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Coversheet This is the accepted manuscript (post-print version) of the article. Contentwise, the post-print version is identical to the final published version, but there may be differences in typography and layout. How to cite this publication Please cite the final published version: Jørgensen, K. E. (2017). Inter Alia: On Global Orders, Practices, and Theory. International Studies Review, 19(2), 283-287. https://doi.org/10.1093/isr/vix009
Publication metadata Title: Inter Alia: On Global Orders, Practices, and Theory Author(s): Knud Erik Jørgensen Journal: International Studies Review, 19(2), 283-287 DOI/Link: https://doi.org/10.1093/isr/vix009 Document version: Accepted manuscript (post-print)
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Inter Alia. On Global Orders, Practices, and Theory
Knud Erik Jørgensen, Yaşar University and Aarhus University
This is a prepublication draft
In contrast to science, it is fairly common in science fiction to encounter and explore parallel
worlds. In IR, we tend to shy away from the possible existence of parallel worlds. According to a
widespread worldview in the field, there is, as Stephen Walt (1998) has put it, “one world—
many theories.” In this brief essay, I will explore three parallel worlds arguing that they are not
at all fictional but very real and should become the subject of a six continents social science
that we with a well-established misnomer call IR (Jørgensen 2003). Hence, the ‘inter’ I focus on
is thus foremost ontological and concerns relations between these parallel worlds as well as
relations between the multiple units we can identify in these worlds. More specifically, I aim at
making three points. First, I argue that the conceptual triptych (state/empire/civilization)
provides a helpful guide to the parallel worlds, their inter-relations, and how the units are
intertwined. Because conceptualization helps us to know the parallel worlds the triptych
establishes an ‘inter’ between ontological and epistemological dimensions. The extended
conceptual repertoire allows for a broader understanding of identity politics that goes beyond
default (state) understandings of self and other. Second, the triptych allows for the inclusion of
non-Western IR-theories that despite rumors about the opposite do exist and do provide
insightful guides to things inter-national/-state/-empire/-civilization. These theories are not
only insightful, but also innovative in their conceptions of global orders and thus most suitable
for global reflexive dialogues. Third, I argue that the non-Western theories demonstrate,
inadvertently, that Europe or ‘the West’ no longer enjoys monopoly of ethnocentrism,
exceptionalism, or universalism, making criticism of Eurocentrism both relatively less relevant
and—in its generic form—more relevant than ever.
A Promising Triptych: State, Empire, Civilization
2
The conceptual triangle of state, empire, and civilization is back in vogue yet characterized by a
very uneven degree of refined conceptualization and continuously slides between analytical
and political-ideological functions of the concepts. We have probably been too successful in
persuading ourselves (and our students) that the only world order of significance is the
international states system; an order where the state is considered the most successful entity
of all and where all alternatives are either absent, irrelevant, or insignificant. We developed our
specialized IR language to help us explicate the dynamics of the global order of states. However,
the vocabulary appears increasingly insufficient. About two decades ago, Lucian Pye (1992)
conceptualized China as “a civilization that pretends to be a state,” i.e., a civilization first and
foremost and only pretending to be a state. Indian scholars tend occasionally to claim a similar
identity for India. At the same time, Samuel Huntington experienced great success with his (re-
)introduction of primordial civilizations, bound to be in conflict, and prominent politicians were
keen to develop global discourses on civilization. A decade later, the George W. Bush
Administration and the Iraq War triggered a renaissance of the notion of empire as a relevant
concept for global order (Lake 2008). In addition, Hartmut Behr (2010) and Mark Langan (2015)
have suggested that the EU represents a system of imperial rule cultivating neo-colonial
relations. Finally, Janusz Onyszkiewicz (2015; see also Trenin 2011; van Herpen 2014) claims
that Putin’s Russia is “an empire that wants to be a civilization.”
While traditional conceptions of the Westphalian system of states are characterized by
simplicity, extensions with either multilateralism (Ruggie 1992), or an emerging global public
domain (Ruggie 2004a) blur simplicity. However, conceptions of global order in terms of states,
civilizations, and empires blow away simplicity by introducing dimensions of culture and
religion as well as hierarchical international orders that are outside the boundaries or comfort
zones of most IR-theories.
