In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room:How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty

This chapter investigates this puzzle of choosing non-sovereignty in a postcolonial setting. Historically, the question of freedom from imperial hegemony has been linked to how Western colonialism involved keeping the colonized in ‘the waiting room of history’ by insisting that they were not yet rea...

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Main Authors: Adler-Nissen, Rebecca, Gad, Ulrik Pram
Other Authors: Epstein, Charlotte
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2017
Subjects:
EU
Online Access:https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/in-the-postcolonial-waiting-room(f35f614d-be7d-43bf-a50f-5565d6ab0afb).html
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spelling ftcopenhagenunip:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/f35f614d-be7d-43bf-a50f-5565d6ab0afb 2024-05-19T07:41:17+00:00 In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room:How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty Adler-Nissen, Rebecca Gad, Ulrik Pram Epstein, Charlotte 2017 https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/in-the-postcolonial-waiting-room(f35f614d-be7d-43bf-a50f-5565d6ab0afb).html eng eng Routledge info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Adler-Nissen , R & Gad , U P 2017 , In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room : How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty . in C Epstein (ed.) , Against International Relations Norms . Routledge , London; N.Y. , Worlding Beyond the West , pp. 175-192 . /dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/FacultyOfSocialSciences Faculty of Social Sciences Greenland Mayotte EU post-colonialism sovereignty games Postcolonial discourse norms International Relations Theory bookPart 2017 ftcopenhagenunip 2024-04-25T00:45:03Z This chapter investigates this puzzle of choosing non-sovereignty in a postcolonial setting. Historically, the question of freedom from imperial hegemony has been linked to how Western colonialism involved keeping the colonized in ‘the waiting room of history’ by insisting that they were not yet ready for sovereignty. It explores a number of European overseas countries and territories. More specifically, it focuses on French dependencies in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and North Atlantic Greenland constitutionally connected to Denmark. The immediate aim of anti-colonial struggles was to make the colonizers leave so that the colonized people could decide for themselves. Many anti-imperial struggles settled for nation-states each acquiring a separate, formal sovereignty-based international status. More recent versions of postcolonialism, inspired by poststructuralism and critical constructivism, have aimed at accounting for ways of realizing agency, which escape, first, imperial submission, and second, norms of an international society based on sovereignty. Instead of representing a rejection of sovereignty, the EU overseas countries and territories that remain under their metropole’s formal authority rearticulate sovereignty. As this chapter demonstrates, a universalizing European discourse on a universal norm for how to organize community and authority as a sovereign state makes a range of postcolonial choices possible, which both constructivist and some postcolonial thinking fail to fully acknowledge. A number of overseas territories take alternative routes to agency; not by resisting the norm of sovereignty - but by creatively articulating it beyond its claim to represent an 'either/or' distinction. The chapter demonstrates that territories not formally decolonized may very well perform a postcolonial agency, which tampers with the sovereignty norm. Book Part Greenland North Atlantic University of Copenhagen: Research
institution Open Polar
collection University of Copenhagen: Research
op_collection_id ftcopenhagenunip
language English
topic /dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/FacultyOfSocialSciences
Faculty of Social Sciences
Greenland
Mayotte
EU
post-colonialism
sovereignty games
Postcolonial discourse
norms
International Relations Theory
spellingShingle /dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/FacultyOfSocialSciences
Faculty of Social Sciences
Greenland
Mayotte
EU
post-colonialism
sovereignty games
Postcolonial discourse
norms
International Relations Theory
Adler-Nissen, Rebecca
Gad, Ulrik Pram
In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room:How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty
topic_facet /dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/FacultyOfSocialSciences
Faculty of Social Sciences
Greenland
Mayotte
EU
post-colonialism
sovereignty games
Postcolonial discourse
norms
International Relations Theory
description This chapter investigates this puzzle of choosing non-sovereignty in a postcolonial setting. Historically, the question of freedom from imperial hegemony has been linked to how Western colonialism involved keeping the colonized in ‘the waiting room of history’ by insisting that they were not yet ready for sovereignty. It explores a number of European overseas countries and territories. More specifically, it focuses on French dependencies in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and North Atlantic Greenland constitutionally connected to Denmark. The immediate aim of anti-colonial struggles was to make the colonizers leave so that the colonized people could decide for themselves. Many anti-imperial struggles settled for nation-states each acquiring a separate, formal sovereignty-based international status. More recent versions of postcolonialism, inspired by poststructuralism and critical constructivism, have aimed at accounting for ways of realizing agency, which escape, first, imperial submission, and second, norms of an international society based on sovereignty. Instead of representing a rejection of sovereignty, the EU overseas countries and territories that remain under their metropole’s formal authority rearticulate sovereignty. As this chapter demonstrates, a universalizing European discourse on a universal norm for how to organize community and authority as a sovereign state makes a range of postcolonial choices possible, which both constructivist and some postcolonial thinking fail to fully acknowledge. A number of overseas territories take alternative routes to agency; not by resisting the norm of sovereignty - but by creatively articulating it beyond its claim to represent an 'either/or' distinction. The chapter demonstrates that territories not formally decolonized may very well perform a postcolonial agency, which tampers with the sovereignty norm.
author2 Epstein, Charlotte
format Book Part
author Adler-Nissen, Rebecca
Gad, Ulrik Pram
author_facet Adler-Nissen, Rebecca
Gad, Ulrik Pram
author_sort Adler-Nissen, Rebecca
title In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room:How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty
title_short In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room:How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty
title_full In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room:How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty
title_fullStr In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room:How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty
title_full_unstemmed In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room:How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty
title_sort in the post-colonial waiting room:how overseas countries and territories play games with the norm of sovereignty
publisher Routledge
publishDate 2017
url https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/in-the-postcolonial-waiting-room(f35f614d-be7d-43bf-a50f-5565d6ab0afb).html
genre Greenland
North Atlantic
genre_facet Greenland
North Atlantic
op_source Adler-Nissen , R & Gad , U P 2017 , In the Post-Colonial Waiting Room : How Overseas Countries and Territories Play Games with the Norm of Sovereignty . in C Epstein (ed.) , Against International Relations Norms . Routledge , London; N.Y. , Worlding Beyond the West , pp. 175-192 .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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