Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
be. In other words, Empire presents its rule not as a transitory
P R E F A C E
xv
moment in the movement ofhistory, but as a regime with no
temporal boundaries and in this sense outside ofhistory or at the
end ofhistory. Third, the rule ofEmpire operates on all registers
ofthe social order extending down to the depths ofthe social
world. Empire not only manages a territory and a population but
also creates the very world it inhabits. It not only regulates human
interactions but also seeks directly to rule over human nature. The
object ofits rule is social life in its entirety, and thus Empire presents
the paradigmatic form of biopower. Finally, although the practice
ofEmpire is continually bathed in blood, the concept ofEmpire
is always dedicated to peace—a perpetual and universal peace out-
side ofhistory.
The Empire we are faced with wields enormous powers of
oppression and destruction, but that fact should not make us nostal-
gic in any way for the old forms of domination. The passage to
Empire and its processes of globalization offer new possibilities to
the forces of liberation. Globalization, of course, is not one thing,
and the multiple processes that we recognize as globalization are
not unified or univocal. Our political task, we will argue, is not
simply to resist these processes but to reorganize them and redirect
them toward new ends. The creative forces of the multitude that
sustain Empire are also capable ofautonomously constructing a
counter-Empire, an alternative political organization ofglobal flows
and exchanges. The struggles to contest and subvert Empire, as
well as those to construct a real alternative, will thus take place on
the imperial terrain itself—indeed, such new struggles have already
begun to emerge. Through these struggles and many more like
them, the multitude will have to invent new democratic forms and
a new constituent power that will one day take us through and
beyond Empire.
The genealogy we follow in our analysis of the passage from
imperialism to Empire will be first European and then Euro-
American, not because we believe that these regions are the exclu-
sive or privileged source ofnew ideas and historical innovation,
but simply because this was the dominant geographical path along
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P R E F A C E
which the concepts and practices that animate today’s Empire devel-
oped—in step, as we will argue, with the development ofthe
capitalist mode ofproduction.3 Whereas the genealogy ofEmpire
is in this sense Eurocentric, however, its present powers are not
limited to any region. Logics ofrule that in some sense originated
in Europe and the United States now invest practices ofdomination
throughout the globe. More important, the forces that contest
Empire and effectively prefigure an alternative global society are
themselves not limited to any geographical region. The geography
ofthese alternative powers, the new cartography, is still waiting to be
written—or really, it is being written today through the resistances,
struggles, and desires ofthe multitude.
In writing this book we have tried to the best ofour
abilities to employ a broadly interdisciplinary approach.4 Our argu-
ment aims to be equally philosophical and historical, cultural and
economic, political and anthropological. In part, our object ofstudy
demands this broad interdisciplinarity, since in Empire the bound-
aries that might previously have justified narrow disciplinary ap-
proaches are increasingly breaking down. In the imperial world
the economist, for example, needs a basic knowledge of cultural
production to understand the economy, and likewise the cultural
critic needs a basic knowledge ofeconomic processes to understand
culture. That is a requirement that our project demands. What we
hope to have contributed in this book is a general theoretical
framework and a toolbox of concepts for theorizing and acting in
and against Empire.5
Like most large books, this one can be read in many different
ways: front to back, back to front, in pieces, in a hopscotch pattern,
or through correspondences. The sections ofPart 1 introduce the
general problematic ofEmpire. In the central portion ofthe book,
Parts 2 and 3, we tell the story ofthe passage from modernity to
postmodernity, or really from imperialism to Empire. Part 2 narrates
the passage primarily from the standpoint ofthe history ofideas
and culture from the early modern period to the present. The red
P R E F A C E
xvii
thread that runs throughout this part is the genealogy ofthe concept
ofsovereignty. Part 3 narrates the same passage from the standpoint
ofproduction, whereby production is understood in a very broad
sense, ranging from economic production to the production of
subjectivity. This narrative spans a shorter period and focuses primar-
ily on the transformations of capitalist production from the late
nineteenth century to the present. The internal structures ofParts
2 and 3 thus correspond: the first sections ofeach treat the modern,
imperialist phase; the middle sections deal with the mechanisms of
passage; and the final sections analyze our postmodern, imperial
world.
We structured the book this way in order to emphasize the
importance ofthe shift from the realm ofideas to that ofproduction.
The Intermezzo between Parts 2 and 3 functions as a hinge that
articulates the movement from one standpoint to the other. We
intend this shift of standpoint to function something like the mo-
ment in
Capital
when Marx invites us to leave the noisy sphere of
exchange and descend into the hidden abode ofproduction. The
realm ofproduction is where social inequalities are clearly revealed
and, moreover, where the most effective resistances and alternatives
to the power ofEmpire arise. In Part 4 we thus try to identify
these alternatives that today are tracing the lines ofa movement
beyond Empire.
This book was begun well after the end of the Persian
GulfWar and completed well before the beginning ofthe war in
Kosovo. The reader should thus situate the argument at the midpoint
between those two signal events in the construction ofEmpire.
PART 1
T H E P O L I T I C A L C O N S T I T U T I O N
O F T H E P R E S E N T
1.1
W O R L D O R D E R
Capitalism only triumphs when it becomes identified with the state,
when it is the state.
