It’s a small, small, small world: The Icesave dispute and global orders of difference

Drawing on Roy and Ong’s work on worlding, this article introduces the concept of orders of difference to analyze the selective incorporation of the nation-state into supranational political and economic systems. I argue that attending to orders of difference is necessary to better understand the...

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Main Author: Jess Bier
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
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Online Access:https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2399654420917410
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:sae:envirc:v:38:y:2020:i:7-8:p:1291-1307 2023-05-15T16:49:05+02:00 It’s a small, small, small world: The Icesave dispute and global orders of difference Jess Bier https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2399654420917410 unknown https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2399654420917410 article ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:43:19Z Drawing on Roy and Ong’s work on worlding, this article introduces the concept of orders of difference to analyze the selective incorporation of the nation-state into supranational political and economic systems. I argue that attending to orders of difference is necessary to better understand the ways that imagined equality is mobilized to reproduce global injustice. I do so through a combined examination of the liberal globalism of the iconic “It’s a Small World†ride at Disney theme parks and Iceland's role in the Icesave dispute—a key struggle of the 2007–8 financial crisis. The design of the Small World 1 ride effects a form of worlding by ordering differences into those that are similar enough to be permitted and those that are too different to be incorporated. In the process, the ride invokes a small world 2 that precisely encapsulates the more complex globalisms that inform the organizational structure of supranational bodies like the European Union and European Economic Area. Global finance is said to be one of the world’s most seamless supranational systems, but one of its many seams was made visible during the Icesave dispute as two orders of difference came into conflict: European Economic Area membership and Icelandic politics. Representatives of the Netherlands and the UK argued that Iceland’s membership in the European Economic Area meant that Iceland was fully the same as other member nations, while those from Iceland successfully argued that its domestic and international economies were irreducibly different. The dispute thus hinged upon a debate over how differences are ordered within and between nations, including the number of permissible orders and the precise extent to which member nations are or should be made commensurable through supranational geopolitics. Global finance; supranational politics; nation-state; financial crisis; geographies of finance Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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language unknown
description Drawing on Roy and Ong’s work on worlding, this article introduces the concept of orders of difference to analyze the selective incorporation of the nation-state into supranational political and economic systems. I argue that attending to orders of difference is necessary to better understand the ways that imagined equality is mobilized to reproduce global injustice. I do so through a combined examination of the liberal globalism of the iconic “It’s a Small World†ride at Disney theme parks and Iceland's role in the Icesave dispute—a key struggle of the 2007–8 financial crisis. The design of the Small World 1 ride effects a form of worlding by ordering differences into those that are similar enough to be permitted and those that are too different to be incorporated. In the process, the ride invokes a small world 2 that precisely encapsulates the more complex globalisms that inform the organizational structure of supranational bodies like the European Union and European Economic Area. Global finance is said to be one of the world’s most seamless supranational systems, but one of its many seams was made visible during the Icesave dispute as two orders of difference came into conflict: European Economic Area membership and Icelandic politics. Representatives of the Netherlands and the UK argued that Iceland’s membership in the European Economic Area meant that Iceland was fully the same as other member nations, while those from Iceland successfully argued that its domestic and international economies were irreducibly different. The dispute thus hinged upon a debate over how differences are ordered within and between nations, including the number of permissible orders and the precise extent to which member nations are or should be made commensurable through supranational geopolitics. Global finance; supranational politics; nation-state; financial crisis; geographies of finance
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jess Bier
spellingShingle Jess Bier
It’s a small, small, small world: The Icesave dispute and global orders of difference
author_facet Jess Bier
author_sort Jess Bier
title It’s a small, small, small world: The Icesave dispute and global orders of difference
title_short It’s a small, small, small world: The Icesave dispute and global orders of difference
title_full It’s a small, small, small world: The Icesave dispute and global orders of difference
title_fullStr It’s a small, small, small world: The Icesave dispute and global orders of difference
title_full_unstemmed It’s a small, small, small world: The Icesave dispute and global orders of difference
title_sort it’s a small, small, small world: the icesave dispute and global orders of difference
url https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2399654420917410
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2399654420917410
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