11 Chapter 3
11 Chapter 3
The environment stands out as directly affecting the quality of our individual and
collective lives, as well as the political and economic choices we make. A contemporary
perspective on the environment confirms that multiple issues of population, natural
resources, enrgy and pollution are integrally related. Trends in one of these issues affect
each of the others. Policy decisions taken to address one issue have impacts on each of
the others. Two conceptual perspectives help us think about the significance of
environmental issues. These perspectives are not contending approaches; rather they
augment each other. First is the notion of collective goods. Collective goods help us
conceptualize how to achieve shared benefits that depend on overcoming conflicting
interests. How can individual contributors to air pollution or ocean pollution be made to
realize that their acts jeopardize the very collective good they are utilizing.
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Nevertheless, it was not until the emergence of ‘modern environmentalism’, the
wave of popular concern about environmental issues that swept across the developed
world during the 1960s, that the environmental discourse became widespread. The rise
of modern environmentalism highlights a second distinctive feature of the environment
as a political subject, unlike most other single issues. It comes replete with its own
ideology and political movement. First, it was driven by the idea of a global ecological
crisis that threatened the very existence of humanity. Secondly, modern
environmentalism was a political and activist mass movement which demanded a
radical transformation in the values and structures of society. It was influenced by the
broader ‘politics of affluence’ and the general upsurge in the form of new social
movements.1
Andrew Dobson in his famous work 'Green Political Thought' defines ecologism
as a distinctive green political ideology encompassing those perspectives that hold a
sustainable society requires radical changes in our relationship with the non-human
natural world and our mode of economic, social and political life.2 Whatever position is
adopted, the advantage of a broad definition of ecologism is that it includes a wide
range of perspectives, all of which seek to generate a higher ecological consciousness
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that will turn the tables in favour of the environment. Obviously, the onus of persuasion
is on those who want to destroy rather than those who want to preserve.
Andrew Dobson also makes the bigger and bolder claim that 'ecologism' should
be regarded as a distinct political ideology. To cohere as an ideology, ecologism must
have three basic features: A common set of concepts and values providing a critique of
the existing social and political systems; A political prescription based on an alternative
outline of how a society ought to look; A programme for political action with strategies
for getting from the existing society to the alternative outline. Ecologism, according to
Dobson, passes the test on all three counts. First, it is characterized by two core ideas: a
rethinking of the ethical relationship between humans and the natural world and the
belief that there are natural limits to growth. Secondly, it offers an alternative political
prescription for a sustainable society. Thirdly, it identifies various strategies for
reaching the sustainable society. By contrast, reformist approaches do not add up to an
ideology. They offer no distinctive view of the human condition or the structure of
society. They are embedded in and ‘easily accommodated by other ideologies’ such as
conservatism, liberalism or socialism.3
In the arena of social and political theory, ecologism encapsulates the most
interesting, challenging and distinctive contributions made by environmental political
theorists. One further question underlying the discussion concerning the implications of
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ecologism for practical political arrangements; what impact has it had on the
development of green parties and the wider environmental movement, and what lessons
does it have for policymakers? Radical perspectives such as 'deep ecology' question the
existence of a clear divide between humans and nature and may even push humans off
their pedestal at the top of the ethical hierarchy. If ecologism is a separate ideology,
then the way the human-nature relationship is conceptualized arguably provides its most
distinctive and radical feature.
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and in our technological competence will enhance our capability to protect the
environment.'5
The other side in the debate is taken by ‘ecoradicals’ who think that the
ecosystem has a limited carrying capacity. Such a limit ‘defines how large a species
population can become before it overuses the resources available in the ecosystem’.
Ecoradicals believe that human societies on earth are moving dangerously closer to the
limits of the planet’s carrying capacity; they also think that there are no simple
technological fixes that can take care of the problem. Therefore, many ‘ecoradicals’ call
for strict population control and dramatic changes in modern lifestyles towards a more
environment-friendly, less consumption-oriented and waste-producing way of life.6
Ecoradicals call for profound changes not only in economic but also in political
organization. They argue that the state is more of a problem than a solution for
environmental issues. The state is part of modern society, and modern society is the
cause of the environmental crisis. But there is no agreement among ecoradicals about
the role of the state or what to put in place of the state. The current debate, then,
concerns scope and depth of necessary reforms for facing the environmental challenge.