Fernand Braudel
They make slaughter and they call it peace.
Tacitus
The problematic ofEmpire is determined in the first
place by one simple fact: that there is world order. This order is
expressed as a juridical formation. Our initial task, then, is to grasp
the
constitution
ofthe order being formed today. We should rule
out from the outset, however, two common conceptions of this
order that reside on opposing limits ofthe spectrum: first, the notion
that the present order somehow rises up
spontaneously
out ofthe
interactions ofradically heterogeneous global forces, as ifthis order
were a harmonious concert orchestrated by the natural and neutral
hidden hand ofthe world market; and second, the idea that order
is dictated by a single power and a single center ofrationality
transcendent
to global forces, guiding the various phases of historical development according to its conscious and all-seeing plan, something like a conspiracy theory ofglobalization.1
United Nations
Before investigating the constitution of Empire in juridical terms,
we must analyze in some detail the constitutional processes that
have come to define the central juridical categories, and in particular
4
T H E P O L I T I C A L C O N S T I T U T I O N O F T H E P R E S E N T
give careful attention to the process of the long transition from the
sovereign right ofnation-states (and the international right that
followed from it) to the first postmodern global figures of imperial
right. As a first approximation one can think ofthis as the genealogy
ofjuridical forms that led to, and now leads beyond, the suprana-
tional role ofthe United Nations and its various affiliated institu-
tions.
It is widely recognized that the notion ofinternational order
that European modernity continually proposed and reproposed, at
least since the Peace ofWestphalia, is now in crisis.2 It has in fact
always been in crisis, and this crisis has been one ofthe motors that
has continuously pushed toward Empire. Perhaps this notion of
international order and its crisis should be dated from the time of
the Napoleonic Wars, as some scholars claim, or perhaps the origin
should be located in the Congress ofVienna and the establishment
ofthe Holy Alliance.3 In any case, there can be no doubt that by
the time ofthe First World War and the birth ofthe League of
Nations, a notion ofinternational order along with its crisis had
been definitively established. The birth ofthe United Nations at
the end ofthe Second World War merely reinitiated, consolidated,
and extended this developing international juridical order that was
first European but progressively became completely global. The
United Nations, in effect, can be regarded as the culmination of
this entire constitutive process, a culmination that both reveals the
limitations ofthe notion of
international
order and points beyond
it toward a new notion of
global
order. One could certainly analyze the U.N. juridical structure in purely negative terms and dwell on
the declining power ofnation-states in the international context,
but one should also recognize that the notion ofright defined by
the U.N. Charter also points toward a new positive source of
juridical production, effective on a global scale—a new center of
normative production that can play a sovereign juridical role. The
U.N. functions as a hinge in the genealogy from international
to global juridical structures. On the one hand, the entire U.N.
conceptual structure is predicated on the recognition and legitima-
W O R L D O R D E R
5
tion ofthe sovereignty ofindividual states, and it is thus planted
squarely within the old framework of international right defined
by pacts and treaties. On the other hand, however, this process of
legitimation is effective only insofar as it transfers sovereign right
to a real
supranational
center. It is not our intention here to criticize or lament the serious (and at times tragic) inadequacies ofthis
process; indeed, we are interested in the United Nations and the
project ofinternational order not as an end in itself, but rather as
a real historical lever that pushed forward the transition toward a
properly global system. It is precisely the inadequacies ofthe process,
then, that make it effective.
To look more closely at this transition in juridical terms, it is
useful to read the work ofHans Kelsen, one ofthe central intellectual
figures behind the formation of the United Nations. As early as the
1910s and 1920s, Kelsen proposed that the international juridical
system be conceived as the supreme source ofevery national juridical
formation and constitution. Kelsen arrived at this proposal through
his analyses ofthe formal dynamics ofthe particular orderings of
states. The limits ofthe nation-state, he claimed, posed an insur-
mountable obstacle to the realization ofthe idea ofright. For Kelsen,
the partial ordering ofthe domestic law ofnation-states led back
necessarily to the universality and objectivity ofthe international
ordering. The latter is not only logical but also ethical, for it would
put an end to conflicts between states ofunequal power and affirm
instead an equality that is the principle ofreal international commu-
nity. Behind the formal sequence that Kelsen described, then, there
was a real and substantial drive ofEnlightenment modernization.
Kelsen sought, in Kantian fashion, a notion of right that could
become an ‘‘organization ofhumanity and [would] therefore be
one with the supreme ethical idea.’’4 He wanted to get beyond the
logic ofpower in international relations so that ‘‘the particular states
could be regarded juridically as entities ofequal rank’’ and thus a
‘‘world and universal state’’ could be formed, organized as a ‘‘univer-
sal community superior to the particular states, enveloping them
all within itself.’’5
6
T H E P O L I T I C A L C O N S T I T U T I O N O F T H E P R E S E N T
It was only fitting, then, that Kelsen would later have the
privilege ofattending the meetings in San Francisco that founded
the United Nations and seeing his theoretical hypothesis realized.
For him the United Nations organized a rational idea.6 It gave legs
to an idea of the spirit; it proposed a real base of effectiveness for
a transcendental schema ofthe validity ofright situated above the
nation-state. The validity and efficacy of right could now be united