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Geopolitics ISSN: 1465-0045 (Print) 1557-3028 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/fgeo20 ‘Factivism’: A New Configuration of Humanitarian Reason Katharyne Mitchell To cite this article: Katharyne Mitchell (2016): ‘Factivism’: A New Configuration of Humanitarian Reason, Geopolitics, DOI: 10.1080/14650045.2016.1185606 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14650045.2016.1185606 Published online: 24 May 2016. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 36 View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=fgeo20 Download by: [University of Washington Libraries] Date: 19 September 2016, At: 00:11 GEOPOLITICS http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14650045.2016.1185606 ‘Factivism’: A New Configuration of Humanitarian Reason Katharyne Mitchell Department of Geography, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA ABSTRACT New actors and ideas about poverty management and humanitarian assistance have arisen in recent years. The underlying context of this shift includes a growing awareness of the limitations and failures of both military forms of humanitarian intervention and unfettered market-based solutions to aid and development. This paper explores the particular form that global humanitarianism is taking in this millennial context. I argue that a new configuration of humanitarian reason is emerging that draws on both neoliberal and pastoral rationalities of governance. The former can be associated with efficiency, transparency, and quantitative evidence, while the latter is articulated with individual compassion, devotion, and Christian duty. Using the celebrity humanitarian Bono and his rhetoric of ‘factivism’ as an illustrative example, the paper explores the way that this message is transmitted through geosocial discourses and networks. It indicates some of the ways that the personal and media dissemination of this new ideology of charismatic, yet rational care helps to weave pastoral rationalities into forms of political authority. Introduction In a 2013 TED talk, the U2 rock star and celebrity humanitarian, Bono, introduced a new word to his audience: ‘factivism’. As a mash-up of ‘fact’ and ‘activism’ the word heralded a type of contemporary humanitarianism blending evidence-based practices with passionate commitment and advocacy for a cause. It also indicated Bono’s recent conversion to the hard-edged power of transparency and accountability in his decades-old fight to eradicate poverty and ill health in Africa.1 This particular TED talk, and the dissemination and reception of its ideas, is illustrative of a number of critical shifts in contemporary forms of humanitarian reason. The newly coined word exemplifies the ways in which a neoliberal logic sustained by the ‘rationality’ of facts and quantitative data (a hard-edged accountability logic used in the measurement of social value) is articulated with a more activist emotional responsiveness – the latter connected with an implicitly Christian and pastoral sensibility of individual compassion, devotion and duty. The emergence and diffusion of this unusual and highly effective CONTACT Katharyne Mitchell [email protected] Smith Hall, Box 353550, Seattle, WA 98195, USA. © 2016 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC Department of Geography, University of Washington, 2 K. MITCHELL configuration occurs through the nexus of elite social networking and the global propagation of these ideas primarily through the internet and new social media. I argue that this novel articulation manifests a complex contemporary domain of power in humanitarian governance, one involving liberal, neoliberal, and pastoral rationalities. By liberal rationalities I am referring to understandings that the preferred management of society is one in which a balanced and selfgoverning system is perceived as natural, harmonious, and pre-existing, and that the role of the state is to help secure this system, but otherwise avoid “governing too much”.2 In this framing government acts on the relations between people and between people and things, helping to develop forms of expert knowledge that can aid in the regulation and management of the processes associated with population; it helps shape the character and lives of individuals in terms of their capacity for human capital development and their pursuit of various goals.3 State actions in excess of this are critiqued as forms of excessive government. A neoliberal rationality of government maintains much of these emphases but is more directly concerned with individual economic calculus and with a universal assumption that human beings are inherently entrepreneurial and choice-making economic beings. In this framing expert knowledge must be provided through various forms of information and precise qualitative and quantitative evidence so that the figure of homo economicus can make accurate cost benefit calculations (so that he/she can, and indeed must, choose wisely). Li writes of this culture of measurement and accountability: “Hence neoliberal governing consists in setting conditions and devising incentives so that prudent, calculating individuals and communities choosing ‘freely’ and pursuing their own interests will contribute to the general interest as well.”4 In contrast with these cold, competitive and abstracted logics of governing ‘from a distance’, pastoral power is characterised as a more direct and fundamentally social relation between the shepherd and his flock. In this we can see the importance of the close, charismatic nature of the pastor in guiding the flock and having them willing to follow. “Foucault illustrates a model of power, then, in which there is a complex (and thoroughly affective) tie between the pastor who exercises a minute and careful jurisdiction over the bodily actions and the souls of his flock in order to assure their salvation, and the members of the flock who each owe him ‘a kind of exhaustive, total, and permanent relationship of individual obedience.’”5 My interest here is in how the current configuration, one that combines elements of all of these rationalities of government, manifests a new formation of humanitarian reason. But first we need to ask, what is the larger framework in which this current configuration can be conceptualised? This particular formation is part of a much larger moral economy of aid and development, a system of governance that some have argued is central to modern liberal forms of power.6 Research in this arena investigates how Western imagining and depictions of suffering, disease, and poverty – and associated liberal forms of care, aid, and GEOPOLITICS 3 development – are inextricably linked with the constitution of a liberal politics and the expansion of liberal forms of security. These are, in turn, directly or indirectly connected with Western imperial interests in capital accumulation and the formation of a specific global order. In this paper I am drawing on this prior research to develop some new theoretical concepts in the field of humanitarian governance – namely the emergence of a new or reconfigured domain of power. Moreover, I ground these abstract notions by illustrating some of the particular actors and