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But many also argue that the more extreme proposals from some ecoradicals go too far
and are unrealistic. In the space between these extremes there is a debate about what
would be the concrete contents of a ‘green state’8 and what a transition to more
sustainable development could look like, given the experience of the earlier great
transition from pre-modern to modern industrial society.
All three see the problems with contemporary environmentalism not as a failure
of policy, but as a deeper failing in the very structure of contemporary society. The
particular failures they see are different but overlapping. For Loftus, it is capitalism; for
Ophuls, rationalism; and for Smith, governmentality and bio-politics. Their solutions all
focus on a radically democratic politics, participatory rather than representative, in
which individuals can embrace a direct relationship with the natural and lived
environment. The solutions differ beyond this commonality, particularly in the scale of
polities. Smith envisions a world of only small polities and Loftus a world of
democratized cities, with Ophuls somewhere in between.12 All three scholars assume
that radical democratization will successfully address the environmental crisis, without
telling us how this relationship will work.
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former Soviet Union, Eastern Bloc and China. On the contrary, Marx and Engels had a
much more holistic view of humankind’s place in the environment.
Marx and Engels viewed humans not as something separate from the
environment, as capitalist ideological orthodoxy does, but dialectically interconnected.
The views of karl Marx on the relationship between nature and humanity is as: "Nature
is man’s inorganic body, that is to say, nature in so far as it is not the human body. Man
lives from nature, i.e. nature is his body and he must maintain a continuing dialogue
with it if he is not to die. To say man’s physical and mental life is linked to nature
simply means that nature is linked to itself, for man is a part of nature".13
A British socialist, A.G. Tansley, who became the first president of the British
Ecological Society, he coined the term 'ecosystem', a concept central to our modern
understanding of ecosystems ecology is now an academic research field of its own.
Tansley wanted to explain how his materialist conception of natural communities had
become fused with all physical and chemical factors such as soil and climate and so
came up with the term 'ecosystem' to speak effectively of this dynamic equilibrium and
essential unity. As he explained, "It is the systems so formed which, from the point of
view of the ecologist, are the basic units of nature on the face of the earth. Our natural
human prejudices force us to consider the organisms as the most important parts of
these systems, but certainly inorganic 'factors' are also parts, there could be no systems
without them and there is constant interchange of the most various kinds within each
system, not only between the organisms but between the organic and the inorganic.
These ecosystems, as we may call them, are the most various kinds and sizes. They
form one category of the multitudinous physical systems of the universe, which range
from the universe as a whole down to the atom. "14
And in an image of how Marxist dialectics can help us understand the constant
motion and interconnectivity of life processes, Tansley goes on to explain how "the
systems we isolate mentally are not only included as parts of larger ones, but they also
overlap, interlock, and interact with one another".15
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Karl Marx was concerned with taking a long-term view of the earth over a
century before the UN discovered a problem. In the third volume of 'Capital', he
essentially defined sustainability, "From the standpoint of a higher socio-economic
formation, the private property of particular individuals in the earth will appear just as
absurd as the private property of one man in together men. Even an entire society, a
nation, or all simultaneously existing societies taken together, are not owners of the
earth, they are simply its possessors, its beneficiaries, and have to bequeath it in an
improved state to succeding generations."16
It is on this second point that ecosocialism has started to build a bridge between
socialism and ecologism. In particular, some writers in the ecosocialist tradition
concede that there may be ecological limits to growth and that unrestrained economic
expansion is unsustainable. At a strategic level, the 'industrialism or capitalism' debate
has little immediate significance because the global hegemony of capitalism, reinforced
by the collapse of the Soviet bloc, clearly makes it the main adversary for both greens
and socialists. Thus ecosocialism encourages 'greens' to focus their attention on
capitalism as the root cause of ecological problems.18
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capitalism, such as multinational corporations, international financial markets and trade
liberalisation.
