양윤선. 최원 님의 홈페이지에서 퍼왔습니다.

글의 원래 출처는 아래 주소입니다.

 
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세계화 시대 좌파의 정치적 실천을 고민하는 분들에게는 좋은 자료가 될 듯합니다.
 
한 번씩 읽어보시길 ... 누가 한번 번역해보는 것도 좋을 것 같군요. 

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A PLEA FOR AN ALTERGLOBALIZING EUROPE: Theses

 

                                             By Etienne Balibar    

                                                        Translation by Anna Preger  

 

1. Now, more than ever before, politics, as Max Weber put it, can only be “global”. This does not mean that there is only one global politics possible: on the contrary there is necessarily a choice between several politics, defined by their objectives, their means, their conditions, their obstacles, their “subjects” or “wills”, the risks they involve. The field of politics is that of the alternative. If we posit that today all the possibilities fall within one trend towards “globalization”, the question then becomes: what are the alternatives to its dominant forms? Can Europe be an “alterglobalizing” force, and how?

 

2. To claim that politics can only be global does not equate to saying that politics is not concerned with the condition and the problems of “people” where they live, where their life history has placed them:  on the contrary, it equates to asserting that local citizenship has as its condition an active global citizenship. Every local political choice of economic, social, cultural, institutional orientation involves a “cosmopolitical” choice, and vice-versa.

 

3. Europe’s place in the world today – in spite of a few vague diplomatic impulses – is that of a dead dog that follows the water’s current, devoid of any initiative of its own. If not – given its economic and cultural “weight” – that of a dead elephant that goes with the flow. Examples abound: from the reform of the United Nations to the enforcement of the Tokyo Protocol, from the regulation of international migration to the resolution of Near and Middle Eastern crises or the deployment of back-up troops to the wars initiated by the US. Consequently, Europe lacks the means of resolving its own “internal” problems, including institutional ones. 

4. That Europe has no global politics entails that there is no – or hardly any – global politics emerging from the European nations, despite the desire of some to “keep their rank” of former great powers or to be a spanner in the works. European nations thus have no – or hardly any – home politics presenting real alternatives. National elections function in this respect as a trompe-l’œil, but one which fails to dupe everyone: hence depoliticization. Global issues therefore re-emerge in a purely ideological form: “the clash of civilizations,” and the like.  

5. The causes of this situation are to be found within the evolution of historically inherited power relations that have been reinforced by the current state of affairs. But this evolution – that confers either a purely reactive or a simply adaptive function upon the “European construction” – cannot stand as a total explanation. We must supplement this acknowledgement with another one: there is a disastrous collective inability, amongst the majority of the European population, to imagine alternative policies and forms of politics, and this cannot be dissociated from the uncertainty looming over the political identity of Europe. The failure of the Constitution treaty is not the source but one of the symptoms of this uncertainty.

6. France has a particular responsibility in this situation: not only as a “founding country” but as a nation that is forever projecting an illusion of leadership, grounded in the myth of its exceptionality (the “country of human rights”), in what remains of its colonial domination or in the spectre of Gaullism and its “independent politics”, whereas in effect France contents itself with establishing compromises between the interests of the dominant or emerging powers. And how could it be otherwise?

7. The construction of Europe as a new kind of federation began and developed during previous stages of globalization and international relations whose features have now undergone a total shake-up. This construction is an (uneven) asset, but not a necessity: its “expansiveness” must not mislead us in this regard. The USSR may have been dismantled 80 years after its formation due to its rigidity and its system of state control, but the corollary of this is not that, 50 years on, by virtue of its flexibility and liberalism, there is no risk of an EU break-up. However, such a break-up would not mean going back to square one: some things are irreversible. Thus the European construction will either establish new foundations and new objectives, or it will collapse taking along with it, for the foreseeable future, any chance of collective political action in this part of the world.

 

8. The forces – “right-“ as well as “left-wing” – that are opposed to re-launching the European construction, are both inside each country (as demonstrated by the “no” voters in France and the Netherlands who would have been joined by many others had the ratification campaign been pursued) and beyond Europe (in particular in the United States). But the determining factor is what I shall call “the contradiction within the European people itself”, with all its social and cultural dimensions. This is what needs to be tackled through discussion and mobilization: operating, initially, at one’s own level, across the borders. To this end, if not parties, then we at least need movements, networks, trans-European initiatives.

 

9. European identity – with regards to the legacy inscribed in the institutions, the geography, the culture that it must maintain – is faced with two problems whose solution will only be reached at the cost of conflicts and errors. On the one hand it must overcome its East-West divide, which shifts position at different points in time, is associated with antagonisms between “regimes” and “systems” (not without its paradoxes, for example when “Westernism” spreads to the East following “revolutions” or “counter-revolutions”), but never disappears. On the other hand it must find a balance between a “closed” Europe (therefore restricted, but within which limits?) that one may wish to homogenize, and an “open” Europe (not so much a Great Europe than a Europe of borders, acknowledging its constitutive interpenetration with vast Euro-Atlantic, Euro-Asian, Euro-Mediterranean, Euro-African spaces). This is where the “questions” now pending lie: the Turkish question, the Russian question, the British question… In order to go on, Europe must invent a variable geometry, a form of state and administration without precedent in history.

