World Statehood: The Future of World Politics

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

Developing a processual understanding of world statehood, this book combines history, political philosophy, explanatory social science, and critical-reflexive futures studies. While doing so, it poses essential questions about world political integration, especially (i) whether and to what degree elements of world statehood exist today, (ii) whether the development of further elements of world statehood in some stronger sense can be seen as a tendential direction of history, and (iii) whether, and under what conditions, a world state could be viable?

The book is organised into three parts. The first part, “Cosmopolitical processes”, explores whether world history as a whole is directed towards planetary integration, focusing on the emergence of cosmopolitanism, the world economy, and the peace problematic. The second part of the book, “Reflexive futures and agency”, focuses on the contemporary 21st-century processes of world history in terms of how non-fixed pasts, changing contexts, and anticipations of the future interact. The author explains how certain rational directionality is compatible with the possibility of deglobalisation, disintegrative tendencies, and “gridlock” in global governance in the key areas of the economy, security, and environment. In the final part of the book, “World statehood and beyond”, the author develops further the processual and open-ended account of the formation of interconnected elements of world statehood by discussing the cases of a global greenhouse gas tax and world parliament. He also analyses the feasibility of different paths towards global-scale integration and the potential for conflicts, divisions, and disintegration.

This book is a must-read for students and scholars of political science, international relations, history, sociology, political philosophy, and futures studies interested in a better understanding of world statehood, world political integration, as well as the future of world politics.


Author(s): Heikki Patomäki
Series: World-Systems Evolution and Global Futures
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 328
City: Cham

Preface
Contents
1: Introduction: The Future of World Politics
The Basic Idea
Summary of the Contents of the Book
References
Part I: Cosmo-political Processes
2: Cosmological Sources of Critical Cosmopolitanism
Introduction
Aristotle vs. Cosmopolitans: Two Different Cognitive Perspectives
A Cosmic Perspective: The Identity of Human Beings Living on Planet Earth
Transformative Cosmopolitanism: The Rise of the Notion of a World State
The Reaction Against the Copernican Perspective: Nietzsche, etc.
Conclusion: Towards a New Cosmological Imaginary?
References
3: A Creation Myth and Origin Story Suitable to our Globalised World? A Friendly Critique of the Big History Storyline about our Place in Cosmos
Introduction
On the Narrative Dimension of Scientific Explanations and Future Scenarios
The Basic Mythologems of Contemporary Liberal-Capitalist Society
A Methodological Critique of the Cosmic Mythologeme of Meaninglessness and Death
An Alternative Mythologeme: The Power of Life and Culture
Analysing and Assessing the Big History Storyline
Conclusions
References
4: Overcoming Eurocentrism: Towards a Universal History of the Industrial Revolution and the Peace Problematic
Introduction: The European States-System and Modernity Are Not Unique
Learning from Counterfactual World Histories
A Universal History of Humanity in Terms of Stages
The Development of the Modern Peace Problematic
Overcoming the Problematic: The Concepts of Global Security Community and Democracy
Conclusions
References
5: Problems of Democratising Global Governance: Time, Space, and the Emancipatory Process
Introduction
The Model of Cosmopolitan Democracy
Space, Time, and Otherness in the Model of Cosmopolitan Democracy
A Critical Realist Interrogation Concerning the Split between Moral Reason and the World
Bringing Real Geo-history Back in: Time, Space, and the Process of Peaceful Democratic Emancipation
Space
Time
A Key Presupposition: A Pluralist Security Community
Conclusions
References
Part II: Reflexive Futures and Agency
6: How Will the Cold War End? Non-fixed Pasts, Reflexive Futures, and the Transformation of the Temporality of Human Existence
Introduction
On the Complexity of Time and Temporality
The Contingency of the Cold War and its End in 1989–1991
The Meaning of the Past Is Undetermined
The Temporality of Human Existence Is Changing
Conclusions
References
7: Resolving Problems and Overcoming Contradictions through Global Law and Institutions: A Post-Deutschian Perspective
Introduction
The Emergence of Common Problems
A Deeper Problem: Disintegrative Tendencies and Contradictions in Global Political Economy
The Problem of Fixed Identities and Hard Will: Deutsch and beyond
The Dialectic Among Three Logics of Identities in the Early Twenty-First Century
Reflexivity, Self-Other Relations, and the Ethical Circle of Non-violence
Overcoming Contradictions through Learning and Building Common Institutions
Conclusion: Reflexivity and the Ethos of Critical Responsiveness
Appendix: On the Role of Religion
References
8: On the Dialectics of Global Governance in the Twenty-First Century: A Polanyian Double Movement?
Introduction
Polanyi’s Historical Double Movement
The Return to the Market: A Puzzle to Polanyians
Towards a Better Explanation of the Market-revival
Constructing the Double Movement: The Problem of Agency
Overcoming Contradictions in Global Political Economy
Collective Learning Towards Holoreflexivity
Concluding Remarks
References
9: Transformative Agency: Towards a World Political Party
Introduction
Different Meanings of Modern Civil Society: Four Possibilities
The Emergence and Development of Global Civil Society
Ambiguities and Limits of Global Civil Society Activities
Predecessors of World Party and the Decline of Democracy Since 2000
Future-oriented Democratic Visions of Global Political Parties
DiEM25: A Seed Crystal?
Learning Lessons: A Sketch of a Possible Global Political Party
Concluding Remarks and Two Additional Issues
References
Part III: World Statehood and Beyond
10: Emergence of World Statehood: A Processual and Open-Ended Account
Introduction
Debates About the World State in the 1940s
Wendt’s Argument About the Inevitability of World State
A Critique of Wendt’s Account
Conclusion: A Processual and Open-ended Account of the Formation of World Statehood
References
11: The Transformative Potential of Responding to Climate Change: Towards a Dynamic Global Tax
Introduction
Characteristic Problems of Carbon Trading
The Clean Development Mechanism and Article 6 of the Paris Agreement: Global Carbon Markets?
An Alternative to Carbon Trading: A Greenhouse Gas Tax
The Case for a Global Keynesian Greenhouse Gas Tax
Conclusions
References
12: Rethinking World Parliament: Beyond the Indeterminacy of International Law
Introduction
The Campaign for a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly (UNPA)
World Parliament: In a Search for a Third Way
The Indeterminacy of International Law
World Parliament: Beyond the Categories of Modern Liberal-Democratic States
A Feasible Process of Establishing a World Parliament
Conclusions
References
13: After World Statehood? Legitimation and Potential Conflicts in a World Political Community
Introduction
Materialist, Structuralist, and Functionalist Arguments for a World State
On the Elusive Nature of Overlapping Consensus and Public Opinion
On the Idea of a “Civilising Process”
Functional Differentiation, Institutions, and Ethical-Political Learning
Why Higher-level Identifications and Purposes are Normatively Better
Conflicts and the Potential Collapse of a World Political Community
Conclusions
References