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Activist political theory and the question of power

Activist political theory and the question of power
Activist political theory and the question of power

Global Justice and Avant-Garde Political Agency is, first and foremost, a manifesto for an approach to political philosophy-what Ypi calls 'activist political theory'and can, I think, be best understood as an attempt to disturb analytic political philosophy from its 'dogmatic slumber' and motivate its movement towards the tradition of critical theory. In the first section of this commentary, I will lay out the grounds for this view. Having thus sketched an account of the point and purpose of this text, I will then focus on the relationship of both the methodological and the (illustrative) substantive arguments on global justice to the question of power. At a methodological level, I will argue that Ypi does not take the significance of power sufficiently seriously as an issue for political theory with emancipatory intent. With regard to her substantive arguments concerning global justice and state power, I will argue that she does not adequately address the character of power as a positional good because the analysis does not operate at the fundamentally appropriate institutional level of analysis.

1654-4951
85-91
Owen, David
9fc71bca-07d1-44af-9248-1b9545265a58
Owen, David
9fc71bca-07d1-44af-9248-1b9545265a58

Owen, David (2013) Activist political theory and the question of power. Ethics and Global Politics, 6 (2), 85-91. (doi:10.3402/egp.v6i2.21316).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Global Justice and Avant-Garde Political Agency is, first and foremost, a manifesto for an approach to political philosophy-what Ypi calls 'activist political theory'and can, I think, be best understood as an attempt to disturb analytic political philosophy from its 'dogmatic slumber' and motivate its movement towards the tradition of critical theory. In the first section of this commentary, I will lay out the grounds for this view. Having thus sketched an account of the point and purpose of this text, I will then focus on the relationship of both the methodological and the (illustrative) substantive arguments on global justice to the question of power. At a methodological level, I will argue that Ypi does not take the significance of power sufficiently seriously as an issue for political theory with emancipatory intent. With regard to her substantive arguments concerning global justice and state power, I will argue that she does not adequately address the character of power as a positional good because the analysis does not operate at the fundamentally appropriate institutional level of analysis.

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More information

Published date: 4 July 2013
Additional Information: Copyright: Copyright 2013 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452818
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452818
ISSN: 1654-4951
PURE UUID: baf7a5d4-0be6-4608-9dbd-7063ffd6d231
ORCID for David Owen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8865-6332

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Date deposited: 21 Dec 2021 17:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:42

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