specific webs of belief through which these rationalities are emerging – a process wherein the social messages of pastoral power are being both generated and disseminated through geosocial discourses and networks. New Forms of Humanitarian Governance and the Geosocial Critical humanitarian scholars have shown how Western-based humanitarianism and the logic and reasoning behind it has shifted over time depending on context: e.g., the factors associated with state development and market expansion in different historical eras.7 With respect to state development, humanitarianism, and the various rationales behind aid-related investment and care, is clearly connected to the broad geopolitics of territory and empire and their transformations over the past centuries. At the same time, humanitarian reason also develops in relation to the growth and development of capitalism and the expansion of globalisation – the geoeconomics of connection, development and aid. These two geostrategic discourses have been intertwined in complex ways for well over a century, with different logics of territory and capital arising in different political economic contexts.8 As Sparke and Essex have both noted, the most critical element to investigate in these twinned global narratives and practices is not their chronological transition from one to the other; rather, the more interesting question is that of context: the particular ways in which geostrategic rationales may be co-generative in different historical and geographical milieus.9 My argument here is that the co-generative conditions of early twenty-firstcentury geoeconomic and geopolitical formations are strengthening the power and importance of what we might term the geosocial. By this word I mean something that is similarly territorialising and global in scope, but also personal and emotional – a form of micro power that is more geo-tactical than geostrategic, involving specific socially networked actors and the experience and manipulation of affective, charismatic relations across space. Bono’s wildly popular TED talk is a good example of this type of geosocial discursive practice and its spreading influence worldwide.10 What are the political and economic conditions in which this type of geotactical discourse has become so salient and pervasive? The emergence of this particular humanitarian vision and message at this historical juncture is part of a larger logic of humanitarianism in the context of post–Cold War geopolitics and 4 K. MITCHELL the perceived market failures of the so-called Washington Consensus. As ReidHenry notes, the end of the Cold War created a power vacuum in which national forms of military intervention and human rights began to converge in many parts of the world into a contemporary form of ‘humanitarian war’.11 At the same time, the worse effects of neoliberal regimes of privatisation and austerity were becoming increasingly evident vis-à-vis both their disastrous effects on the poor and in the multiple forms of resistance they were engendering worldwide – including the Seattle-based anti-WTO protests of 1999.12 I contend that these specific historical and geographical processes have galvanised the advance of more modulated or ‘compensatory’ liberal articulations of post-national, market-based development and care.13 These compensatory configurations blend neoliberal ideologies of efficiency, evidence, and return on investment with the anti-state, human capital logic of liberalism, alongside pastoral rationalities of individual value, charismatic care, and Christian duty. Moreover they do so in a manner that indicates a much stronger interest in social relationships that foreground individualising forms of care and duty at a global or post-national scale. They thus remain firmly entrenched within a (newly configured) market rationale, but operating above and beyond a state-based rhetoric of interventionism. It is a form of market foster care in the context of a liberal, postnation-state milieu. Bono’s humanitarian message of factivism and the workings of liberal philanthropic foundations such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) are examples of these types of contemporary configurations. The BMGF manifests some of the new, highly managed partnerships that have been developing in the twenty-first century between philanthropy, business and, in some cases, the state.14 These types of partnerships demonstrate the emergence of socially modulated efforts to contain and manage the violence of the state and the market through new technologies of biopolitical government. Included among these new technologies and mechanisms are what I term here the humanitarian geosocial. Geosocial care discourses are personal and intimate, but simultaneously deeply political and calculative; they go beyond emotional investments in particular geostrategic ideals and visions by helping to reconstitute international relations and practices on the model of interpersonal relations.15 Thus, as I show below, Bono’s universalising message of factivism is effective at the level of both private emotion and public sentiment. It is important to investigate because both the talk and its popular public and political reception indicate some of the ways that the vast media dissemination of this new ideology of charismatic, yet rational care helps to weave pastoral rationalities into forms of political authority.16 The importance of studying the politics of interpersonal relations and ‘geopolitical intimacy’ such as this embraces and builds on over a decade of work seeking to bridge feminist geography and geopolitics.17 It recasts abstracted and often vacuous ideas of global economic formations and GEOPOLITICS 5 geopolitical relationships into the figure of embodied social actors operating in identifiable geosocial formations with ideas and technologies embracing the power of social (or in this case pastoral) relations. Thus, studies of the geosocial necessitate examining not just the specific actors and interpersonal relations shaping the fields of action, but also the various emotions and affective technologies that are employed by them.18 A key method involved in these types of studies is the analysis of texts, images, and verbal encounters. Analysis of this type aids in the interpretation of the multiple ways that human subjectivity and relationality is produced through discursive interactions; it enables us to see how texts and talk are imbricated in forms of power through which subjects are both enabled and constrained in their ways of thinking, feeling, and acting.19 Considering the development of humanitarian reason in terms of individual affect and interpersonal communication and relations helps to direct our attention to how power is socially deployed. The intersection of diverse forms of power is implicated in the different ways that people think, feel, interact socially, conceptualise and practise moral trusteeship, and posit the most efficient way of providing hospitality, care, and the improvement of others.20 For example, the political rationalities of humanitarian reason might involve religious feelings of individual duty and compassion alongside a general interest in the development of populations, as well as abstract concerns about efficiency