The dialogue between these two ideologies has been particularly lively.
Ecologism has certainly been sharpened by the socialist critique of capitalism.
Socialism has also taken on board some of the lessons of ecologism; indeed, many
socialists would agree that 'A socialism for the Twenty First century must put at its
heart the ecological challenge and escape from the limits of productivist thinking'.19 Yet
critical differences remain on key issues, such as attitudes to human-nature relations and
in the institutional and cultural manifestations of each movement.
After tracking the emergence of 'green theory' in the form of 'ecologism' in the
social sciences and humanities in general, this chapter explores how green theory has
itself become more transnational and global, while critical IR theory has become
increasingly green. Green IR theory is shown to rest at the intersection of these two
developments.
Yet during the Cold War, the analytical attention of many IR scholars was on
the 'high' politics of security given the intense military and nuclear rivalry between the
two superpowers. Economic and environmental issues were relegated to what was
pejoratively labelled 'low' politics as these were seen as less consequential to state
survival. With the end of the Cold War, the environmental limitations of industrial
growth took on new urgency, and analytical interest in these topics increased
accordingly. Thus, the concept of sustainable development gained further traction and
has informed global cooperative efforts on the environment since the early 1990s.
Finally, post-Cold War globalization amplified damage that had already been
done to environment, particularly to the earth's ozone layer and with regard to global
warming. Prior industrial and consumer practices would have contributed to
deteriorating global environmental conditions regardless of globalization, but global
economic activity after 1990 compounded the problems.
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'Neo-liberal institutionalism' perspective, and more recent IR environmental theorizing
employs elements of post-positivist approaches like social constructivism,
postmodernism and critical theory.
These two points of connection, what we might call a broadly held ecological
concern and a normative sensibility, are basic to the IR environmentalist tradition. A
first implication is that environmentalists have found analytic benefit in what Daniel
Deudney has described as 'bringing nature back in' to analyses of international affairs.
By urging that nature be made a focus of IR analysis, Deudney was suggesting, in part,
that the geographical and historical distribution of natural resources should not be
ignored when trying to understand particular IR phenomena.22
The green voices in the global climate change debate have extended this line of
critical inquiry to include neglected areas of environmental domination and
marginalization. These are domination of non-human nature, the neglect of the needs of
future generations and the skewed distribution of ecological risks among different social
classes, states and regions.
While the term 'green' is often used to refer simply to environmental concerns,
by the early 1990s green political theory had gained recognition as a new political
tradition of inquiry that has emerged as an ambitious challenger to the two political
traditions that have had the most decisive influence on twentieth century politics,
liberalism and socialism. Like liberalism and socialism, green political theory has a
normative branch (concerned with questions of justice, rights, democracy, citizenship,
the state and the environment) and a political economy branch (concerned with
understanding the relationship between the state, the economy and the environment).24
There has also been an increasing engagement by green political theorists with
some of the core debates within normative IR theory, particularly those concerned with
human rights, cosmopolitan democracy, transnational civil society and transnational
131
public spheres. This scholarship has also fed into and helped to shape, a distinctly green
branch of normative IR theory concerned with global environmental justice.
132
individual strengths but from the extent to which they tie states into a continuing and
institutionalized process of negotiation.
Liberals view that the global environment problems and consequent process of
institutionalized enmeshment are deeding to a 'fading away of anarchy' at the inter-state
level and to a 'denationalizing' or ínternationalized' of the state. Basically, it is no longer
accurate to conceptualized states as having their traditional degree of autonomy because
of the network of formal and informal regimes in which they are becoming increasingly
involved and this process of enmeshment is likely to progress throughout the coming
century.26
133
Thus neo-liberal institutional scholars could rightfully argue that they were
among the first IR theorists to analytically examine the topic. Their focus is on the role
that IOs, regimes, interstate negotiations and institutional design play in inducing or
inhibiting cooperation on environmental affairs. It is also positivist in its
epistemological orientation, although unlike realist environmentalism it has a
programmatic, reformist orientation to the institutional arrangements in global politics,
and is concerned with how to reform the UN machinery to deliver more effective
environmental governance.28 The application of this approach to the study of the
environment remains an active if not dominant approach to the subject matter in the
mainstream IR literature.
