Between the state and global civil society: non-official experts and their network in the Asia-Pacific, 1925–45
Abstract
his article stresses the need for a more rigorous scrutiny of the power
structure in which an expert network produces its ‘expert knowledge’. It defines a
pioneering multinational expert network in the Asia-Pacific region in the interwar
years as a prototype of an epistemic community, and examines how far it challenged
the state-centred and North Atlantic-centred dominant structure of international
politics, and became ‘global’. In this article I argue that this particular network
largely reinforced the dominant structure. This meant that it remained
inter-national
and colonial, and served the interests of the state/empire, neither becoming global
nor advancing a universalist cause for the global civil society. The failure owes a lot
to historical circumstances. Yet this case study also demonstrates that the structure in
which the expert network produced specific knowledge is still dominant and that a
constant scrutiny of the role of an expert network remains critical.
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Global Networks 2.1(2002): 65-81