Research Handbook on the Sociology of International Law
Edited by Moshe Hirsch and Andrew Lang
Chapter 8: Ignorance/power: rule of law reform and the administrative law of global governance
Deval Desai
Abstract
This chapter explores the emergence and implications of a new type of legal expertise in development. This expertise, found in a set of contemporary rule of law and governance reformers, openly denies its own capacity for knowledge about the institutions it purports to reform. Referring to it as ‘expert ignorance’, this chapter provides some initial methodological and analytical foundations for its study. The chapter problematizes the purchase over expert ignorance of existing sociological modes of studying expertise. It then draws on the emerging literature on the sociology of ignorance for insights and to develop a methodological apparatus. The chapter applies this apparatus to problem-driven iterative adaptation (PDIA), a recent effort to formalize expert ignorance in development practice. It argues that PDIA shows the importance of sociologizing the specific ways in which PDIA tries to inculcate within reformers, and organize a specific sensibility towards institutional reform. The chapter concludes with some broader reflections on how and why sociologically inclined scholars of global governance might study expert ignorance.
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