134
environmental vulnerability, relative capacity to adjust to environmental change and the
relative costs of adjustments. By contrast, green theorists point out that environmental
regimes embody moral norms that cannot be reduced to state interests or capacities.
While research on scarcity and conflict has continued, scholarly attention has
increasingly turned to the development of an 'environmental security' approach that
attempts to broaden the concept of national security to include non-military threats.
135
Daniel Deudney argues, "This approach has a great deal in common with the
geostrategic interests of classical realism, its proponents have tended to be explicitly
antirealist, while most self-avowed realists. The result is a relative absence of sustained
realist contributions to contemporary environmental debates and it remains a
comparatively underdeveloped strand of environmentalism".32
136
perspectives, which regard environmental co-operation as perfectly rational whenever
self-interested states judge that the benefits of co-operation will outweigh the costs.
More generally, however, green political economy scholarship has defined itself
in opposition to rationalist regime theory. Indeed, the state-centric focus of rationalist
137
regime theory is seen to deflect attention away from what is seen to be the primary
driver of global ecological degradation and environmental injustices, namely the
competitive dynamics of globalizing capitalism rather than the rivalry of states per se.
Capitalism operates at a global level in ways that leave highly uneven impacts on
different human communities and ecosystems, with some social classes and
communities leaving much bigger écological footprints' at the expense of others.35
On the whole, green IPE initially formed the backbone of green IR theory.
However,it has been increasingly complemented by green normative inquiry,
particularly in the wake of the increasing transnationalization of green political theory,
which has injected a distinctly green voice into the more general debates about
international justice, cosmopolitan democracy and the future of the state.
138
increasing penetration of instrumental reason into human society and nature'.37 This
general theme has been further developed by the second generation of Frankfurt school
critical theorists, led by Jurgen Habermas. One of Habermas's enduring concerns has
been to protect the 'lifeworld'from the march of instrumental rationality by ensuring that
such rationality remains subservient to the practice of critical deliberation. Habermas's
ideal of communicative rationality has served as a major source of inspiration in the
development of green democratic theory and critical green explorations of the
relationship between risk, science, technology, and society. Whereas orthodox Marxist
theory had confined its critical attention to the relations of production, green theory has
expanded this critique to include the 'forces of production'(technology and management
systems) and the risks of modernization.38
139
current paradigms to address particular intellectual and practical challenges.39 Critical
theory, in contrast, questions existing power dynamics and seeks not only to reform but
to transform social and political conditions.
Critical environmental theory has come under attack in recent years. While
inter-disciplinary engagement has refined our ability to identify and make visible
impediments to creating a greener world, it has also isolated critical environmental
studies from the broader discipline and the actual world it is trying to transform. Indeed,
critical environmental theory has become almost a sub-discipline to itself. 'To many,
this has rendered critical theory not more but less politically engaged as it scales the
heights of thought only to be further distanced from practice'.40
Scholars working in the social constructivist tradition has argued that a state's
support for international environmental treaties is not determined by domestic interests, but
rather is constructed' by a 'world environmental regime' that informs and structures national
preferences. States internalize a form of peer pressure, and seek to 'enact' behaviours
expected of modern states, including the ratification environmental treaties. These scholars
argue that the states most deeply embedded in world society tend to ratify more
environmental treaties.41 Whatever the merits of this perspective, it cannot by itself explain
EU leadership, because a host of other advanced industrialized democracies such as Japan,
the US, Australia and Canada are embedded in world society to a similar degree as the EU,
but none of them has asserted a role of global environmental leader on par with the EU.
140
In recent times, considerable importance has been attached to the normative
identities, preferences and beliefs of civil society. Thus, it is suggested that global civil
society plays a pivotal role in embedding, mobilizing and sanctioning normative
obligations at the international level. In this context, green IR theorists have explored
the role of not-state forms of 'deterritorialized' governance, In the form of transnational
initiatives of environmental NGOs (such as IUCN, Greenpeace etc). This new
scholarship has produced a more complex and layered picture of global environmental
governance that is able to recognize new, hybrid and network patterns of authority that
straddle state jurisdictional boundaries.
