*** apologies for cross-posting *** 

Dear list, 

Please find below a cfp for the standing section „IR in the Anthropocene“ at 
the 16th Pan-European Conference on International Relations, 5-9 September 
2023, University of Potsdam. We invite proposals for papers, panels, or 
roundtables related to all aspects of international politics in the 
Anthropocene. Please get in touch if you want to discuss panel or roundtable 
submissions in advance.

Deadline for submissions is March 15, 2023!

More information as well as the link to the submission portal can be found at: 
http://pec2023.eisa-net.org/ <http://pec2023.eisa-net.org/> 

------------------------------------------------------------
ST09 International Relations in the Anthropocene

Section Chairs
David Chandler & Delf Rothe

The Anthropocene has become a major concern for scholars of international 
politics and one that, for many authors, fundamentally destabilizes much of the 
traditional disciplinary concerns and assumptions. The crisis brought about by 
rising temperatures and sea levels goes well beyond the physical impacts of 
climate change and other anthropogenic environmental changes. The Anthropocene 
is a crisis of government – as established modes of governance seem 
increasingly inappropriate to deal with the complex and unbounded political 
problems we see emerging. Furthermore, the Anthropocene is a crisis of Western 
ethics and political theory – as established anthropocentric norms, 
institutions and values appear increasingly problematic and outdated. Finally, 
the Anthropocene is a crisis of imagination, as Amitav Gosh crucially reminds 
us, since it becomes increasingly difficult to imagine any alternative to the 
current path of fossil-fuels based consumption and destruction.

The proposed section is devoted to the multiple engagements of IR scholars with 
the notion of the Anthropocene. It provides a space to think through the new 
forms of political agency and governance that we see emerging in the 
Anthropocene. It fosters critical discussions of the concept – for example from 
decolonial, feminist, and/or poststructuralist perspectives – and invites 
proposals for thinking the Anthropocene differently. It reflects upon the 
technological dimension of the Anthropocene and engages with the implications 
of posthumanism beyond the realm of ecology (for example in the realm of AI and 
other emerging technologies). Finally, it includes methodological discussions 
and fosters new and creative approaches to studying international politics.

We look forward to reading your proposals. 

With best wishes, 

David and Delf
__________________
Dr Delf Rothe
Senior Researcher
Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy at the University of Hamburg 

[email protected] 
+49-40-866077-85
https://ifsh.de/en/staff/rothe
Twitter @DelfRothe
www.anthropocene-security.org




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