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SOCIAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL / AFTER SEPT. 11
9/11 and the New
'Anti-politics' of 'Security'
Kanishka Jayasuriya, Senior Research Fellow, Southeast
Asia Research Centre, City University of Hong Kong
The
dramatic events of September 11, 2001 have ramifications
for the nature of global governance as well as the
institutions of liberal democracy. The most serious danger
these events pose is their potential to usher in, under
the appealing cloak of 'security', a debilitating form
of 'anti politics' that marginalises the constructive
conflicts- the debate and discussion - that animate the
public sphere in liberal polities.
Some of these effects are already apparent in the US,
where self-censorship in the media has made discussion of
the politics of terrorism all but impossible. Perhaps more
seriously, the language of security serves to frame facets
of transnational governance in terms of 'risk', thereby
occluding important issues of conflict and power. Take,
for example, the pressure on the Canadian government by
the United States to impose 'perimeter continental
security', with the objective of establishing common entry
and exit policies for visitors, immigrants, and refugees.
Posing the movement of people as primarily a security risk
submerges the significant questions of power and
distribution raised by the proposed policy of continental
integration, and constrains serious discussion of the
proposal.
It could well be argued that these developments presage
the emergence of a new security state. Indeed, an analogy
for the present crisis can be found in the anti-Communist
and cold war rhetoric that dominated US domestic and
international politics in the decades after 1945. The
obvious parallels are to be found in the increasing
importance attached to issues of 'security' in both
domestic and international politics. The decisive shift in
the political climate initiated by Truman, and
consolidated by Eisenhower, lay not in the increasing
salience of security to public policy and political
language, but in how the US state apparatus came to be
dominated by cold war imperatives. The pursuit of these
imperatives was often at the expense of broader civil
liberties, as exemplified by the infectious spread of
McCarthyism.
Like the cold war, the present crisis has also exposed the
precarious position of civil liberty as this 'new war'
gathers steam. The US Attorney General has proposed far
reaching changes - including the preventive detention of
immigrants on suspicion of terrorism - which would
severely curtail civil liberties. Further, the US
President has signed an order for special military
tribunals to try those charged with terrorism. These
tribunals have lower standards of proof and admissibility
of evidence than ordinary judicial processes. Yet other
actions such as increasing surveillance and wire-tapping
powers pose serious problems for those concerned with
basic rights. Similarly the British Home Secretary has
proposed tough anti-terrorist legislation that includes
extending the already substantial powers to detain
suspected terrorists, and the extensive use of
surveillance powers. In Australia, the ruling Liberal and
National Coalition, with the support of the opposition
Labor Party, has enacted draconian laws on border security
that effectively curtail judicial review for asylum
seekers and give wide discretionary powers to Ministers.
In surprisingly short order, a broad set of emergency
powers based on the concept of 'exceptions' has emerged to
offer political leaders and other public officials a
legislative framework for acting outside normal
constitutional and representative institutions. Carl
Schmitt, the deeply conservative jurist who was a critic
of the Weimar Republic, is perhaps the most pre-eminent
theorist of the exception: 'exception' is the capacity of
the sovereign to make decisions in terms of its political
will rather than be constrained by normative 'law'.
Schmitt suggests the exception as something that is '…
codified in the existing legal order, can at best be
characterised as a state of peril, a danger to the
existence of the state, or the like. But it cannot be
circumscribed factually and made to conform to preformed
law' (1985: 6). In this context, the emergence of certain
aspects of a 'state of exception' (to use a phrase of the
outstanding Weimar jurist Franz Neumann) should be a cause
for concern for those interested in the protection of
fundamental political rights.
One of Neumann's (1986) central arguments is that the
development of capitalism leads to the development of
non-formal instruments of law . The last century has seen
a gradual acceleration of legal fragmentation and
dissolution. Legal deformalization Neumann argued is
rooted in a fundamental transformation of capitalist
economies over the greater part of the twentieth century.
It could be argued that the new language of security
reflects the fact that globalisation has changed the
internal architecture of the state and this is markedly
apparent in the increasing emphasis placed on aspects of
'risk' and 'security' across social life. It leads both at
the international and domestic level to the kind of legal
deformalisation so astutely analyzed by Neumann. This
process has been accelerated by the events of September
11.
At this point the analogy with the cold war 'national
security state' is misleading because it obscures how
globalisation has transformed the very notion of security
in recent years, so that it is increasingly understood in
terms broader than merely as a matter of 'guns and bombs'.
The language of security now permeates every sphere of
life - ranging from finance to the environment.
