[PDF] The Politics of Knowledge - Edited by Samuli Hurri and Iiris Kestilä





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The Politics of Knowledge

No Foundations: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Law and Justice 17 (2019)

Special Issue on the Politics of Knowledge

VISITING EDITORS

Samuli Hurri, University of Lapland, Finland

Email: samuli.hurri@ulapland.

Email: iiris.kestila@ulapland.

EDITORS-IN-CHIEF

Kati Nieminen, University of Helsinki, Finland

Email: kati.nieminen@helsinki.

Sanna Mustasaari, University of Helsinki, Finland

Email: sanna.mustasaari@helsinki.

ADVISORY BOARD

• Ari Hirvonen, University of Helsinki, Finland • Samuli Hurri, University of Helsinki, Finland • Pia Letto-Vanamo, University of Helsinki, Finland • Panu Minkkinen, University of Helsinki, Finland • Kimmo Nuotio, University of Helsinki, Finland • Kaarlo Tuori, University of Helsinki, Finland

INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY BOARD

• Peter Becker, University of Vienna, Austria • Joxerramon Bengoetxea, University of the Basque Country, Spain • Emilios Christodoulidis, University of Glasgow, UK • Carlos Closa, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Spain • Julen Etxabe, Peter A. Allard School of Law, University of British

Columbia, Canada

• Peter Fitzpatrick, Birkbeck, University of London, UK • Jeanne Gaakeer, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands • Daniel Halberstam, University of Michigan, USA • Rebecca Johnson, University of Victoria, Canada

• Juha Karhu, University of Lapland, Finland

• Mónica López Lerma, Reed College, USA

• Hans-W. Micklitz, European University Institute, Italy • François Ost, Facultés Universitaires Saint-Louis, Belgium 209
No Foundations: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Law and Justice 17 (2019)

Special Issue on the Politics of Knowledge

• Jared Del Rosso, University of Denver, USA

• Ditlev Tamm, University of Copenhagen, Denmark • Scott Veitch, e University of Hong Kong, China

• Gary Watt, University of Warwick, UK

• Jeremy Webber, University of Victoria, Canada • James Boyd White, University of Michigan, USA

Copyright © 2012 NoFo

Layout: Pamela Arslan

Publisher: Samuli Hurri

ISSN 1797-2264

No Foundations: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Law and Justice 17 (2019)

Special Issue on the Politics of Knowledge

TABLE OF CONTENTS

.................................... i

ARTICLES

?e Politics of Knowledge: Introduction ........................... 1 ‘Ensnare the Language": Imagination and Resilience in Indigenous Arts of the Self Julian Reid . . ..................................................................... ................................. 16 Enhancing Resilience rough Indigenous Traditional Knowledge in Ecological Restoration Punam Noor . . . .................................................................. ................................. 42 Justice As a Matter of inking. Phenomenological Approach Juha Himanka .................................................................................. .................. 60 Towards New Ethics of Sexual Self-determination: Finnish Rape Law through the Speculum of Feminist Philosophy

Minni Leskinen ................................................................................................... 78

Dao: Cosmological ?inking and Social Practice

Matti Nojonen . .............................................................................. .....................106

Cosmology and Practices of the European Union

Samuli Hurri . . ........................................................................... ........................ 118 Rural Governance in Australia: e Family Provision Act and the Role of ‘Expert Knowledges" Malcolm Voyce . . . ........................................................................ ........................ 138 e ‘Financial Stability of the Euro Area as a Whole": Between Jurisdiction and Veridiction Tomi Tuominen . . ........................................................................ ........................ 161 Embodied and Embedded Vulnerable Subject: Asylum Seekers and Vulnerability eory Laura Tarvainen . ........................................................................ ........................ 183 i

Editorial

?is special issue of No Foundations is dedicated to the politics of knowledge. ?e politics of knowledge is a recurring theme in all societal critique - not least because

of the Foucauldian power/knowledge nexus. We started addressing this theme in a small research community, aptly named as Problematizations. At rst our

intention was to approach the issue through the ‘hard" and objective stem sciences as compared to the ‘so" and subjective social sciences. Such a distinction between

dierent types of knowledges, however, seemed to contain within itself already a problem, although that problem was not that clear to us in the beginning. However,

that problem seemed to be closely intertwined with politics as exercise of power. Our discussions around this question grew into a seminar series, where the issue

of politics and knowledge was looked upon from several dierent perspectives. We were lucky to receive contributions from many excellent academics from a number

of disciplines, so that the special issue gathers together a nice variety of approaches to the theme. We express our gratitude towards everyone who contributed to this special issue.

What is knowledge or what do we mean by knowledge? During the seminars it became clear that knowledge as a concept covers several possible approaches,

theoretical and methodological. e perspectives from which we approach the politics of knowledge in this issue highlights this point well: subjugated knowledges,

knowledge as a phenomenological problem, politics of knowing other cultures, and nally the critique of knowledge-based societies. is is in no way an exhaustive list

of the ways in which the topic of the politics of knowledge can be approached, but we feel it oers an up-to-date exposition on the theme. Aer our foray into the politics of knowledge we are next going to focus

on an adjoining theme: the role of language in the production of knowledge and politics. Many of the issues that were brought up during our seminars seemed to

somehow associate with language. erefore, we decided to take language as our next problematization. What problems indeed does language include and why do we perceive language as problematic in the rst place? e work we started in a small

group of scholars will continue in a community that has since grown larger. We look forward to the upcoming discussions in our seminar series.