and freedom – all of these sustaining a larger moral economy of care. As Foucault has remarked, these modes of thought and feeling may be linked in “complex edifices” that are actively created and responded to by individual actors – thus once again reshaping the terrain of action and belief.21 In order to understand these critical contemporary formations and reformations we need to think of pastoral, liberal, and neoliberal rationalities not as leading in a particular direction – a teleology of rationalisation – but in articulations that may join up pre-modern or early modern webs of belief or technologies of governing.22 In so doing, however, it is important to understand these articulations as specific to the historical and geographic circumstances that have conditioned their emergence and which are generative of historical change. We can then analyse how and why a specific domain operates in the current moment as a highly contingent form of liberal governance across space. As noted above, the current nexus has emerged in the context of twenty-first-century military interventionism and neoliberal market failure. Efforts at market resuscitation are made via a widening array of philanthropic partners – including foundations, businesses, and the state, as well as for-profit and non-profit entities of various kinds. Moreover, this growing nexus of market foster care collaborators further constitutes and enlists individual celebrities, fans, politicians, donors, and recipients in a geosocial moral economy of pastoral care, security, development, and self-improvement that is often boldly post-political. 6 K. MITCHELL In what follows I investigate how one particular constellation of power – a topology of metrics and activist empathy – works as a form of humanitarian reason that transcends local and national scales and operates to nudge actors in specifically market-oriented, state-vigilant directions. The term factivism is a good metonym for this constellation and provides the illustrative underpinning for my investigation. In the past few years Bono has become a factivist evangelist – joining forces with other evidence-based promoters of humanitarian investment such as Bill Gates, but adding his own particular investments in empathy, duty, and charismatic care to the global cause of humanitarian aid. An investigation of Bono’s activities, rhetoric, and relationships in the factivist cause provides a good example of the social channels through which these recombined and redeployed rationales flow and converge across distance. In this paper I show how this geosocial realm facilitates the articulation of (warm) pastoral rationalities alongside (chilly) neoliberal rationalities of calculation and accountability in a complex domain of contemporary power, one that is currently shaping how humanitarianism is conceptualised and conducted worldwide.23 Topologies of Power A topological analysis is one “that examines how existing techniques and technologies of power are re-deployed and recombined in diverse assemblies of biopolitical government.”24 As Collier notes, this approach relies on a reading of Foucault’s later work that emphasises the heterogeneous articulation of elements that are brought together, rather than a form of regulatory power that targets and optimises control of populations. In other words, there is no single logic, trajectory, or necessary link between different forms of power such as one leading from sovereignty to discipline to biopolitics; rather, contemporary configurations may manifest elements of some or all of these, in unique patterns and combinations.25 There are two features of this approach that are useful for an analysis of Bono and contemporary formations of humanitarian reason. The first is in the openness to diverse elements brought together or recombined in a topological space that is organised and coherent but not linear or pre-determined; this enables a reading of factivism as something shaped by the simultaneous existence of co-existing rationalities. The second way in which this analytical lens is useful is in the foregrounding of the work of actors and of thinking in the formation of new power configurations. Collier writes, In this view, thinking is not bound by a knowledge-power regime; it should not be analyzed, as Foucault argued in a late interview, as a ‘formal system that has reference only to itself’ (Foucault, 1984: 388). Rather, it is an activity that involves a ‘degree of constraint as well as a degree of freedom’, that makes possible a certain critical distance from existing ways of understanding and acting. In sum, the space GEOPOLITICS 7 of problematization is a topological space, and thinking is a driver of recombinatorial processes.26 This emphasis on the importance of actors and thinking in relation to contemporary problems is critical in understanding how geosocial tactics and webs of belief can form, travel, and influence political economic processes – such as policies on social impact investment or the best, most efficient, and most ‘moral’ ways of engaging with poverty worldwide. For example, Bono, alongside Gates, Cameron, Merkel, GAVI, and other contemporary actors and entities engage with and problematise contemporary market ‘failure’ in the context of Washington Consensus–led systems of austerity and dispossession worldwide – at the same time helping to redirect interest in recombined and redeployed ‘solutions’ to these problems. These solutions involve liberal rationalities of human capital development, neoliberal techniques of efficiency and accountability, and highly individualising, often faith-based forms of pastoral power. In almost all cases, the desired outcomes to which donors and recipients are directed are market-based.27 Similar to Foucault’s depiction of the Physiocrats in the 1978 and 1979 lectures, these contemporary humanitarians and politicians are actively engaged in reformulating and recombining these elements – reacting to and operating within the context of the crises, constraints, and perceived opportunities of the new millennium.28 The promotion of metrics and accountability measures displayed in the ‘fact’ segment of factivism, are elements of neoliberal governmentality that have been documented in as diverse realms as insurance, policing, education, and health.29 The actuarial logic evident in these technologies relates to the statistical calculations employed in measuring bios, e.g., life expectancy, fertility, quality of life, life course management and development, etc. These types of metrics are now being brought to bear on the fruits of philanthropy itself, i.e., on the social value that is incurred as a result of charitable interventions. In order to make a return on a charitable investment, social progress must be measured and measurable. As Prime Minister David Cameron said in an introductory speech to the G8 Social Impact Investment Forum in London in 2013, “It is not enough just to incentivise social investments. We need a robust way of measuring their value and in doing so connecting businesses that deliver social and environmental value with investors seeking both a social and a financial return.”30 Thus, the evidence-based aspect of factivism manifests some of the cold logic of