2024 Sussex International Theory Prize Winner and Honourable Mention
Posted on behalf of: The Centre for Advanced International Theory (CAIT)
Last updated: Friday, 9 August 2024
CAIT are pleased to announce the 2024 Sussex International Theory Prize winner and honourable mention.
The CAIT book award panel selected the following book for the 2024 Sussex International Theory Prize:
Ajay Parasram's "(Manchester University Press, 2023)
Additionally, the Inés Valdez's book " (Cambridge University Press, 2023) earned an honourable mention from the CAIT book award panel:
The CAIT book award panel statements on the books are below:
"Pluriversal Sovereignty and the State: Imperial Encounters in Sri Lanka" provides an original critique of IR’s central concept of ‘sovereignty,’ demonstrating its colonial lineage and epistemological anchorage in the false universalism of Eurocentric international political theory. Focusing on nineteenth-century Sri Lanka and drawing on extensive archival research, the book develops the innovative theoretical argument that the normalization of modern sovereignty as politically unitary, spatially universal, and territorially total rests on the erasure of precolonial forms of pluriversal sovereignty involving non-territorial multilateral rule. Through foregrounding the cosmological, legal, and insurrectionary politics of mid-19th century Sri Lanka, the book shows how the dialectic of colonialism and anti-colonialism contributed to the normalization of monadic sovereignty in the political imagination and discourse of nationalist movements and the postcolonial state. By conducting a critical and creative conversation between theoretical and historical literatures on state sovereignty on the one hand, and South Asian studies and British colonial historiographies on the other, Pluriversal Sovereignty and the State demonstrates postcolonial states’ internalisation, enforcement and reproduction of modern sovereignty underpin the hierarchical international system and generates (post-)colonial violence against stateless cultural communities that are otherised and securitised by the purported universalism of modern sovereignty. In so doing, it also delineates the contours of a decolonial, emancipatory pluriversal politics.
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"Democracy and Empire: Labor, Nature, and the Reproduction of Capitalism" provides an original account of the interactive development of racial capitalism, empire, and democratic politics. It demonstrates the dependence of popular sovereignty and self-determination, two concepts central to Western democratic theory, upon imperial domination and extraction of non-European and indigenous peoples and life-worlds. These structures, the book shows, continue to organise global capitalist accumulation and sustain hierarchical nation-state system. The book therefore disrupts the dualism of the domestic and the global by demonstrating the constitution of both realms through racial and possessive forms of popular sovereignty. It therefore expands and problematises the dialectics of democratic and imperial frameworks in transnational politics and on that basis retheorises key features of popular sovereignty such as immigration control as aspects of imperial inheritance. It also shows how these features of racism and sovereignty are related to the ecological destruction wrought by capitalism. Finally, drawing on Indigenous political thought and engaging with King and Fanon, Democracy and Empire challenges us to conceptualise an anti-imperial popular sovereignty and imagine forms of solidarity that might be genuinely emancipatory.