The notion of empire usually carries negative connotations and for many this function is
a sufficient reason to employ the term. Onyskiewicz’ performative act of labelling Russia ‘an
empire that wants to be a civilization’ is functioning as a message that does not need
explication. Typologies of empire or refined conceptualization come second, if at all, and
rigorous conceptual or empirical analysis is usually not on the research agenda and anathema
3
to the political agenda. Empire as an inter-state hierarchical order is largely off the research
agenda and it follows that theorizing about inter-empire relations is limited. Classical
configurations such as the European Concert are analyzed in great power balance of power
terms and thus without the disturbing factor of hierarchical relations within the involved
empires. When conceptualizing international society, English School theorists elegantly avoid
the issue (Keene 2002). Scholars typically analyze regional great powers as lesser great powers
than global great powers and not as imperial powers. Regarding the EU case, Langan goes back
to Ghanese President Kwame Nkrumah's notion of neo-colonialism and Behr (year) finds
inspiration in historical inter-empire relations, specifically relations between nineteenth century
European empires and the Ottoman Empire.
The parallel worlds that are constituted by states, civilizations, and empires are inter-
related and they interact in often complex fashions. In order to comprehend the complexity of
inter-world relations, Rudra Sil and Peter Katzenstein’s (2010) work on civilizations represents a
quantum leap in terms of turning civilization into an analytical concept. He elegantly balances
the controversial distinction between civilization and civilizations. He skips the notion of
primordial civilizations presenting them as malleable and characterized by internal diversity.
Moreover, as the parallel worlds are parallel, it is probably helpful to think in terms of both/and
instead of either/or. These social structures inter-act. Brzezinski and Mearsheimer might be
correct in observing how China is being socialized into the Westphalian order of states,
Ikenberry might be correct in observing how China is being socialized into the multilateral
system, but Pye might also have a point in characterizing China as a civilization-state where the
ruling elite thinks in terms of civilization yet engage in the Westphalian order. Does Russia
cultivate ‘frozen conflicts’ in Transnistria, South Ossetia, Abkhazia, and Ukraine in order to
assert or protect a Russian civilization based on orthodox Christianity, Russian language, and
the mythological ‘Rus’? Are the conflicts in Chechnya or Dagestan the outposts of a Christian
(orthodox) civilization facing a different (Muslim) civilization or simply unruly provinces in a
Russian empire? Is the Eurasian Union a means to (re-)establish a Russian empire with an
orthodox civilizational core or simply a response by Russia facing NATO (and the EU) in the
West and a rising China in the East? Does civilization discourse guide or shape policy-making or
4
is such discourse merely being used instrumentally to justify policies that are determined by
other factors? This is obviously a general issue and as many binaries invite, the debate can go
on forever. However, we could also respond by saying, ‘It depends,’ thus abandoning the futile
search for a final solution and instead allow for both roles and essentially making it an empirical
issue.
It might be that we academics have our preferences regarding the phenomena we find
worthwhile, analyzing how we want to explain them but we do not have a monopoly on
explananda or explanans. Politicians, journalists, military folks, diplomats, and religious folks all
have their worldviews and entrenched ideas about how the world operates. They have their
vocabularies and teach students often long time before students become our students. These
conceptualizations do not make these authors IR-scholars and their worldviews are not
necessarily IR-theory. But, their thinking and worldviews might well have an impact on how the
world operates even if we, the observers refuse to accept or recognize the parallel worlds or
the cognitive practices.
Beyond the Global Northwest: Theorizing Ontological Incongruence
The conceptual triptych enables the inclusion of non-Western IR-theories and thus a better
understanding of the degree to which global IR-theories reflect contemporary global politics
practices. I argue that the ontology of the parallel worlds helps us better understand the
dynamics of contemporary conceptualization and theory building in a discipline that is in a state
of “after hegemony” (Jørgensen 2014). Chih-yu Shih and Jiwu Yin (2013, 72) employ the term
“ontological incongruence” for global orders that are constituted by different types of units—
states, civilizations, or empires—and how these units are intertwined. However, ontological
incongruence is not only about global orders constituted by different types of units, and how
these units are intertwined, but also concerns our specialized vocabularies.