By the late 1990s and early 2000s, environmentalism in IR had emerged that
collectively may be referred to as 'green theory.' These approaches are intended to
address the shortcomings of realist and neo-liberals at institutionalist approaches. They
draw upon a variety of theoretical perspectives. Fundamental point is the shared belief
that environmental issues need to be understood on their own terms, not simply as an
appendix to existing IR theories and schools of thought. We have to view environmental
issues in the context of a larger structural phenomenon in mainstream analysis of global
politics.
141
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2. Andrew Dobson (2007), Green Political Thought, London : Routledge, p. 82.
3. Ibid, pp. 101-107.
4. Robyn Eckersley (2010), Environmentalism and Political Theory : Towards an
Ecocentric Approach, NY : State University of New York Press, pp. 77-78.
5. B. Lomborg (2011), The Sceptical Environmentalist, Cambridge : CUP, pp. 82-83.
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12. J. Samuel Barkin (2013), A Radical Environmental Politics, Cambridge : MIT Press, pp. 80-
90.
13. Quoted in John Bellamy Foster (2000), Marx's Ecology: Materialism and Nature, New
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14. A.G. Tansley (1930), ''The Ecosystem'', reprinted in Joseph Coulson et al. (eds., 2003),
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15. Ibid.
16. Quoted in John Bellamy Foster (2009), The Ecological Revolution, NY : Monthly
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17. Tim Hayward (1995), Ecological Thought, Cambridge: Polity, pp. 101-110.
18. Ibid.
19. Marry Mellor (2006), Socialism, Cambridge: Polity, p. 104.
20. Peter Dauvergne (2005), Handbook of Global Environmental Politics, Cheltenham:
Edward Elgar, p.111.
21. Mathew Paterson (1996), ''Green Politics" in Scott Burchill and Andrew Linklater,
Theories of IR, Hampshire : Macmillan Press, p. 252.
142
22. Daniel Deudney (2011), Security and Conflict in New Environment Politics, Albany:
SUNY Press, pp. 114-124.
23. Ibid.
24. Mathew Paterson, op. cit., pp. 253-260.
25. Anthony J. Langlois (2014), Liberal Cosmopolitanism: A Review, Cambridge : MIT
Press, p. 114.
26. Ibid, pp.120-130.
27. Robert O. Keohane (2011), "The Regime Complex for Climate Change," Perspectives
On Politics, Vol. 9, No. 1, p. 75.
28. Peter Dauvergne, op. cit., pp. 120-125.
29. R. Bryant & S. Bailey (2012), Third World Political Ecology, London : Routledge, pp. 40-50.
30. Ibid.
31. Thomas Homer-Dixon (1999), Environment, Scarcity and Violence, Princeton: PUP, p. 105.
32. Daniel Deudney, op. cit., p. 97.
33. Robert O. Keohane (1989), International Institutions and State Power: Essays in IR
Theory, Boulder : Westview Press, pp. 20-27.
34. Michael Mason (2004), Environmental Democracy, London: Earthscan, pp. 50-60.
35. Peter Newell (2008), "The Political Economy of Global Environmental Governance,"
Review of International Studies, Vol. 34, No. 2, pp. 507-525.
36. Ibid.
37. T. Adorno & Max Horkheimer (1972), The Dialect of Enlightenment, New York:
Herder, pp. 50-60.
38. Mathew Paterson, op. cit., pp. 257-258.
39. Robert Cox (2002), The Political Economy of a Plural World: Critical Reflections on
Power, Morals and Civilization, London: Routledge, pp. 26-35.
40. A. Stainer (2011), After Post-Modernism, London: Routledge, pp. 50-55.
41. John Hannigan (1995), Environmental Sociology: A Social Constructionist Perspective,
London: Routledge, pp. 50-55.
42. Ibid.
143