counting, measuring, documenting, and assessing – even in diffuse, hard-toquantify realms such as the quality of foster parenting or the effectiveness of prison reading programmes. These practices are emblematic of the broader turn to ROI (return on investment) philanthropy, which is based on business language and practices, and where assumptions about market freedoms and efficiencies are naturalised and largely undisputed. As Bill Gates remarked in 2008, “Naturally, if companies are going to get more involved, they need to earn some 8 K. MITCHELL kind of return. This is the heart of creative capitalism. It’s not just about doing more corporate philanthropy or asking companies to be more virtuous. It’s about giving them a real incentive to apply their expertise in new ways, making it possible to earn a return while serving the public who have been left out.”31 This market-oriented aspect of ROI philanthropy, or what some have called venture philanthropy or philanthro-capitalism, is now well documented in the literature.32 What I am interested in here is the way in which this hard neoliberal logic and its associated technologies of responsibility and accountability, is tempered, augmented, and reconfigured in contemporary humanitarianism by other rationalities such as pastoralism. While focused on care and consent, pastoral power precedes and is distinct from biopolitics as a regime of care (of making live), as it is individualising and faith-based, drawing on the care and devotion for each sheep in the flock and of the flock to the shepherd, rather than on the more generalising responsibility towards and responsibilisation of the population as a whole. At the same time, pastoralism is not a form of sovereignty or discipline; the shepherd wields power over a flock of individuals rather than over land or territory, and does so through constant kindness and watchfulness rather than through coercion or sovereign power. Moreover, unlike systems grounded in law, the central, indispensable role of the shepherd is key, as he gathers together dispersed individuals and keeps them together; the shepherd has only to disappear for the flock to be scattered. Foucault writes of this critical, highly centralised position: The shepherd’s immediate presence and direct action cause the flock to exist…. The shepherd’s role is to ensure the salvation of his flock. It’s not only a matter of saving them all, all together, when danger comes nigh. It’s a matter of constant, individualised, and final kindness…. And individualised kindness, too, for the shepherd sees that all the sheep, each and every one of them, is fed and saved.”33 Among other themes explored by Foucault, a key one is the obvious Christian ties and symbolism of this form of power: the moral ties that bind each to each, the personal submission of individuals to the shepherd, the rendering of accounts necessary for salvation, the necessity of mechanisms of self-examination and conscience, of opening up and submitting.34 He also notes the paradoxical relationship of pastoralism with violence, as well as with modern political and legal systems. It is this paradoxical parallelism that is of most interest here: the topologies of power that redeploy medieval rationalities of retributive violence alongside modern legal frameworks and political programmes, themselves juxtaposed with “a power we can call ‘pastoral’, whose role is to constantly ensure, sustain, and improve the lives of each and every one.”35 Bono’s centrality as a celebrity humanitarian, guiding his fans and followers into relationships of devotion and responsibility to himself, to each GEOPOLITICS 9 other, and to the poor in Africa shares many features of the shepherd-flock relationship. One of the key tropes that frequently emerges when he plays a humanitarian role is his depiction as a messiah figure, a modern-day Jesus who has returned from rock stardom to spread the word about humanitarian compassion and duty.36 In his many calls to action, in talks, interviews, and on websites, Bono embraces Christian symbolism and messages of spirituality, while simultaneously downplaying any formal religious component to his actions. At the same time, he acknowledges the basis for the Jesus comparison, speaking of himself wryly as a “jumped-up Jesus” with a “messiah complex” in his TED talk. In several public engagements Bono uses different measures of emotion and intimacy to draw in his audience and create the mechanisms for both openness and submission.37 Magubane has noted how his references to his underdog Irish ancestry and to his working-class roots give him an intimate point of connection with many of his fans, one that simultaneously enables him to sidestep contemporary issues and criticisms such as his own remarkable wealth, tax evasions, and potentially patronising attitude in seeking to help Africa and Africans as a wealthy white man.38 Duvall and Chouliaraki have also indicated that personal language and intimate gestures (such as Bono often uses in his expressions of emotion, religious faith, and passionate care), can give an aura of authenticity to celebrities like Bono, something that is critical in building strong fan connections over time.39 These forms of intimacy and individual connection create and sustain the feelings of shepherd and flock, thus nourishing the pastoral rationalities that are an integral aspect of Bono’s humanitarian reason. At the same time, Bono’s humanitarianism is firmly articulated with multiple forms of political power and legal frameworks associated with the rationalities of liberal state governance. These involve the freedoms and responsibilities of human development and accountability at all scales. It is this architecture of power, both individualising and totalising, and involving redeployed elements of the “pastoral game” and the “city-citizen game” in a post-colonial context of violence and hierarchy, that make up the contingent configurations of humanitarianism I illustrate below. Factivism: The New Humanitarian Reason So I’m here to – I guess we’re here to try and infect you with this virtuous, databased virus, the one we call factivism. It’s not going to kill you. In fact, it could save countless lives. I guess we in the One campaign would love you to be contagious, spread it, share it, pass it on. By doing so, you will join us and countless others in what I truly believe is the greatest adventure ever taken, the ever-demanding journey of equality. Could we really be the great generation that Mandela asked us to be? Might we answer that clarion call with science, with reason, with facts, and, dare I say it, emotions?40 10 K. MITCHELL In this short segment of his TED talk Bono addresses his audience (now at 1.5 million) in familiar language as ‘you’, at the same time that he introduces the desired result of infecting you – his audience – with the virus of factivism. This virus joins science with reason, facts, and emotions, and has the excitingly contagious possibility of leading those so infected into the “greatest adventure ever taken.” In this speech it is possible to hear the emphasis on reason, which is equated with facts and science, as well as the passionate call to witnessing and to account of the shepherd-preacher, who seeks to guide or rather ‘infect’ his flock with the invocation to duty and action. In a great irony, this same metaphor of virus, disease, and infection is inverted when Bono speaks later of corruption. In this part of the talk Bono is concerned with the political biases and economic problems of crony capitalism and corrupt governments. These problems are also narrated as a kind of infection, this one negative, which he indicates is most likely to be found in countries such as Uganda. Fortunately, however, the solution to this form of infection is facts, “open data sets,” and transparency in communication and government. Thus, the (mainly white, upper-class) audience members of his TED talk must be infected with factivism in order to fight the infection of corruption in (largely black, poor) places such as Uganda. He says, And right now, we know that the biggest disease of all is not a disease. It’s corruption. But there’s a vaccine for that too. It’s called transparency, open data sets…. So let me tell you about the U-report, which I’m really excited about. It’s 150,000 millennials all across Uganda, young people armed with 2G phones, an SMS social network exposing government corruption and demanding to know what’s in the budget and how their money is being spent. This is exciting stuff.41 Once again borrowing from the language of sickness and disease, it is transparency and open data sets that are literally vaccinating the young millennials against the corruption assumed to be endemic in non-Western governments. Here, efficient and modern forms of humanitarian governance reach across national borders to touch individuals, arm them with technology, and inoculate them against horizontal (state-based) systems of social organising. Bono indicates further that this approach will be victorious because it is inherently apolitical – outside the formal systems of government. “We are going to win,” he says, “because we don’t play politics…” He goes on to sing the praises of neutral groups of individuals acting as ‘people’ rather than in an institutionalised capacity, i.e., in positions of political power: “The power of the people is much stronger than the people in power…” In these statements the criticism of corruption and the general disdain for the government of Uganda morphs into a more general critique of statebased forms of politics and governance. Politics is presented as something GEOPOLITICS 11 inherently pejorative: “we don’t play politics”, in contrast with a more amorphous conceptualisation of “the power of the people”. This postpolitical ‘power’ is shared amongst the flock of believers who are bound to the pastor in their mutual understandings of obedience, duty, and individual care – a form of care that stretches out and beyond the confines of nationstates. Factivism thus effectively links both highly individualised pastoral rationalities of the shepherd-guide and his flock of obedient and devoted believers, with evidence-oriented, efficient and prudential rationalities of neoliberal governance across distance. Moreover, factivist followers are exhorted to get infected (with the right kind of virus), become contagious, and then spread across the world to areas where the wrong kinds of disease and infection are predominant. These are the diseases of undeveloped areas of the globe, where there is a perceived lack of transparency and a dearth of evidence or ‘facts’ to draw on in cost-benefit calculations; in these types of areas development aid cannot take root efficiently and thus cannot create either a social or financial return. Bono’s talk illustrates the contemporary convergence of biopolitical and pastoral rationalities in a post-colonial context with strong racial legacies and overtones. This type of message and the related practices of social impact investment and social entrepreneurialism in these regions have proliferated rapidly over the past few years. How do these particular webs of belief – these factivist ideas about social investment, human value, and poverty assistance become common sense and travel so widely and so quickly? In the following section I illustrate a few of the many ways that these rationalities are deployed and travel transnationally through various kinds of geosocial networks. These types of affective networks can be both elite and banal; they can involve, for example, social networking at Davos between billionaires and politicians and simple interactions on a TED talk listserv. Geosocial Networks and Webs of Belief: Spreading the Good News (Virus) Bono’s conversion to factivism came partly as a result of his budding relationship with Bill Gates, a strong promoter of evidence-based philanthropy. In philanthropic circles, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) is generally recognised as the driver of many new ideas and practices as a result of its size and global reach.42 In 2012, the year before Bono’s TED talk, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (founded by BMGF in 2002), initiated a new strategy of funding called “Investing for Impact.” As outlined on the fund’s website, the new strategy is based on a stronger effort to invest strategically “in areas with high potential for impact and strong value for money.”43 The shift shows an increased interest in deriving maximum social 12 K. MITCHELL and economic returns. The combined emphasis on evidence, efficiency, and ROI is one that BMGF has embraced in other charitable venues as well, with Gates himself writing and speaking of the importance of harnessing the power of capitalism, drawing on technology and expertise, and deriving ‘value for money’ as important elements of humanitarian aid.44 The foundational logic and associated technologies here are a belief in the superior freedoms and efficiencies of the market – for both social aid delivery and human capital development. Bono’s relationship with Gates was evident at the TED talk, where Gates tweeted “I’m in!” and in a joint interview of the men at the Forbes 400 Summit on Philanthropy in June 2013. At this meeting Gates and Bono were joined by 150 other billionaires, multi-millionaires and social entrepreneurs to share ideas on the so-called best practices vis-à-vis tackling extreme poverty. Noting the importance of the BMGF in sharing and disseminating these ideas, Bono said, “I couldn’t do anything that I do without the Gates Foundation. We couldn’t move, neither ONE nor (RED).” Their mutual influence, including Bono’s conversion to metrics, also came through in another quote, after he was designated a new numbers geek by the media: “That’s just me pretending to be Bill. I’m Irish, we do emotion very well. You’re just experiencing some of it, and it can go on and on and on. I’ve learned just to be an evidence-based activist. Cut through the crap. Find out what works. Find out what doesn’t work.”45 The G8 Social Impact Investment Forum, at which David Cameron spoke about the necessity of incentivising and measuring social investment, was held just one day after this Forbes Summit, held in New York City. Both meetings showcased individuals, primarily men, with unparalleled wealth and a broad humanitarian impulse to improve the existing state of global society. At the London Forum, financier and philanthropist George Soros spoke about the great potential