It was once upon a time that Europe’s self-image was ‘the civilization,’ in the singular,
capable of setting “standards of civilization” (Gong 1984). These days, Europe shies away from
such bragging self-images, leaving it to upbeat nationalists on other continents. At the same
time, authoritarian presidents are keen to propose ‘dialogues among civilizations’ (Khatami and
5
Erdogan). While the Chinese conception of sovereignty is said to be ‘modern’ (in contrast to a
European post-modern conception), it is in potential conflict with the Confucian idea of a
harmonious society, characterized by unity and order and, based on dynastic authoritarianism,
i.e., a hierarchical mode of international politics. In Russia, the notion of ‘nova Russia’ surfaced
for a while as a cognitive frame, meaning the civilization of all Russians, no matter in which
state they live. The cognitive frame accompanies the idea that state x, y, and z not really are
states.
In non-Western IR-theory, key terms include both empire and civilization yet limited
conceptualization characterizes each term. Relations between civilizations and the states
system are not addressed in any systematic fashion, yet intriguing suggestions flourish.
Moreover, scholars promoted and critiqued both empire and civilization. While critique of
Western imperialism is to be expected, the active promotion of non-Western empires is
perhaps slightly surprising. The author of the preface to Civilizations and World Order
(Dallmayr, Kayapinar, and Yaylaci 2014), Ahmet Davutoglu, is both the former Turkish Prime
Minister and, as IR-scholar, the author of “Strategic Depth,” a blueprint for neo-Ottomanism,
i.e., a highly contested term in Turkish identity politics. In Iranian identity politics, processes of
self-image formation do not only draw on Islamic sources but also on imperial and civilizational
sources. In the China case, the harmonious world idea has striking similarities with imperial
peace. In Russia, Alexander Dugin and other neo-Eurasianists do not hide their appetite for a
new Russian empire, specifically a (re-)integrated Soviet empire without communism. Andrei
Tsygankov (2008) introduces the rich tradition of civilizational debates in Russia and situates
the civilizational perspectives along two axes: their identity—Europe/West vs. non-West—and
their degree of essentialism. In Russian civilizational debates, it is particularly the Eurasianist
current of thinking that cultivates counter-hegemonic but not anti-hegemonic ideas. Whereas
balance of power theory provides a rationale for avoiding hegemony, Eurasianists seek to
counter and replace what they see as an existing Western hegemony. Drawing on Slavophil
ideas, neo-Eurasianists are convinced that they can count the days of Western world leadership
and that Russia will replace the West.
6
Concerning India, Priya Chacko (2012) navigates brilliantly between traditional and
revisionist perspectives on Indian foreign policy, the former emphasizing Indian versions of
idealism, the latter emphasizing why India need to ‘grow up’ by means of adopting power-
oriented perspectives. Her own approach is to consider foreign policy “a self-reflexive ethico-
political project of identity construction.” She emphasizes the deep ambivalences in Indian
discourses on foreign policy and analyses the meta-narratives that present India as a
civilization-state embedded in civilizational exceptionalism. Unhappy with the tendency to keep
analysis at a general level she explores how ideas about civilization inform policy-making and
the conduct of foreign relations including the role of civilization discourse in reasons for action,
i.e., in strategies of justification.
Ever more states are thus lining up for a status as a civilization state and/or empire and
political discourses related to inter-civilization relations are thriving. Among the main initiatives,
we find the ‘Dialogue among Civilizations’ (former Iranian president Khatami) and the UN-
sponsored ‘Alliance of Civilizations’. Given the global material power shifts and the sustained
debates about normative global orders, it is increasingly clear that IR is moving towards an after
hegemony phase (Jørgensen 2014). Theoretical perspectives and debates on global order have
become de-centric, are conducted in several languages, and constitute different discursive
structures with nodal points around the key terms state, empire, and civilization. The
traditionally close relationship between discourses of practice and discourses of theory is
maintained, yet with the twist that global IR-theory seems to reflect more than shape practices.
