The United States' current "war on terror" has been framed as a struggle for "civilization"; one which requires a "new paradigm of international law." The rationale for the United States' selective self-exemption from otherwise applicable international law in conducting this war has been that new and imminent threats require the re-shaping of legal doctrines. This essay considers this rationale against the backdrop of three centures of American visions and policies, and the legal justifications put forth to justify Euroamerican expansion. It concludes that the justifications for American exceptionalism have been remarkably consistent throughout its history and that, as a result, contemporary exceptionalist policies can only be effectively countered if the presumptions of the underlying paradigm are confronted directly.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Saito on Colonial Presumptions: The War on Terror and the Roots of American Exceptionalism
Colonial Presumptions: The War on Terror and the Roots of American Exceptionalism has just been posted by Natsu Taylor Saito, Georgia State University College of Law. It is appears in the Georgetown Journal of Law and Modern Critical Race Perspectives (2009). Here's the abstract: