Abstract

Critical scholarship in Political Science and International Relations (IR) theory is turning increasingly to Michel Foucault’s writings on governmentality and biopolitics to explore the complex discursive interdependencies between transnational governance and the War on Terror. Marxist critics have assailed this effort recently, however, for its premature assumption that the practices of governmental power can simply be “scaled” without the interventions of specific state-imperial powers. Yet both sides in this “debate about biopolitics” seem to rest their arguments on readings of Foucault which ignore his views on the importance of developments in the discourses of political economy for the emergence of modern governmental relations. Inspired by Foucault’s recently published lectures on importance of the concept of “economic man” for neoliberal governmentality in particular, this article suggests that Foucault attributed to governmentality an explicit impulse toward economic globalization. Moreover, based on comments made in the same lectures concerning the emergence of contemporary “anarcholiberalism” and its radically economic ontology of security, the article closes with an exploration of the crucial role played by economic knowledge in the integration of Iraq into a regime of global-governmental security.

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Author notes

1

An earlier draft of this article was presented at the Thinking (With) Out Borders: International Political Theory in the 21st Century conference, at the University of St Andrews, 12–13 June 2008. Thanks to Jason Weidner, Scott Nelson, the editors of New Political Science, and two anonymous reviewers for their very helpful comments.