Beyond European Eurocentrism
The inclusion of non-Western theoretical perspectives on civilizational and imperial global
orders is not without problems. The employment of distinctly non-Western concepts is
obviously a notable challenge to lazy Western minds and a highly disquieting factor in the (de-
)construction of our worldviews and globalizing discipline. Yet it is an even bigger cognitive
challenge to acknowledge that non-Western theoretical reflections on things ‘inter’
predominantly tend to be primed by features that critical IR aims at problematizing. The
7
following three challenges for a sound six continents IR-discipline therefore amount to a
mission nearly impossible.
It is in the first place not particularly exceptional to think in terms of exceptionalism.
Scholarship on Eurocentrism, orientalism, and European integration documents, despite
notable differences and sometimes unintendedly how Europeans in practice and theory are no
strangers to thinking in terms of exceptionalism. However, it is well known that American
exceptionalism is also a phenomenon of considerable consequence (Ruggie 2004b; Holsti 2010).
Likewise, scholarship on Russia, India, and China demonstrates the existence and significance of
exceptionalism with Russian, Indian, and Chinese characteristics. Analysts report and/or
represent conceptions of unique and/or primordial Russian, Indian, and Chinese (state-)
civilizations (Pye 1992; Shlapentokh 2007; Tsygankov 2008; Chacko 2012; Dugin 2014). Indeed,
exceptionalist thinking seems predominant around the world, making it somewhat hard to find
exceptions to this seemingly universal way of thinking.
Moreover, it is not particularly exceptional to think in terms of ethnocentrism. In the
Russian case, ethnocentrism is among the key characteristics of the neo-Eurasionist conception
of global order, with notions of Russian cultural superiority, accompanied by prescriptions of
power maximization and territorial advances. Being perpetually torn between Western and
Eastern civilizations, it seems Russia has to choose. Yet neo-Eurasionists reject the dilemma by
claiming a distinct Russian civilizational status thus using in-betweenness as a source of identity.
In Global South perspectives, cultural or moral superiority claims are ubiquitous and cherished.
As a leading Muslim Brotherhood social theorist, Sayed Qutb (2006) claims a moral superiority
based on Islamic faith. Confucianism is characterized by a significant degree of ethnocentrism,
Han Chinese ethnocentrism to be precise. This version of ethnocentrism comes as a full
package, including ideas about non-Han races being barbarians. In India, it is a widespread idea
that the Indian state-civilization is more peaceful than most and certainly morally superior
(Chacko 2012).
Finally, it is not particularly European or Western to cultivate universal ideas. Similar to
Western liberalism, Confucianism is universalistic, cf. notions like tianxia and expectations
about a global order with Chinese characteristics, beginning with China’s peaceful rise. Yet
8
contending universal ideologies are bound to cause diplomatic challenges. It is hardly surprising
that relations between China and the EU are characterized by “conceptual gaps” (Pan 2012;
Jørgensen and Wong 2015), i.e. concepts that are shared globally but with contending
meanings or key terms that only are known or have meaning in parts of the world. In Chinese
nationalist discourse, the notion of ‘a century of humiliation’ is routinely cultivated whereas a
European version e.g., ‘a century of decline,’ hardly exists in nationalist discourse. Likewise,
concepts that Europeans take for granted, e.g. ‘Renaissance’ or ‘the Enlightenment,’ might
understandably provoke cognitive turbulence elsewhere.
In a genuine six continents IR-discipline, it will be difficult to acknowledge that Europe
(or the West) does not enjoy a monopoly of exceptionalism, ethnocentrism, and universalism,
for which reason criticism of Eurocentrism appears increasingly to be a critique of yesterday’s
state of affairs. While it is well documented that the discipline in the West has been and is
heavily Eurocentric (Hobson 2012), the persistent exclusion of non-Western concepts and
theories has contributed to produce this state of affairs. The way forward might be a continued
critique of this version of centrism while at the same time critically considering non-Western
conceptualizations, thereby eventually redefining what Ted Hopf (2002) calls a particular well-
known consensually foundational literature. Moreover, the mega-trend of European relative
decline and the related global power shifts make a universal critique of centric perspectives of
all sorts more relevant than ever.
9
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