of social impact bonds to unleash new forms of socially oriented entrepreneurialism; at the Forbes Summit a similar message was disseminated.46 By the end of December 2013, a number of initiatives had been launched in this vein, including the US-based Social Impact Investment Taskforce, the Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN), the Global Health Investment Fund (GHIF), and the Global Learning Exchange on Social Impact Investing (GLE), at the World Economic Forum.47 At the January meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, 2014, both Bono and Cameron were invited to a panel on new millennium development goals where they spoke about global care and emotional investment and also took the opportunity to warn about corruption and the necessity for political and economic transparency worldwide.48 In his global peregrinations, Bono has met with many other heads of state, business and NGO leaders, members of parliament and congress, humanitarians, and activists. In many of these encounters his emotive energy, passion, and charisma are recognised as highly effective in winning over GEOPOLITICS 13 ‘converts’ to his various causes.49 These types of geosocial connections and institutional networks give some indication of the grand boulevards through which geostrategic discourses travel, but it is equally important to investigate some of the more mundane avenues and passageways that link up message disseminators, conduits, and receivers, and the ways in which they are often mutually constitutive. One of these pathways can be seen in the manifold interactions with Bono’s TED talk. Bono’s 2013 talk, watched by 1,516,193 viewers as of September, 2015, produced thousands of responses in the form of direct comments, comments on the reactions of others, and interview responses.50 Mostly positive, these interactions convey the general captivation and engagement of both the emotional call to action from someone perceived as a strong and caring leader or ‘shepherd’, as well as the recognition of the need to be aware of corruption, and the importance of facts and transparency in combating poverty in developing countries. The Nigerian commentator Ogor Winnie Okoye (with 4,903 followers), wrote, for example, What a brilliant message by Bono! A must watch for everyone especially my Nigerian brothers and sisters! He said the biggest disease in the world is corruption! Hear him; ‘We are going to win because the power of the people is “much” stronger than the people in power’ {emphasis is mine} Amen! This comment was followed by three interactive comments: “Biggest disease IS corruption!…;” “People are awesome. There’s no doubt in my mind that the power of connecting everyday people will define the next generation of poverty alleviation;” “…It takes people getting active and vocal. If you can’t do anything else at least SPREAD THE WORD!!”51 In addition to the individualising call to action and sense of people power that is evident here (as well as the Christian references), it is clear that Bono’s message about corruption in African countries is also heard, repeated, and emphasised by many. These themes are reiterated in numerous other comments, such as that of Roberto Agosto on 18 March 2013, who wrote in direct reaction to the metaphor of virus in the talk, “Go Bono! I believe it is possible. Let’s start the vaccinations against corruption, inertia and bad governance.” In a similar response, Barry McMahon (14 March 2013), picked up on the factivist insistence on science and the application of reason and facts as critical in the struggle to end poverty: “This is great news! The One organization has been working toward ending AIDS and eliminating poverty through applied methods that actually work.” Eileen Peterson’s (14 March 2013) response displayed both the absorption of the message of effectiveness and things that work, alongside the strong emotive relationship with Bono: “I think I’m in love… ‘Answer the clarion call’ with economic systems that WORK and are effective and honest win-win ~~ not with 14 K. MITCHELL constant charity, but with ALL doing their part. It begins with awareness and education. Wake UP, folks!” Bono’s charisma and devotion links individuals to himself, to each other, and to those in need of care and help ‘over there.’ The factivist message resounds and is amplified by those (1.5 million) who watched the talk and/or are global members of ONE (6.9 million) or are in numerous other ways connected to U2/Bono and their respective causes.52 Bono and his linked organisations and intermediaries become the connectors that enable transnational care connections for beneficiaries. They generate ideas and help to transmit webs of belief about modern neoliberal systems of targeted efficiency and accountability (open data sets, 2G phones) along with liberal beliefs in human capital development, and pastoral rationalities of faith, devotion, individualising care, and global community. Conclusion In this paper I investigated the discourse of ‘factivism’ as an example of a new configuration of humanitarian reason. This particular formation blends the calculative rationalities of neoliberalism and the intimate connections of pastoralism in new topologies of biopolitical power. I argued that this type of configuration is growing rapidly as a common sense approach to aiding and developing poor and underserved populations worldwide. It is manifested in increasingly popular political programmes of social impact investment, social impact bonds, and social entrepreneurialism. These developments manifest the emergence of a third co-generative force in the discursive geostrategic production of international political economy writ large. This is the force of the geosocial, a form of micro power that operates through affective relations and webs of belief that travel through global social conduits. Geosocial discourses such as factivism are tactical interventions in security, and articulate with more macro forms of humanitarian biopolitical governance. In the case of Bono these discourses flow and take purchase through strong affective relations of empathy and care. The charismatic shepherd, the message, and the wider global flock itself are constituted through these pastoral forms of power and simultaneously serve as the conduits through which the factivist message expands outward and is woven into forms of geopolitical authority and policy. Like the Physiocrats identified by Foucault, individual thinkers such as Bono, Gates, and other celebrity humanitarians and elite politicians seek to work through the problems that are specific to their time and place. This time and place is one where the limitations and failures of addressing chronic ill health and poverty through military humanitarian interventions and unfettered market dominance have become evident, even to many market proponents. Elite responses to these problems are manifold, but in this paper GEOPOLITICS 15 I identified the actions, reactions, and social connections of some key actors, arguing that the broader discursive field of humanitarian reason is shifting, in part, because of the interpersonal relations and geo-tactical strategies of these dominant players. While the perceived failed set of market norms of high