Event

Foucault, Governmentality and the Knowledge Economy

Join us for a talk on Umar Salam – DPhil Candidate Queen Elizabeth House – on his recent paper. The paper considers Foucault’s concept of governmentality and asks whether it might be applied to contemporary forms of development discourse, specifically those associated with the knowledge economy. In the first section, it examines Foucault’s critique of Chicago-School neoliberalism and the striking claims Foucault made regarding the Chicago School’s “generalisation of the economic form of the market” – firstly, that the market served as a “principle of intelligibility of social relationships” and secondly, that it acted as a “permanent economic tribunal” according to which the state could be held to account. In the second section, it briefly outlines how the idea of ‘building knowledge economies’ came to take such a dominant position in development discourse and review the impact this has had on science and higher education policies in certain developing countries. It argues that Foucault’s theoretical insights about the relationship between systems and practices of knowledge, and the relations and exercise of power, may be generalised from his own critique of neoliberalism to that of the knowledge economy discourse, and that the political effects of pursuing a knowledge economy strategy cannot be disentangled from the conceptual context from which such stragies emerged.