeding version: http://hdl.handle.net/1814/64344
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