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Celine Tan Birmingham Law School University of Birmingham

The NEW BIOPOWER: POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY PAPERS AND THE OBSFUSCATION OF INTERNATIONAL COLLECTIVE RESPONSIBILITY. ‘Poverty Reduction as Development Morality: Theory and Practice’ Development Studies Association Annual Conference 5 November 2010, London. Celine Tan Birmingham Law School

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Celine Tan Birmingham Law School University of Birmingham

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  1. The NEW BIOPOWER: POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY PAPERS AND THE OBSFUSCATION OF INTERNATIONAL COLLECTIVE RESPONSIBILITY ‘Poverty Reduction as Development Morality: Theory and Practice’ Development Studies Association Annual Conference 5 November 2010, London Celine Tan Birmingham Law School University of Birmingham

  2. 1. Introduction • Central concern of the paper: examining the impact of the Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) on the constitution of global economic governance, in particular its effect in foreclosing possibilities for a radical revision of the asymmetries in the rules and institutions of international economic law. • Paper does so through:(a) a historical reading of the PRSP narrative(b) an exploration of the conceptual and operational premise of the PRSP approach • PRSP project reframes fundamental tenets of international cooperation and global communal responsibility by:(a) problematising the state in the context of economic and social development; and (b) constituting the nation state as primary sites for the fulfilment of economic and social rights ascribed collectively

  3. 2. PRSPS and the new social contract • A PRSP is primarily a document outlining a country’s national economic policy with a focus with a focus on a programme of poverty reduction and participatory policymaking. • Each PRSP is required to be:(1) nationally owned, meaning the strategies outlined in the PRSP is generated by the constituencies it purports to serve and by the government of the country involved in the process; and (2) formulated in a participatory manner, involving a wide range of government and civil society actors, including representatives of ‘the poor’ to whom these policies are directed. • It follows, from the conceptual principles and operational directives underpinning the PRSP approach, that the PRSP state as recipient of concessional financing and debt relief, must demonstrate its desire to be disciplined by a set of rules constituting the values which represent the universal normative framework for all state resource extraction, allocation and administration.

  4. 3. Prsps as a response to crisis in the international order • The PRSP framework can be foregrounded in the evolution of development financing over the mid-and late-1990s and, more importantly, in the aftermath of a crisis of legitimacy in the international economic order in the late 1990s. • Links a political and social governance agenda to disbursement of financial resources • Catalysed largely by an imperative to restore relevance to existing structures of multilateral trade and finance, notably to third world states and to mitigate the groundswell of public dissent to the policies of the Washington Consensus, which were, in many cases, bankrolled by the IFIs, during the same period. • As a subset of the wider post-Washington Consensus, PRSPs may be viewed as a means of quelling this potential danger of ‘exit’ of third world states in the face of the failures of neoliberal globalizations

  5. 4. Reisncribing discipline and order via the aegis • The conceptual and operational premise of the PRSP framework not only reflects the imperative to discipline errant states in the global economy and maintaining the existing asymmetries within the international economic order • The response to the aforementioned ‘crisis of legitimacy’ is therefore not one predicated upon the revision of international economic law but one that revises state engagement with the law and the political economy which sustains it. • This is achieved through:(1) Problematising the state: PRSPs transfers state autonomy over but also responsibility for state interaction with and commitment to the norms, legal or otherwise, of the international economy. Poverty is less rooted in the ‘international’ than the ‘national’ caused by state incapacity and/or inefficiency not from global structural deficits.(2) Assigning the nation as the site for political struggle and economic redistribution: the national sphere is constituted as the primary site for any contestation over resource allocation and redistribution and the state is ascribed with the duty to meet social and economic challenges ascribed collectively

  6. 5. A new regulatory framework • The PRSP framework signals a larger paradigmatic shift in the cartography of aid and, consequently, in the constitution of north-south relations. • The revision of the modalities of countries’ engagement with the international community however exemplifies the current international legal order in which third world states remain objects of international law rather than its subjects. • The characterisation of PRSP countries as legitimate sites for remedial interventions – social, economic and political – not only resonates with the ‘civilising mission’ and technologies of colonial management but also demonstrates the way in which the ‘colonial encounter’ continues to shape third world engagement with international lawand masks the imperial character of international law. • Represents a continuation and an extension of the old mechanisms of imperial and neo-imperial control – transition from ‘disciplinary society’ to ‘society of control’.

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