neoliberalism are implicitly critiqued in this vision, they are nevertheless replaced with new market norms that are post-political, and which draw on anti-state notions of intrinsic corruption and corruptibility, individual duty, and pastoral care. One can point, for example to the World Economic Forum at Davos in 2013, where panels seeking to address the end of poverty with factivist-style futures lead with titles such as, “Catalyzing markets through philanthropy”, and “Turning transparency into growth: how can anti-corruption become a core element of a company’s growth strategy?”53 Moreover, investigating how these types of messages are received leads to the literally thousands of comments by passionate advocates for the poor and ill, who respond to the factivist message by critiquing corruption and offering technical or marketstyle solutions, rather than addressing poverty and inequality as relationally produced and maintained in laissez-faire capitalist systems. Bono’s TED talk appears neutral – from its ahistorical references to poverty as a global condition, to its generalising call to care, to its technological fixes. But factivism illustrates a type of anti-politics machine that is, in fact, deeply political. The depoliticising effects of the pastoral and technological messaging coupled with the ROI logic of social impact investment manifest both the neoliberal market orientation of this particular configuration of humanitarian reason and the anti-state legacy of liberalism. In this respect, it is a geosocial discourse as powerful and effective as those emerging from any political or economic venue, from 10 Downing Street to Wall Street to Davos. Acknowledgements With thanks to Matthew Sparke and Kirsi Kallio for helpful comments on earlier drafts of the paper. Notes 1. Bono, ‘The Good News on Poverty (Yes, There’s Good News)’, TED2013, available at <http://www.ted.com/talks/bono_the_good_news_on_poverty_yes_there_s_good_n ews?language=en>, accessed 1 Sep. 2015. 2. N. Rose, P. O’Malley, and M. Valverde, ‘Governmentality’, Annu. Rev. Law Soc. Sci. 2 (2006) p. 84. 3. Ibid., p. 87. 4. T. Li, ‘Fixing Non-Market Subjects: Governing Land and Population in the Global South’, Foucault Studies 18 (2014) p. 37. 16 K. MITCHELL 5. B. Golder, ‘Foucault and the Genealogy of Pastoral Power’, Radical Philosophy Review 10/2 (2007) p. 167. 6. M. Duffield, ‘The Liberal Way of Development and the Development-Security Impasse: Exploring the Global Life-Chance Divide’, Security Dialogue 41 (2011) pp. 53–76; S. Reid-Henry, ‘Humanitarianism as Liberal Diagnostic: Humanitarian Reason and the Political Rationalities of the Liberal Will-To-Care’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 39 (2014) pp. 418–431; D. Fassin, Humanitarian Reason: A Moral History of the Present (Berkeley: University of California Press 2012); I. Hay and S. Muller, ‘Questioning Generosity in The Golden Age of Philanthropy: Towards Critical Geographies of Super-Philanthropy’, Progress in Human Geography 38/5 (2014) pp. 635–653. 7. See, e.g., S. Reid-Henry, ‘Humanitarianism as Liberal Diagnostic’. 8. D. Harvey, The New Imperialism (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2003). 9. M. Sparke, ‘Geopolitical Fears, Geoeconomic Hopes, and the Responsibilities of Geography’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers 97/2 (2007) pp. 338–349; J. Essex, Development, Security and Aid: Geopolitics and Geoeconomics at the U.S. Agency for International Development (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press 2013); M. Sparke, review of J. Essex, in Dialogues in Human Geography, 6/1 (2016) pp. 95–98. 10. See also K. Mitchell, ‘Celebrity Humanitarianism, Transnational Emotion, and the Rise of Neoliberal Citizenship’, Global Networks 16/3 (2016); I. Kapoor, Celebrity Humanitarianism: The Ideology of Global Charity (New York: Routledge 2013); J. Wilson, ‘Stardom, Sentimental Education, and the Shaping of Global Citizens’, Cinema Journal 53/2 (2014) pp. 27–49; L. Chouliaraki, ‘The Theatricality of Humanitarianism: A Critique of Celebrity Advocacy’, Communication and Critical/ Cultural Studies 9/1 (2012) pp. 1–21. 11. S. Reid-Henry, ‘Genealogies of Liberal Violence: Human Rights, State Violence, and the Police’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 33 (2015) pp. 626–641. According to Reid-Henry a good example of this type of historical convergence was the ‘Responsibility to Protect’ doctrine evident in humanitarian interventions in places such as Bosnia. 12. D. Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2005). 13. See also K. Mitchell and M. Sparke, ‘The New Washington Consensus: Millennial Philanthropy and the Making of Global Market Subjects’, Antipode 48/3 (2016) pp. 724–749. 14. There are a number of studies of these types of partnerships, particularly in the fields of health and education. See, e.g., research by K. Storeng, ‘The GAVI Alliance and the ‘Gates Approach’ to Health System Strengthening’, Global Public Health 9/8 (2014) pp. 865–879; and work on education by K. Saltman, The Gift of Education: Public Education and Venture Philanthropy (New York: Palgrave Macmillan 2010). 15. J. Mercer, ‘Feeling like a State: Social Emotion and Identity’, International Theory 6/3 (2014) pp. 515–535. 16. Cf. I. Kapoor, Celebrity Humanitarianism: The Ideology of Global Charity (New York: Routledge 2013). 17. See, e.g., J. Hyndman, ‘Towards a Feminist Geopolitics’, The Canadian Geographer 45/2 (2001) pp. 210–222; L. Dowler and J. Sharp, ‘A Feminist Geopolitics?’, Space and Polity 5/3 (2001) pp. 165–176; J. Hyndman, ‘Mind the Gap: Bridging Feminist and Political Geography through Geopolitics’, Political Geography 23 (2004) pp. 307–322; A. Mountz, ‘Introduction: Reconceptualizing the State from the Margins of Political Geography’, Political Geography 23 (2004) pp. 241–243; see also the special section GEOPOLITICS 18. 19 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 17 on feminist geopolitics introduced in J. Williams and V. Massaro, ‘Feminist Geopolitics: Unpacking (In) Security, Animating Social Change’, Geopolitics 18/4 (2013) pp. 751–758. C. Pedwell, Affective Relations: The Transnational Politics of Empathy (New York: Palgrave Macmillan 2014); E. Hutchison and R. Bleiker, ‘Theorizing Emotions in World Politics’, International Theory 6/3 (2014) pp. 491–514; E. Hutchison and R. Bleiker, ‘Emotions in the War on Terror’, in A. Bellamy, R. Bleiker, S. Davies, and R. Devetak (eds.), Security and the War on Terror (London: Routledge 2008) pp. 57–70. G. Rose, Visual Methodologies: An Introduction to the Interpretation of Visual Materials (London: Sage 2001). L. Dowler, ‘Waging Hospitality: Feminist Geopolitics and Tourism in West Belfast Northern Ireland’, Geopolitics 18/4 (2013) pp. 759–778; T. Li, ‘Fixing Non-market Subjects: Governing Land and Population in the Global South’, Foucault Studies 18 (2014) pp. 34–48. M. Foucault, Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the Collège de France, 19771978 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan 2007) p. 8 For a great, in-depth examination of some of these recombinatorial processes as they play out in the sanctuary movement, see the ethnographic study by R. Lippert, Sanctuary, Sovereignty, Sacrifice: Canadian