The Value of Violence by Benjamin Ginsberg


The Value of Violence
Title : The Value of Violence
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1616148314
ISBN-10 : 9781616148317
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 222
Publication : First published January 1, 2013

This provocative thesis calls violence the driving force not just of war, but of politics and even social stability.Though violence is commonly deplored, political scientist Ginsberg argues that in many ways it is indispensable, unavoidable, and valuable.Ginsberg sees violence manifested in society in many ways. "Law-preserving violence" (using Walter Benjamin's phrase) is the chief means by which society preserves social order. Behind the security of a stable society are the blunt instruments of the police, prisons, and the power of the bureaucratic state to coerce and manipulate.Ginsberg also discusses violence as a tool of social change, whether used in outright revolution or as a means of reform in public protests or the threat of insurrection. He notes that even groups committed to nonviolent tactics rely on the violent reactions of their opponents to achieve their ends. And to avoid the threat of unrest, modern states resort to social welfare systems (a prudent use of the carrot instead of the stick).Emphasizing the unavoidability of violence to create major change, Ginsberg points out that few today would trade our current situation for the alternative had our forefathers not resorted to the violence of the American Revolution and the Civil War.


The Value of Violence Reviews


  • Muhammad Ahmad

    I wrote this review for The National:

    In a 1993 interview, after his release from prison, Nelson Mandela was asked if he regretted taking up arms against the apartheid regime. The African National Congress, Mandela replied, was committed “to building a nation through peaceful, non-violent, and disciplined struggle”. But it was “forced to resort to arms by the regime, and the lesson of history is that for the masses of the people, the methods of political action which they use are determined by the oppressor himself”.

    Earlier this month, after Mandela’s passing, when world leaders gathered in Soweto for a memorial service, they eulogised a different man. Their Mandela was an irenic figure, a paragon of compromise, an exemplar of conciliation, a symbol of non-violence. It would have been harder to celebrate the rebel, since actions similar to Mandela’s still land you in prisons – or morgues – from the US to Zimbabwe. It was, indeed, a CIA tip-off that led to Mandela’s arrest in 1962 and the US State Department did not take him off its terror watch list until 2008. In the end, Mandela was legitimised only by his victories.

    “Violence is terrible,” writes the political scientist Benjamin Ginsberg in his provocative new book The Value of Violence, “but it is the great engine of political change.” It takes precedence over other forms of political action because of its “destructive and politically transformative power”, its capacity “to serve as an instrument of political mobilisation”. Violence was not Mandela’s preference; but it was part of the array of tactics that led to apartheid’s collapse. In questions of statehood, territoriality and power, Ginsberg argues, violence provides definitive answers. Violence is not politics by other means, as the military theorist Carl von Clausewitz had it. For Ginsberg, it is Mao Zedong’s dictum that all politics issued from the barrel of a gun that shows greater ­percipience.

    But violence poses both moral and strategic questions. The moral question has been answered in the affirmative by many, from Thomas Jefferson to Nelson Mandela. “Occasionally the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of patriots and tyrants,” said Jefferson. Armed insurrection becomes unavoidable, said Mandela, if a state’s violence leaves its opponents “no alternative but to retaliate by similar forms of action”.

    The strategic question is more complicated. Violence as a strategy is only viable where there is a realistic possibility of success. If the power imbalance is too great and if there is no possibility of third-party intervention, it merely gives the stronger side an opportunity to crush opponents. Though violence can be used by anyone, notes Ginsberg, states have an advantage over other actors since bureaucratic organisation allows them to monopolise force and overcome “the natural, human, and moral limits of ­violence”. Take the example of Syria. Few people would deny that Syrians have a right to resist their oppressive and murderous regime. But only the rash few would insist that armed struggle is the surest way to achieve this. No one was more conscious of this than the regime itself. In March 2011, when the scale and intensity of the protests appeared irresistible, the regime changed the equation to its favour by drawing the opposition into a military confrontation. It no longer mattered that the regime held all the air power, artillery, armour, ballistic missiles and unconventional weapons. The moment a rebel fired a shot, state repression had turned into “civil war”. Deprived of a perfect victim, the world felt no obligation to the oppressed beyond issuing periodic admonitions for “both sides” to exercise restraint. A similar situation obtains in Palestine, where the military conflict is portrayed as an equal confrontation.

