Beyond (and Before) the Transnational Turn: Recovering Civil Disobedience as Decolonizing Praxis

Authors

  • Erin Pineda Smith College

Abstract

Abstract: Can civil disobedience be transnationalized? This question presumes civil disobedience to be a fundamentally domestic concept—one constitutively tied to both the nation-state and the normative underpinnings of liberal, constitutional democracies. This essay shows how this assumption mistakes one version of civil disobedience’s 20thcentury intellectual history for the whole of it, and risks reproducing binaries (domestic vs. international, democracies vs. non-democracies) that trouble attempts to theorize the transnational. Turning to an alternative intellectual history—a network of civil rights and anticolonial activists—reveals a novel theory of civil disobedience as decolonizing praxis, as well the stakes of these binaries: the disavowal of white supremacy as pervasive and durable global structure of governance, linking the domestic to the international, and democratic rule to domination.

Published

2024-11-13

Issue

Section

Articles