 

10. Facing the decline of the American hegemony in the world (which is relative, but irreversible and precipitated by the “neo-conservative” attempt to re-establish it by force), Europe must choose between two strategies, which will gradually entail consequences in every area of political and social life: either attempting to form one of the “power blocs” (Grossraum) that will compete with one another for supremacy over a new global configuration, or forming one of the “mediations” that will attempt to give birth to a new economic and political order, more egalitarian and more decentralized, likely to effectively curtail conflicts, to institute redistribution mechanisms, to keep claims to hegemony in check. The first way is doomed to failure (even at the cost of an evolution towards totalitarianism, that might increase insecurity, terrorism being one of its aspects). The second is improbable without a considerable degree of collective conscience and political will, rallying public opinion across the continent. What is certain is that the terms of the alternative cannot be conflated within a rhetoric of compromises between national and communitarian bureaucracies.

 

11. Between the “North”, which most of Europe pertains to, and the “South” (whose geography, economy and degree of state integration are increasingly changing), there is not only an interdependence but a genuine reciprocity of possibilities of development (or “co-development”). It is important to recognize this and turn it into a political project. The fact that Europe was the starting-point for the “Westernization of the world”, in ways that were, to varying degrees, marked by domination but which today are universally challenged, represents in this respect both an obstacle and an opportunity to be seized: these are the two sides of the “post-colony”. Only a project such as this would allow for a balance to be found between a Europe focused on law-and-order, violently repressing the migrations it itself provokes, and a Europe without borders, open to “unrestrained” migration (that is to say, migrations entirely ordered by the market of human instruments). Only this would allow for conflicts of interests and culture between “old” and “new”, “legal’ and “illegal”, “communitarian” and “extra-communitarian” Europeans to be addressed. It is thus not an administrative but an existential priority. 

12. Against the backdrop of the uninterrupted Middle Eastern crisis that is in the process of becoming a regional war, the war in Lebanon highlighted the urgency of creating a political space encompassing all the countries surrounding the Mediterranean – only such a space can offer an alternative to the “clash of civilizations” in this highly sensitive and crucial region. As for the Israeli-Palestinian question that is its epicentre, the extreme anti-Zionist discourse should not be condoned; rather, concertedly and without delay Israeli expansion should be stopped and the rights of the Palestinian people recognized – rights that are officially championed by European nations. More generally, this hotbed of wars and ethnic-religious hatred should be turned into a site of cooperation and institutionalized negotiation, with repercussions across the globe. It is, for obvious reasons, Europe that should take the initiative. France, with its shared and troubled history with the Maghreb, has a particular part to play here. 

 

13. Crucial to alterglobalization are the following legal and political projects:

    • The democratic regulation of migration flows, therefore the reform regarding the right to mobility and residence, still marked by national interests at the expense of reciprocity;
    • “Collective security” and, correlatively, the penal responsibility of states and individuals regarding supranational affairs, therefore the reform of the UN, still held back by its support of decisions inherited from the Second World War and the logic of power;
    • The reinforcement of the guarantees of individual freedom, minority rights and human rights, therefore the practical and legal conditions of humanitarian intervention.
    • The merging of the instances of economic negotiation and regulation, of those controlling tax evasion and those concerning social rights, so as to sketch out on a global scale a Keynesian model now dismantled on a national level;
    • Finally, the prioritization of ecological risks over the other factors of insecurity rehearsed by Kofi Annan in his Millennium speech.

This list is not a closed one, but it demonstrates how diverse and interrelated the elements now forming, on a global scale, the substance of real politics, are.

 

 14. The above theses are merely propositions to orient and open a debate. Rather than presenting solutions, they are attempts to explicate contradictions that cannot be evaded. It is now a question of establishing the touchstones of rigour and integrity for a political debate in Europe today. And this debate will enable us, hopefully, to then supplement, clarify and modify them.   

 


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기인 2007-02-20 07:02   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
퍼갑니다. 이것도 인쇄해서 읽어봐야겠네요 ^^ ㅎ

balmas 2007-02-20 07:29   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
예, 그러셈~ :-)

에로이카 2007-02-20 07:51   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
발마스님, 안녕하셨어요? 저는 발리바르의 최근 동향에 대해서는 잘 모르는데요... 읽다가 그냥 요즘 드는 생각이랑 살짝 겹치는 부분이 있어 질문 좀 하려구요...