    But violence alone cannot sustain a state’s power, Ginsberg argues. States have to refine it with force multipliers, such as laws, legitimation and soft power abroad. These, says Ginsberg, allow “the same result to be achieved with less effort”. Some states also command loyalty through carrots in the place of sticks. Welfare, writes Ginsberg, is “more a substitute for force than a force multiplier”. This is the track followed by Europe, where the decline of empire coincided with investment in the welfare state. But in the US, he writes, a combination of Lockean liberalism and a puritan ethic encouraged notions of individual responsibility and disdain for social programmes. Where Europeans were using incentives and public goods to instil loyalty, writes Ginsberg, the US settled on punishment. It developed the carceral state.

    At close to one per cent, the US currently has the world’s highest incarceration rate. In 2009, it held 2.3 million in prison; another five million were on parole, probation or bail. Europe, by contrast, imprisons only 0.2 per cent. With an overbearing and oppressive criminal-justice system, instances of wrongful arrest, prosecutorial overreach and prisoner abuse are legend.

    For Ginsberg, this internal reliance upon force is consequential, because it also leads to a violent posture abroad. A culture that sees force as an indispensable corrective to social ills will also see it as a suitable alternative to diplomacy. Absent the financial constraints of a welfare state, resources will always be there for foreign military adventures. A “war on drugs” will lend tropes to a “war on terror”; and the prison system will yield a ­Guantanamo Bay.

    Ginsberg’s critique of the state is refreshing for its tone if not for its originality: politicians are irredeemably corrupt; votes preserve the status quo; and reform is a mere mechanism for forestalling meaningful change. If power is the currency of politics, then politics only attracts the power-hungry and corrupts the virtuous. But Ginsberg’s criticism loses some of its persuasiveness when it collapses into libertarian anti-politics. Yes, protest is a useful form of political action, but it must be a complement rather than an alternative to voting. While everyone would like the justice system to be fairer, few would want to dispense with it. Some laws are prone to abuse, but that is merely an argument for reform and greater oversight. There is no substitute for sustained political engagement.

    Ginsberg uses Walter Benjamin’s distinction between “lawmaking” violence and “law-preserving” violence to dismiss the possibility of real peace. What people consider peace, he argues, is merely the submission to a state’s overwhelming capacity for violence. The state maintains its authority through the systemic violence of laws and ­incarceration.

    But this inflation of concepts is of little analytical value if it obscures the question of degree. One can argue that both Syria and the US maintain their authority through violence, but few would suggest that their rule is of a piece. No doubt even the humane Norwegians deploy such violence to maintain order, but violence in Scandinavian proportions is surely preferable to a lawless free-for-all.

    Ginsberg denounces US prison systems on libertarian grounds, but elides the fact that it’s the privatisation of prisons and the rise of the prison-industrial complex that are partly to blame for the high incarceration rate. Prisons are a $60 billion (Dh220.38bn) a year business; its bottom-line depends on the number of units that it’s allowed to process. It has lobbied for the criminalisation of more and more offences; and the prison population has risen since the neoliberal turn of the 1980s. At the same time, commercial imperatives have mandated cost-cutting that causes overcrowding, understaffing and general neglect. A profit motive has replaced the public interest and, following the new zeitgeist, politicians have been all too eager to prove themselves tough on crime with excessively harsh legislation.

