TY - JOUR
T1 - Nature and the international
T2 - towards a materialist understanding of societal multiplicity
AU - Corry, Olaf
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - The global environmental crisis requires a grasp of how human society interacts with nature, but also, simultaneously, how the world is divided into multiple societies. International Relations has a weak grasp of nature treating it as external to the international–an ‘environment’ to be managed–while environmentalism has a planetary epistemology that occludes the significance of the international. How to break this impasse? While neither Geopolitics nor ‘new materialism’ capture the complex conjuncture of socio-natural and inter-societal dynamics, I argue that Justin Rosenberg’s theorization of the international as ‘the consequences of societal multiplicity’ provides a theoretical opening. If a materialist notion of societal is adopted, ‘societal multiplicity’ allows human-natural and international dynamics to be grasped together. Thus, climate change is not a problem arising exogenously to the international, but something emerging through international dynamics, reciprocally affecting the units, structure and processes of the international system itself.
AB - The global environmental crisis requires a grasp of how human society interacts with nature, but also, simultaneously, how the world is divided into multiple societies. International Relations has a weak grasp of nature treating it as external to the international–an ‘environment’ to be managed–while environmentalism has a planetary epistemology that occludes the significance of the international. How to break this impasse? While neither Geopolitics nor ‘new materialism’ capture the complex conjuncture of socio-natural and inter-societal dynamics, I argue that Justin Rosenberg’s theorization of the international as ‘the consequences of societal multiplicity’ provides a theoretical opening. If a materialist notion of societal is adopted, ‘societal multiplicity’ allows human-natural and international dynamics to be grasped together. Thus, climate change is not a problem arising exogenously to the international, but something emerging through international dynamics, reciprocally affecting the units, structure and processes of the international system itself.
KW - Anthropocene
KW - Climate change
KW - geopolitics
KW - international theory
KW - nature
KW - societal multiplicity
U2 - 10.1080/14747731.2019.1676587
DO - 10.1080/14747731.2019.1676587
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85076390856
VL - 17
SP - 419
EP - 435
JO - Globalizations
JF - Globalizations
SN - 1474-7731
IS - 3
M1 - 3
ER -