Problematizations Team

1

The Politics of Knowledge: Introduction

1. Introduction

?e politics of knowledge is an open-ended notion that releases a whole variety of critical research possibilities. What we introduce in this volume is collective work by researchers who have come together for one academic year to explore those possibilities. 1 e question for us was how dierent types of knowledge and exercise of power mingle in the governing of societies. At the beginning, we had in mind a number of rather traditional dichotomies whose ‘hybridization" or ‘deconstruction"

the notion of politics of knowledge seemed to suggest: science and politics, theoretical and practical reasoning, facts and norms, description and prescription, and so forth.

How we proceeded from there will be explained shortly. Before that, however, we feel we should say a word on the topicality of our theme. e politics of knowledge

is not a new notion and even less a new thing, yet we think that it opens a view on to what is going on in the world at the present time.

A couple of years ago, public ridicule of statements by a certain White House press secretary about how many people attended Donald Trump"s inauguration ceremony seemed entirely unimportant. 2

Ridicule was not so much about that statement as about its subsequent defence by someone else. at defence appeared

somewhat obtuse at the time, but also comical and amusing: the Counsellor to the President publicly on television termed the number of attendees as oered by the

press secretary not as plain falsehood but as an ‘alternative fact". As we now know, the waters quickly became more muddied and nothing is amusing about alternative

facts any longer. On the one side, there is the rise of cultural, socio-economic and anti-establishment populism that distrusts all knowledge as mere ocial dogma

1 is was the academic year 2018-2019. e work was organized within the framework of what we have come to call the ‘problematizations seminar". For its current themes and problems, see

Problematizations>.

2 He said it was the ‘largest audience to ever witness an inauguration". It was quickly established that more

people attended Obama"s inauguration in 2009.* Adjunct Professor and Researcher, Universities of Lapland and Helsinki.

2 whose function is to constrain the will of the true people. 3

On the other side, there

is the uncanny gure of the furious teenager Greta unberg speaking before the U.S. Congress and the UN General Assembly and urging everybody to ‘listen to the scientists" in the face of imminent destruction. e politics of knowledge apparently stands in the midst of these types of development that may sometimes appear very dramatic. ey surface in our awareness as broadcast events like any other matter does, but are they perhaps generated by more intricate, less visible contradictions of our Zeitgeist? Should we try to nd out whether a steadier current of politics of knowledge exists beneath the headlines, the task rst involves capturing its nature, then corroborating its existence, and nally measuring its size and trend. For that task, one would need rigorous analytical tools and fruitful research materials. Each of the articles in this volume will provide their own vision with precisely those ends in mind. Before introducing this more elaborate work, we will provide a brief illustration of the idea by way of a couple of examples from newspapers.

2. Illustration of the idea

?e following are from the speci?c ?eld of the politics of economic knowledge and it is not clear whether any other or even all knowledge works in the same way, but it is not impossible that they do. e Wall Street Journal reported in September 2019 about the ?ndings of NYU economics professor omas Philippon. 4

Having compared the development of

prices and wages in the European Union and the United States, Philippon had found as a fact that on both counts Europe has done considerably better than the USA over the last decade. Philippon"s explanation for that was that the USA had given up on the free market by letting business concentrate and competition dry out, whereas the EU had been more careful in upholding and enhancing the functioning of the free market. is may of course very well be true. e Financial Times reported one month later about the changing of the guard at the European Central Bank. 5 e story was really about Christine Lagarde, but the Bank"s outgoing president Mario Draghi was also considered. He had frequently defended the Central Bank"s so-called bail-out and austerity policies that were oen criticized as interventions in the functioning of the market. According to Draghi, the eleven million new jobs created in Europe during the previous ten years prove that the policies of the European Central Bank were the right thing to do. Like Philippon"s theory, Draghi"s may also be true. We will return to both of these shortly. e New York Review of Books published one month later a book review 6 by

3 According to the study by Jordan Kyle and Limor Gultchin (2018, 20) the number of countries with populism

in power increased vefold between 1990-2018.

4 ‘What France - Yes, France - Can Teach the U.S. About Free Markets". Wall Street Journal, 6 September 2019.

5 "What will Christine Lagarde"s ECB look like". Financial Times, 27 October 2019.

6 ‘Against Economics". e New York Review of Books, 5 December 2019. ?e book reviewed was Robert

Skidelsky"s Money and Government: e Past and Future of Economics. Baron Skidelsky is an emeritus 3 David Graeber opening as follows: '?ere is a growing feeling, among those who have the responsibility of managing large economies, that the discipline of economics is no longer t for purpose. It is beginning to look like a science designed to solve problems that no longer exist." e paragon for all such futile economic sciences is the microeconomic theory of rational choice. According to Graeber, what was at rst simply ‘a technique for understanding how those operating on the market make decisions" transformed into ‘a general philosophy of human life". is philosophy, in turn, posits ‘purely rational actors motivated exclusively by self-interest, who know exactly what they want and never change their minds". e point that for us illustrates the implicated notion of politics of knowledge comes immediately next: Surely there"s nothing wrong with creating simplied models. Arguably, this is how any science of human aairs has to proceed. But an empirical science then goes on to test those models against what people actually do, and adjust them accordingly. is is precisely what economists did not do. Instead, they discovered that, if one encased those models in mathematical formulae completely impenetrable to the noninitiate, it would be possible to create a universe in which those premises could never be refuted. 7 What do we get out of these three pieces of economic news? As to the rst two, we do not know in fact whether Philippon and Draghi are right about the causes of the current state of Europe"s economy. For that matter, we are not even sure whether such an upbeat assessment of the situation is correct at all. Perhaps someone competent in economics could establish all this. What even we as a couple of simple lawyers can point out and problematize, however, is that the scientist Philippon and the central banker Draghi here seem to explain more or less the same facts with rather dierent wisdoms. Apparently, one of them explains the current state of Europe by its vigilant free market policy, whereas the other says it is because of its cautious interventionist policy.quotesdbs_dbs17.pdfusesText_23

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