COVID-19 and the Sacrificial International Order

被引:46
作者
Barnett, Michael [1 ]
机构
[1] George Washington Univ, Int Affairs & Polit Sci, Washington, DC 20052 USA
关键词
COVID-19; Liberal International Order; Sacrificial International Order; moral economy; humanitarian governance; triage; sacrifice; international relations theory;
D O I
10.1017/S002081832000034X
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
This essay uses COVID-19 to illuminate the sacrificial practices of the liberal international order as woven through the concepts of humanitarian governance, moral economy, triage, and sacrifice. The concept of a sacrificial international order calls attention to how all international orders have their share of sacrifices-and this includes liberal international orders. International orders can be distinguished by the selection mechanisms used to identify the sacrifices and the meanings attached to them. I call attention to how liberal international orders often rely on markets as a selection mechanism and interpret these deaths as part of progress. Following critical contributions to the study of neoliberalism that show how markets shape the ethics of "giving life" and "letting die," I illuminate these processes through four concepts: humanitarian governance and the claim that the highest moral principle is saving lives and relieving suffering; moral economy that regulates who has access to basic subsistence goods during periods of crisis; triage, which considers how to prioritize whose lives are valued; and whether all deaths count as sacrifices or whether they are better understood as "those who can be killed." I conclude by discussing how COVID-19 conjures hierarchies of humanity ignored by the liberal international order and challenges the discipline to consider the sacrifices in world order.
引用
收藏
页码:E128 / E147
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] International publication activity during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Strobl, Stephanie
    Roth, Wilfried
    PATHOLOGE, 2021, 42 (02): : 224 - 230
  • [42] International Cooperation in Scientific Research during the COVID-19
    Li M.
    Yue X.
    Hu J.
    Wu Y.
    Min Y.
    Fu C.
    Dianzi Keji Daxue Xuebao/Journal of the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, 2022, 51 (06): : 928 - 936
  • [43] COVID-19 from the lens of Global International Relations
    Bas Vilizzio, Maria Magdalena
    Nieves Aguirre, Monica Fernanda
    OASIS-OBSERVATORIO DE ANALISIS DE LOS SISTEMAS INTERNACIONALES, 2022, (36): : 21 - 38
  • [44] COVID-19 in people living with diabetes: An international consensus
    Caballero, A. E.
    Ceriello, A.
    Misra, A.
    Aschner, P.
    McDonnell, M. E.
    Hassanein, M.
    Ji, L.
    Mbanya, J. C.
    Fonseca, V. A.
    JOURNAL OF DIABETES AND ITS COMPLICATIONS, 2020, 34 (09)
  • [45] From the editor: COVID-19 and international business policy
    Van Assche, Ari
    Lundan, Sarianna
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS POLICY, 2020, 3 (03) : 273 - 279
  • [46] International migration, COVID-19 and migration from Cuba
    Aja Diaz, Antonio
    NOVEDADES EN POBLACION, 2020, 16 (31): : 156 - 172
  • [47] The international trade in human vaccines before COVID-19
    Segarra-Blasco, Agusti
    Teruel, Mercedes
    Cattaruzzo, Sebastiano
    WORLD ECONOMY, 2024, 47 (05) : 1978 - 2008
  • [48] An embarrassment of changes: International Relations and the COVID-19 pandemic
    Davies, Mathew
    Hobson, Christopher
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2023, 77 (02) : 150 - 168
  • [49] Covid-19 and stock market liquidity: international evidence
    Umar, Muhammad
    Rubbaniy, Ghulame
    Iqbal, Amjad
    Rizvi, Syed Kumail Abbas
    Xu, Yan
    ECONOMIC RESEARCH-EKONOMSKA ISTRAZIVANJA, 2022,
  • [50] International Impact of COVID-19 on the Diagnosis of Heart Disease
    Einstein, Andrew J.
    Shaw, Leslee J.
    Hirschfeld, Cole
    Williams, Michelle C.
    Villines, Todd C.
    Better, Nathan
    Vitola, Joao V.
    Cerci, Rodrigo
    Dorbala, Sharmila
    Raggi, Paolo
    Choi, Andrew D.
    Lu, Bin
    Sinitsyn, Valentin
    Sergienko, Vladimir
    Kudo, Takashi
    Norgaard, Bjarne Linde
    Maurovich-Horvat, Pal
    Campisi, Roxana
    Milan, Elisa
    Louw, Lizette
    Allam, Adel H.
    Bhatia, Mona
    Malkovskiy, Eli
    Goebel, Benjamin
    Cohen, Yosef
    Randazzo, Michael
    Narula, Jagat
    Pascual, Thomas Nb
    Pynda, Yaroslav
    Dondi, Maurizio
    Paez, Diana
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2021, 77 (02) : 173 - 185