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Ong Aihwa, Neoliberalism as Exception: Mutations in Citizenship and Sovereignty. Durham: Duke University Press, 2006.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2008

Federico Helfgott
Affiliation:
University of Michigan
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Abstract

Type
CSSH Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2008

Like globalization, neoliberalism tends to evoke images of declining states and governments, powerless before the onslaught of the global market. In this new book, however, Aihwa Ong combines insights from Foucault and Agamben to argue that East/Southeast Asian as well as other governments are using a neoliberal form of the sovereign exception to articulate themselves with the market-centered logic of the contemporary world. The neoliberal order described by Ong is one suffused at all levels by the logic of the exception, and one in which conflicting neoliberalisms clash and merge. She develops these insights through a series of ten case studies on topics ranging from Chinese state policies, to U.S. outsourcing of high-tech jobs, to Singapore's privileging of high-skill foreigners over native-born citizens.

Ong finds her best example in the Chinese state's repeated acts, since the 1970s, of sovereign exception to the state socialist norm—its creation of special economic zones (SEZs) where the market determines wages and the labor and citizenship protections of the rest of China do not apply. Hong Kong and Macao, on the other hand, are more “positive” political zones of exception to the repressive norm of the rest of the country. Both are part of a strategy for greater national power and regional integration under Chinese leadership.

Ong sees a neoliberal biopolitics at play across the world, forming new kinds of subjects who are different from previous capitalist subjectivities such as Weber's Protestant ethic and Singapore's once-celebrated “Asian values.” It is no longer enough to be rational and disciplined; one must also be flexible, knowledge-rich, creative, and cosmopolitan. Those who do not fit this model increasingly form the underside of the system, as rights that once came with formal citizenship are de-linked from it and attached to skills that are valued in the global market. Flexible entrepreneurs and professionals move capital and skills across latitudes and borders, and exercise disciplinary control on workers living in states of exception to labor norms.

More optimistically than Agamben, Ong argues that rather than a single opposition between citizenship and bare life there are multiple overlapping ethical and political systems that include and exclude in different ways. NGOs can find a way to include people through one when they are excluded through another. At the same time, Ong is more pessimistic than Hardt and Negri in that she sees the flexibility and mobility of the new world order as primarily a weapon of capital against labor, not as an opportunity for a “multitude” to oppose Empire.

There are times when Ong seems to stretch the concept of the exception beyond recognition, as when she discusses Malaysia's “exception of moderate Islam” (p. 51) while also stating, in a seeming contradiction, that Malay village Islam has historically been flexible. Though Ong's analysis of particular exceptions and departures is often brilliant and suggestive, she does not convincingly show that ruptures and shifts are unique to the neoliberal era. And while Ong's engagement with specific aspects of Agamben's theories is evident, it is less certain that the overarching thesis of “neoliberalism as exception” works as a clear theoretical statement.

However, she compensates for this by the richness of the individual essays, and it is this subtleness and wealth of insight—particularly her illustrations of neoliberal citizenship, subjectivity, and state strategy—rather than theoretical unity, that constitute the strength of the book. Furthermore, Ong's openness to ambiguous political possibilities, and to both optimism and pessimism, make this book a durable source of insights and tools for understanding the peculiar times we live in.