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Why Theorise During a Climate Crisis?

Democratisation
Political Theory
Climate Change
R003
Eva Erman
Stockholm University
Sorin Baiasu
Keele University
Jonathan Floyd
University of Bristol
Lisa Herzog
Andrei Poama
Leiden University
Antoinette Scherz
Stockholm University

Building: O'Brien Centre for Sciences, Floor: G, Room: Moore Auditorium

Wednesday 14:00 - 15:45 BST (14/08/2024)

Abstract

Why be a political theorist in times of the climate and biodiversity crisis? While theorists have long contributed to discussions about climate justice, in this talk I suggest that the 'anthropocene' (or arguably, 'capitalocene') raises far more fundamental questions about how to understand the political, social, and economic realms and their interrelations. Some of the most basic assumptions about how these realms are organised need to be challenged, and this requires theory. To do so, political theory benefits from crossing three boundaries: the boundary between political theory and other social scientific disciplines, the boundary between Western and other traditions, and the boundary between the academic world and broader public discourses. In this roundtable, the speakers will exemplify this approach by discussing some questions about value creation in the economic realm and who has the political right to decide about it. They will argue that turning our societies onto a sustainable path requires a thorough-going democratisation – of the economy, but also of democracy as it currently exists as a political system – and discuss the role that political theorists can play in this project.