Concluding Discussion: The planetary is not the end of the international
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Concluding Discussion : The planetary is not the end of the international. / Corry, Olaf.
Nonhuman Nature and World Politics : Theory and Practice. red. / Joana Pereira; André Saramago. Cham : Springer, 2020. s. 337-352 (Frontiers in International Relations).Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Bidrag til bog/antologi › Forskning
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Concluding Discussion
T2 - The planetary is not the end of the international
AU - Corry, Olaf
PY - 2020/8/27
Y1 - 2020/8/27
N2 - Drawing on chapters of this book as well as wider literatures, in this concluding chapter I first situate the relative invisibility of non-human nature in IR, pointing to the demise of geopolitics around the Second World War as part of a wider bifurcation of knowledge into “social” and “natural” sciences. Secondly, I argue that current attempts to take account of non-human nature have tended to bring with them globalist framings that underplay or even obscure the importance of the international. Thirdly, I outline an outlook that does not feature prominently in the rest of this book, but which might provide an additional way of further developing its goals, allowing a theorisation of society that has the non-human at its core to form the building block for a materialist theory of the international. The overall aim is to take stock of attempts to grasp how the metabolism between humans and non-human nature is itself multiple, intrinsically bound up with and marked by relations between societies—separate yet coexisting socio-ecological entities.
AB - Drawing on chapters of this book as well as wider literatures, in this concluding chapter I first situate the relative invisibility of non-human nature in IR, pointing to the demise of geopolitics around the Second World War as part of a wider bifurcation of knowledge into “social” and “natural” sciences. Secondly, I argue that current attempts to take account of non-human nature have tended to bring with them globalist framings that underplay or even obscure the importance of the international. Thirdly, I outline an outlook that does not feature prominently in the rest of this book, but which might provide an additional way of further developing its goals, allowing a theorisation of society that has the non-human at its core to form the building block for a materialist theory of the international. The overall aim is to take stock of attempts to grasp how the metabolism between humans and non-human nature is itself multiple, intrinsically bound up with and marked by relations between societies—separate yet coexisting socio-ecological entities.
UR - https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783030494957#aboutAuthors
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-49496-4
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-49496-4
M3 - Book chapter
T3 - Frontiers in International Relations
SP - 337
EP - 352
BT - Nonhuman Nature and World Politics
A2 - Pereira, Joana
A2 - Saramago, André
PB - Springer
CY - Cham
ER -
ID: 247507822