Retrieving the Imperial: Empire and International Relations
Author(s)
Barkawi, Tarak; Laffey, Mark
Abstract
This essay uses Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri’s Empire, one of the most widely read accounts of international politics in recent years, as a vehicle to rethink International Relations’ engagement with the notion of empire. We begin with the observation that Westphalian models of the international obscure the role of imperial relations in world politics. We go on to develop a conception of the international as a ‘thick’ set of social relations, consisting of social and cultural flows as well as political-military and economic interactions, which often take place in a context of imperial hierarchy. Retrieving the imperial thus offers a way out of the ‘territorial trap’ set by Westphalia and alerts us to a range of phenomena occluded by International Relations’ central categories. From this perspective, we analyze Empire as an innovative but flawed effort to take seriously the imperial character of international relations. In particular, we focus on the role of the multitude in world politics, Hardt and Negri’s genealogy of sovereignty, and their claim that imperialism in the old-fashioned sense is over.