Sanctuary Incidents, Power, and Law (Vancouver: UBC Press 2005). In his lectures published in The Birth of Biopolitics Foucault also uses the language of warm (moral and cultural values) and cold (impassive, calculating and rational forms of competition) to describe the ways in which proponents of ordoliberalism seek to make these ‘new’ liberal rationalities palatable to society; see M. Foucault, The Birth of Biopolitics: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1978-1979 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan 2008) pp. 242–243. S. Collier, ‘Topologies of Power: Foucault’s Analysis of Political Government beyond Governmentality’, Theory, Culture and Society 26/6 (2009) p. 79. Ibid. Ibid., pp. 95–96. Mitchell and Sparke (note 13). M. Foucault, Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the Collège de France, 19771978 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan 2007); M. Foucault, The Birth of Biopolitics: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1978-1979 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan 2008). See, e.g., J. Donzelot, The Policing of Families (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press 1997); R. Lippert, ‘Neo-liberalism, Police, and the Governance of Little Urban Things’, Foucault Studies 18 (2014) pp. 49–65; T. Popkewitz, Cosmopolitanism and the Age of School Reform: Science, Education, and Making Society by Making the Child (New York: Routledge 2008); the essays in G. Burchell, C. Gordon, and P. Miller (eds.), The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality (Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1991). Prime Minister David Cameron: Social Investment Can Be a Great Force for Social Change’, Gov.UK, 6 June 2013), available at <https://www.gov.uk/government/ speeches/prime-ministers-speech-at-the-social-impact-investment-conference>, accessed 25 Sep. 2014 (italics mine). B. Kiviat and B. Gates, ‘Making Capitalism More Creative’, Time Magazine, 31 July 2008, pp. 29–30 (italics mine). See, e.g., I. Hay and S. Muller, ‘Questioning Generosity in the Golden Age of Philanthropy: Towards Critical Geographies of Super-Philanthropy’, Progress in Human Geography 38/5 (2014) pp. 635–653; K. Saltman, The Gift of Education: 18 K. MITCHELL 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. Public Education and Venture Philanthropy (New York: Palgrave Macmillan 2010); I. Kapoor, Celebrity Humanitarianism: The Ideology of Global Charity (New York: Routledge 2013). M. Foucault, ‘Omnes et Singulatim: Towards a Criticism of ‘Political Reason’’, The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, delivered at Stanford University, 10 and 16 Oct. 1979, p. 229. Ibid., pp. 236–238. Ibid., p. 235. S.-S. Duvall, From Walking The Red Carpet To Saving The World: Global Celebrity, Media, And Commodity Activism, PhD dissertation, Indiana University, May 2010. Mitchell (note 10). Z. Magubane, ‘The (Product) Red Man’s Burden: Charity, Celebrity, and the Contradictions of Coevalness’, The Journal of Pan African Studies 2/6 (2008) pp. 101–125. 39. Duvall (note 36); L. Chouliaraki, ‘Improper Distance: Towards a Critical Account of Solidarity as Irony’, International Journal of Cultural Studies 14/4 (2011) pp. 363–381. 40. Bono (note 1). 41. Ibid. 42. Total grant payments since inception are $33.5 billion, making BMGF the largest private grant funder for global causes over the past fifteen years. Its scale and power in grant-making, particularly in the field of global health, is recognised in numerous books and articles. On education, see, e.g., P. Kovacs (ed.), The Gates Foundation and the Future of U.S. ‘Public’ Schools (New York: Routledge 2011). In global health, see, e.g., D. McCoy, G. Kembhavi, J. Patel, and A. Luintel, ‘The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Grant-Making Programme for Global Health’, The Lancet 373 (2009) pp. 1645–1653. 43. See The Global Fund “Strategy”. From the Global Fund website: <http://www.theglo balfund.org/en/about/strategy/>, accessed 27 Feb. 2015. 44. See B. Kiviat and B. Gates (note 31), ‘Making Capitalism More Creative’; B. Gates, ‘Annual Letter 2014’, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, available at <http://www. gatesfoundation.org/Who-We-Are/Resources-and-Media/Annual-Letters-List /Annual-Letter-2014>. 45. Passage quoted in R. Lane, ‘Bill Gates and Bono on their Alliance of Fortune, Fame, and Giving’, Forbes, 17 Nov. 2013, available at <http://www.forbes.com/sites/randall lane/2013/11/17/bill-gates-and-bono-on-their-alliance-of-fortune-fame-and-giving/>, accessed 10 June 2015. 46. The idea behind these bonds, as with social impact investing more generally, is that a return on investment can be obtained, but that the return is contingent on the achievement of desired (and benchmarked) social outcomes. 47. All of these initiatives have active websites and numerous programmes in operation as of 2015. For an overview of the attempt to ‘mainstream’ and draw greater attention and interest in social impact investment beginning in 2012, see ‘From the Margins to the Mainstream: Assessment of the Impact Investment Sector and Opportunities to Engage Mainstream Investors’, World Economic Forum, Sep. 2013, available at <http://www3. weforum.org/docs/WEF_II_FromMarginsMainstream_Report_2013.pdf>, accessed 1 Sep. 2015. 48. See Bono and David Cameron at Davos 2014, ‘The Post-2015 Goals: Inspiring a New Generation to Act’, <http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/davos/ GEOPOLITICS 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 19 10594485/Watch-live-Bono-and-David-Cameron-at-Davos-2014.html>, accessed 1 Sep. 2015. The right-wing evangelist Senator Jesse Helms was one of these. See, for example, M. Bunting and O. Burkeman, ‘Pro Bono’, The Guardian, 18 March 2002, available at <http://www.theguardian.com/world/2002/mar/18/usa.debtrelief>, accessed 1 Sep. 2015. Comments on the talk have appeared in a number of sites, including on the ONE website, on the TED talk website, and on a number of individual blogs and sites. In the past two years, as well, numerous commentators have been asked by ONE and other organisations such as Transparency International and the United Nations Millennium Challenge, to respond directly to the ideas presented at the talk, such as “peoplepowered, technology-facilitated activism” or “Millennial Factivism.” For the latter, see, for example, the interview of Nigerian Activist Japheth Omijuwa at <http://www. okayafrica.com/culture-2/interview-japheth-omojuwa-millennial-factivism-panel-unevent/>. Comments are posted at <http://www.one.org/us/shareworthy/bono-at-ted/>. They are often updated, but these comments from 2013 were still accessible as of September 2015. Another example is fan clubs such as Zootopia, or smaller groups such as the Bono Street Team. For more on the emotional connections and responses of these types of communities, see Mitchell (note 10). See ‘Insights: Catalysing Markets through Philanthropy’, World Economic Forum, 2013, available at <http://www.weforum.org/videos/insights-catalysing-markets-throughphilanthropy>; ‘Turning Transparency into Growth’, World Economic Forum, 2013, available at <http://www.weforum.org/videos/turning-transparency-growth>, accessed 2 Sep. 2015.