Metz’s conception of African communal ethics, global economic practices and decolonisation

Research Article

Metz’s conception of African communal ethics, global economic practices and decolonisation

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 43 , issue 1 , 2024 , pages: 94–105
DOI: 10.1080/02580136.2023.2288755
Author(s): Peter Mwipikeni University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

Abstract

Metz holds that we can use African communal ethics to constitute global economic practices such as appropriation, production, distribution and consumption in such a way that promotes harmonious relations. In this article, I will show that Metz’s reformist approach to constituting the global economic practices is problematic as it fails to deal with the fundamental problem that pertains to a racialised world order that is structurally configured by coloniality of being. I will show that reformist approaches such as Metz’s use of African communal ethics to constitute global economic practices in a way that promotes harmonious relations are undesirable attempts that are opposed and curtailed by a structural racialised logic/ontology of the world that governs and supervises the evolution of the world economic structures and practices in a way which undermines harmonious relations and in a way which causes economic marginalisation and impoverishment of historically disadvantaged indigenous Africans.

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