International relations boffins like to talk about 'securitisation'
to describe this expansive notion of security. For
example, one of the most striking elements of the policy
response to this crisis is that many ethnic and minority
groups are now deemed to pose a threat to national
security. Many cold war warriors in the United States have
given extraordinarily generous airplay to Sam Huntington's
thesis of a clash of civilisation. Unlike during the cold
war, these threats to national security are framed in
terms of 'ethnicity' rather than 'ideology', but the
outcome poses the same challenge to basic rights. Further,
this shift towards a 'security state' is not confined to
the US and Britain, but is evident in a number of European
countries as well as Australia where members of the ruling
Coalition government have implied that Afghan refugees and
Muslim immigrants were 'terrorists'.
But this language of security is not just confined to
mainstream security agencies. It has also become an
intrinsic rationale of the program of development agencies
like the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). For
these international agencies and many other
non-governmental organisations, the vacuous notion of
'human security' now includes such areas as poverty and
the environment; it is the transnational analogue of
'community policing'. This new perspective embodies the
more expansive understanding of security employed by
establishment security agencies.
The expansive definition of security - whether used by the
UNDP or the Pentagon - has disturbing consequences.
Security in this conception takes over the idea of risk
management from penology and other related disciplines.
Indeed, this is what is most striking about the new
security debate: the extension of the US 'law and order
state' to the transnational arena. In this respect, one of
the most interesting and worrying developments is likely
to be the internationalisation of the 'state of
exception'.
New forms of risk management apply risk profiles to a set
of relationships, institutions, and even geographic sites,
rather than endeavouring to manage or transform the
behaviour of individuals. This emphasis on the management
of risk at the level of population rather than individuals
is critical. It is reflected in the high priority given to
issues of border control and the use of identity
documents. This approach to risk control and management
strips away the social and legal context of individual
behaviour as governments and other organisations seek to
manage the 'sites' of criminal activity such as terrorism,
international drug trafficking, or the current panic over
so-called 'people smuggling'. The effect is
depoliticisation of complex problems and issues, as
transnational problems are disembedded from the politics
of power and interests and situated within the
anti-political framework of security and risk. Within the
framework of the new security language - whether it is the
'hard' security of Bush's National Security Council or the
'soft' security of some international development agencies
- the conflict and debate that are raw material of
politics get submerged in the search for policies of risk
management. This 'politics of anti-politics' is deeply
inimical to the institutions and values that sustain and
animate politics in liberal democracies.
There are good reasons for thinking that even before the
events of September 11, the 'criminalisation' of various
issues in the transnational system was well in train. The
massive intensification of border and immigration controls
in most liberal democracies (for example, at the
US-Mexican border or with the brutal and racist treatment
of refugees by Australia) points towards the development
of the new transnational 'law and order state'. In recent
years, the Anglo-American democracies of the US, Britain,
and Australia have developed harsh penal regimes to combat
so-called law and order problems, spurred on by a
media-stimulated climate of fear. A similar process is
well under way in the global arena.
Admittedly, in a globalised world, the state loses some of
its traditional capacities and functions - such autonomy
in national economic policy making - to increasingly
emerge as a regulatory state providing economic and social
order. One important dimension of this new regulatory
state is the move towards a kind of economic
constitutionalism, which attempts to insulate key economic
policy making institutions such as independent central
banks from the politics of bargaining. Just as important,
I have argued, is the shift towards the securitisation of
civil society reflected in policies of transnational risk
management. The idea that the events of September 11 can
somehow be seen as the traditional state cantering back
into prominence is naïve and simplistic. Rather,
developments reinforce the emergence of a new form of the
regulatory state that has the 'securitisation of civil
society' as a key governance strategy. In fact, it is
possible to see in some aspects of these developments the
'internationalisation of the state of exception' that
Neumann so brilliantly analysed.
However, quite apart from its deleterious consequences for
civil liberties, the new language of security may prove to
be a significant hindrance to developing a truly global
rule of law and cosmopolitan democratic governance. This
is surely is the most effective means of dealing with the
terrorism witnessed on 11 September. And make no mistake;
these problems have to be forcefully confronted by the
global community. Neo-fascist fundamentalism (of Islamic
and other hues) poses a threat to politics - and the
discussion that is vital to its survival - much more
serious than anything contemplated in the war against
terrorism. But we should not allow this crisis to be used
to threaten the very politics that the neo-fascist
movements so abhor. These movements can only be combated
by articulating the rationale and principles underlying a
global rule of law, which in turn means we need to
acknowledge the elements of conflict and power that
pervade modern politics. It forces us to return to the
politics that the new expansive conception of security so
clearly eschews.
Professor Kanishka Jayasuriya is a Senior Research
Fellow at the Southeast Asia Research Centre, City
University of Hong Kong.
References
Neumann, Franz
(1986) The Rule of Law: Political Theory and the Legal
System in Modern Society. Berg, Leamington Spa, England.
Schmitt, Carl (1985) Political Theology: Four Chapters on
the Concept of Sovereignty. MIT Press, Cambridge Mass.
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