Figure 1. Overlapping Assemblages and Relations across Time and Space.
As global scholars, we think it is essential to be flexible thinkers and interrogate our taken-for-granted assumptions about the workings of power and related social, legal, economic, and political concepts. In short, we need to decolonize the basic building blocks that have dominated the past three centuries of Western thought (Santos 2007, 2014; Mutua and Swadener 2011). As global scholars, we should be careful not to reify or unduly privilege the nation-state by viewing everything as operating either above or below its framing parameters. In other words, we need to analytically decenter the nation-state despite some states remaining very powerful actors. And as global scholars, we want to suggest that it is entirely appropriate, if not imperative, to foreground people living within local and intimate communities. This does not mean that the local is somehow intrinsically good or a more important arena of study, but analyses of global processes should always take into account the people and communities who ultimately feel the impact of those processes even when impacts are unintended or unforeseen. We should be anxious to explore the global dimensions of the local and how local forces may be both resisting and reconstituting national contexts (fig. 2).
Figure 2. Conceptual Imaginaries.
Perhaps most important, as global scholars we should embrace a global imaginary without naïvely believing—as was the case in the post–World War II era—in Western industrialized states as the driving force and only source of emancipatory possibility. This means recognizing alternative, non-Western epistemologies and pluralist political, legal, and economic systems, and promoting—as the World Social Forum seeks to do—how another world may be possible (Santos 2007). As Toni Morrison reminded us years ago, embracing the imagination of another can be one way of sharing the world (Morrison 1992). Adopting a global imaginary means appreciating that what happens in one part of the world affects and influences what happens in other parts of the world. Aspirations of global democracy necessarily involve “us” and “them” because another person’s insecurity is only a few steps removed from our own. Finally, as global scholars, adopting a global imaginary means understanding the overlapping and intersecting social contexts across times and spaces in which all of our work is situated. This is the case whether one’s primary research is engaged with family relations, local communities, global cities, national governments, multinational corporations, international agencies, or global governance institutions. Depending on the research questions one asks, all or some of these dimensions may be in play, in some cases simultaneously.
DECENTERING THE PRODUCTION OF KNOWLEDGE
The current challenges presented by our complex world require global scholars to embrace new ways of thinking. We argue that decentering is an important way of thinking about global challenges. To “decenter” something means to displace it from a primary place, from a central position or role, or from an established center of focus. French philosopher Louis Althusser introduced the idea of a “decentered structure” to structural theory (Althusser 1990: 254–55). Jean Piaget used the idea in his theory of cognitive development. In his work, decentering refers to the stage of cognitive development when a child relinquishes an egocentric world for a more objective world shared with others, and develops the ability to logically consider multiple aspects of a situation (Silverman 1980: 106). In social theory, decentering can mean “to disconnect from practical or theoretical assumptions of origin, priority, or essence” (Merriam-Webster 2015).
The decentering theme will be used in several ways in this book. For example we argue, as others before have argued, that Euro-American scholars need to decenter Western conceptions of history. Further, we argue that to engage with global issues, Western scholars need to decenter the fundamentally modernist and rationalist imperatives to categorize and dichotomize what are essentially decentered social processes. Scholars need to recognize and overcome prevailing logics that put everything into hierarchies, ordered positions, center and periphery models, and developmental progressions with directional flows and linear causalities that start at an origin point and evolve in one direction.
Embracing a decentered world and learning to consider it from multiple perspectives implies a decentering of the production of knowledge that has been, at least for the past four centuries, historically associated with the rise of modernity that emerged out of Western Europe and through processes of colonialism, industrialization, and imperialism spread around the world. Today the Euro-American academy still dominates the production of scholarly knowledge, in part by ignoring long-standing and rapidly growing bodies of non-Western scholarship. There is a pressing need for research dealing with global issues to incorporate knowledge produced outside the Euro-American academy, and to understand this scholarship as a vital source of inspiration and innovation (Comaroff and Comaroff 2012; Grosfoguel 2011; Keim et al, 2014). As Australian and US scholars ourselves, we have to constantly deal with this issue. We have found that there are a number of ways to engage scholarship in other languages and cultures. Scholars can read translated works, have their own work translated, participate in reciprocal scholarly exchanges, copublish, conduct field research, and ideally become conversant in foreign languages. This requires a lot of work, but we find each collaboration is more rewarding than we could have imagined.
Postcolonial scholar Edward Said was an early proponent of the need to create a more inclusive intellectual landscape, one that does not privilege the perspective of industrialized Western societies. Reflecting on the unprecedented escalation of merging systems of knowledge and traditions in the second half of the twentieth century, Said wrote, “We are mixed in with one another in ways that most national systems of education have not dreamed of” (1993: 328). Said went on to say, “To match knowledge in the arts and sciences with these integrative realities is, I believe, the cultural challenge of the moment” (Said 1993: 331; see also Said 1983). Mike Featherstone and Couze Venn add that “as we move into the 21st century, it is clear that the boundaries, limits and classifications of the world are shifting” (Featherstone and Venn 2006: 1). More recently, global scholar Saskia Sassen has argued, “When we confront today’s range of transformations—rising inequality, rising poverty, rising government debt—the usual tools to interpret them are out of date” (Sassen 2014: 7). Global scholars, and the emerging field of global studies, should be at the forefront of this engagement and developing new theoretical and conceptual tools for understanding global processes.
In this context, the book Imagined Globalization by Néstor García Canclini, a Latin American theorist, is pertinent. He writes:
In this second decade of the twenty-first century neoliberal thought, normalized on a worldwide scale, has deteriorated, and in several regions it has been seen that not only is another world possible but that many worlds and forms of social organization are possible, as are different relations between men and women, between technology, territory, and investments. This decentered multifocality is what is interesting