    The ubiquity of crime mandates that every society evolve a means to protect the vulnerable. Rule of law necessarily requires an enforcement mechanism. But just because the end is legitimate doesn’t mean the means are also legitimate. Bestowing legitimacy upon any entity’s violence is fraught with the possibility of abuse. If the state’s system of checks and balances fails, it can easily turn into a licence for oppression. Citizens have the choice to end oppression by mass protest – but where confronted by a state that is willing to kill rather than compromise, the question of violence becomes inescapable. This, however, can be a potentially suicidal choice, since it plays to a state’s strength; and states suffer less censure for the use of violence than citizens. Indeed, states are sometimes legitimised by it.

    On August 21, when the Syrian regime trained its ballistic missiles on Ghouta, it may or may not have calculated the political ramifications of its actions. But the chemical attacks proved a dramatic turning point for a regime that appeared on the ropes. In one bold move, it was able to terrorise the opposition, humble a superpower and earn international legitimacy. By crossing the US “red line”, the regime had called Barack Obama’s bluff and found him wanting. The war criminals who appeared destined for a dock in the Hague found themselves with seats at Geneva. “All murderers are punished,” Voltaire quipped, “unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets.”


    http://www.thenational.ae/arts-cultur...

  • David

    Mr. Ginsberg's book, because of its title, may be off-putting to many readers, however if you can look beyond the title you will discover 'The Value of Violence' is NOT a glorification of violence and how useful it is on a practical level. Rather, 'The Value of Violence' is deeply unhappy about the fact that violence does solve many problems. The Author repeats the sentiment over and over again--in almost the same words. This part of the book can be a little tedious. What, in effect, 'The Value of Violence' is is an analysis of violence, its causes, and its uses--however, Mr. Ginsberg goes beyond this and actually critiques violence in many cases.

    What really stands out, for this reader, is the way in which the author analyzes and critiques prison rape. Still and all, Mr. Ginsberg's main thrust is the analysis of the value of violence and its nature.

    Mr. Ginsberb is interested in the following:

    1.Violence is the driving force of politics
    2.In using violence, state generally have a number advantages relative to other actors.
    3. Most states do not rely upon naked violence as an instrument of governance but seek to refine violence and make it a more effective tool.
    4. Another instrument that reduces the state's need to rely upon overt violence is public welfare.
    5.Governments use violence against their citizens every day.
    6.Violence is...the great engine of political change.

    These six points are carefully analyzed and then explored through examples...sometimes the examples are a little longer than they need be...in the world of the ebook reader brevity is a virtue...this virtue is not always adopted by the author but the examples are very very good.

    Mr. Ginsberg also critiques the Hobbesians like Steven Pinker [whose book The Angels of Our this reviewer also enjoyed very much]. This analysis is very astute. It alone would be worth buying the book.

    The author is particularly critical of professional politicians but makes a very good case for this and why politicans 'must' be duplicitous. Another reason to read the book.

    Violence, it is argued, answers 3 of the major questions in political life: statehood, territoriality, and power. A fascinating analysis that readers today are not used to seeing because of the pacifist nature of most academics today--especially those with an Anti-Western bias...which includes most Western academics today.

    What was unique for this reader was the critique of Nonviolence as deployed by Mahatma Gandhi and Mr. King.The notion that nonviolence was "designed to produced economic and social disruption and, in some instances, to provoke a violent response from their opponents" was fascinating. Most do not read the cult of nonviolence this way...even the Occupy movement but it seems undeniable.

    None of this is to say that Mr. Ginsberg is glorifying or encouraging violence. What is happening in the book is an attempt to give an honest analysis of violence it history and it future. The latter being implicit in the book's argument.

    This reviewer enjoyed Mr. Ginsberg's book very much and would highly recommend it to readers of political science and geopolitics of any particular leaning.

    A MUST READ BOOK

  • Christian

    This is a sobering, cynical and realistic view of violence in human societies. Violence is inescapable and a major component in almost all relationships. Many people don’t even recognize or have become inured to violence on a daily basis. Ginsberg has many (exhaustive) examples to show the utility and scope of violence in national and international relationships. The writing style is very organized and dry. It reminded me of writing my MA thesis. It made reading a pleasure.