https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1523908X.2021.1956310

A leap of Green faith: the religious discourse of Socio-Ecological Care as
an Earth system governmentality

ABSTRACT

The Anthropocene is fundamentally altering concepts of human agency and
responsibility in the governance of the Earth system. These concepts are
paramount in discussions about governing deliberate interventions into the
global climate – often referred to as ‘climate engineering’. Reflections on
what it might mean for humanity to ‘play God’ by controlling the climate
have brought religious knowledge to bear in these discussions. Using
climate engineering as a paradigmatic example of human interventions which
may come to define the Anthropocene, this paper presents a
sociology-of-knowledge discourse analysis of interviews with
environmentally active multi-faith leaders and scholars. Showing how green
religious discourse provides a blueprint for a *governmentality of
Socio-Ecological Care (SEC),* the paper argues that religious knowledge has
a role to play alongside other global systems of knowledge in
reconceptualising the *who, what, why and how* of responsible and
sustainable Earth system governance in the Anthropocene.

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