제가 이해하기로는, 모든 권리(right)는 그 권리를 제정하고 집행하는 권위(authority)를 필요로 합니다. 그렇다면 인권에 상응하는 (곧 그것을 규정하고 집행하는) 권위가 있나요? 주권국가의 국민(citizen)은 특정 영토 내에서 (적어도 명목상으로는) 그 인권을 보호받겠지만, 그렇지 못한 외국인 노동자들의 인권을 이야기할 때 우리는 그에 상응하는 어떤 권위를 (마치 천부인권론 같은) 상정해야 하는건가요? 아니면 권위 없는 특수한 권리로서 인권, 인권은 권위가 없기 때문에 보편성을 획득할 수 있다는 주장을해야 하나요?... 질문이 둘다 같은건가.. 모르겠습니다..

발리바르의 열세번째 테제를 보면서 든 생각인데요.... EU처럼 초국가적 권위가 상정이 될 경우 이민에 대한 "민주적" 조정을 얘기할 수도 있을 지 모르겠으나, 그런 권위가 없다면... 생각이 잘 정리가 안 되긴 하네요.. 질문이 산만해서 죄송합니다... 꾸벅..

balmas 2007-02-20 08:36   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
에로이카님, 오랜만이십니다. :-)
좋은 질문을 주셨네요. 사실 이 질문은 제가 지금 번역하고 있는 발리바르의 [Nous, citoyens'Europe?]--영어로 한다면, [We, the People of Europe?]--이라는 책(2001년 출간)의 주요 주제 중 하나죠. (이 책은 최근 한 10여년 간의 발리바르의 작업이 집약되어 있는 중요한 저서인데, 저의 게으름 때문에 아직 국내에서는 빛을 못보고 있습니다. 출판사에는 이번 달 안으로 원고를 넘겨주기로 했는데, 아무래도 한 2달 정도는 더 걸려야 일이 다 끝날 듯 ... -_-;;;) 그래서 저도 관심이 많은 문제이고, 마침 에로이카님이 질문을 주셨으니, 질문에 답변할 겸 생각을 정리해볼 겸 페이퍼를 하나 써보고 싶네요. :-)
그런데 제가 지금 글을 하나 마무리하고 있는 중이라서 며칠 동안은 페이퍼를 쓸 만한 여유가 없네요. 글이 마무리되는 대로 한번 페이퍼를 올릴 테니 잠시만 기다려주시길 바랍니다. ^^;

balmas 2007-02-20 08:43   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
아, 그리고 이 문제에 관한 발리바르의 글이 두어 편 번역되어 있으니까 한번 읽어보시면 도움이 될 듯합니다.
발리바르, [인권과 시민권], 윤소영 옮김, {인권의 정치와 성적 차이}, 공감
발리바르, [잔혹성의 지형학에 관한 개요 : 세계적 폭력시대의 시민성과 시빌리티], {사회운동} 2004년 6월호 (http://www.movements.or.kr/bbs/view.php?board=journal&id=1058)
발리바르, [인간 시민권의 철학은 가능한가?], {사회운동} 2006년 11월호 (http://www.movements.or.kr/bbs/view.php?board=journal&id=1624)

Chopin 2007-02-20 17:31   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
무슨 말이에여~ㅠㅜ
그리고 이 할아버지는 누구?

에로이카 2007-02-21 01:58   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
발마스님.. ^^ 감사합니다. 제가 너무 꽁으로 먹을라고 했나 보네요.. 페이퍼까지 쓰신다니 황송해서... 헤헤... 가르쳐주신 글들 짬짬이 읽으면서 답변 기다리고 있겠습니다. 바쁘신데 서두르시지는 마십시오.

아, 그리고 페이퍼 쓰시는 김에 이 문제도 살짝 건드려주셨으면 하는 거 하나 더 여쭙겠습니다. 저는 글로벌 시민(사회)라는 말은 성립될 수 없다고 (읽었고) 생각하고 있습니다. 왜냐하면 만약 그런 식의 용법이 가능하려면 국가/시민사회 대당에 의존하지 않고, 시민사회를 새로이 정의하거나, 혹은 (하트 / 네그리 식대로) 일국적 수준의 국가와 같이 지구적 수준에서 제국을 상정해야 한다고 생각하거든요... 여기에 EU 같은 초국적 정치체 (constitution + authority)가 있느냐 없느냐에 따라 논의가 달라질 것 같긴 합니다만, 발리바르는, 또 발마스님은 어떻게 생각하시는지.. 제가 그냥 줏어들은 풍월을 읊은 거라 말이 안되는 질문일 지도 모릅니다만... 어여삐 여기시고, 쉽게 잘 설명해주세요.. ^^ 그럼.. 건강하십시오..

balmas 2007-02-21 08:40   좋아요 0 | 댓글달기 | URL
쇼팽님/ ㅎㅎㅎ ^^;; 제 서재 이미지의 인물은 바로 이 글의 필자인 발리바르랍니다. :-) 프랑스의 저명한 철학자이고, 지난 번 이미지의 주인공이었던 알튀세르의 제자이기도 했습니다.
에로이카님/ ㅎㅎ 너무 기대는 하지 마세요. 허접한 페이퍼가 될 듯 ... ^^;
그나저나 이 놈의 글이 빨리 다 끝나야 하는데 ... -_-+