scholarly journals THE CHALLENGES OF THE ANTHROPOCENE: FROM INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS TO GLOBAL GOVERNANCE

2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 177-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
MATÍAS FRANCHINI ◽  
EDUARDO VIOLA ◽  
ANA FLÁVIA BARROS-PLATIAU

Abstract : This article proposes a reflection on the challenges of global environmental policy in the Anthropocene. Firstly, the inconsistency between the institutions of international environmental policy and the progressive degradation of the planetary boundaries is highlighted. Secondly, it is stated that, since the transition to Anthropocene requires the conscious construction of a new space of safe operation for humanity, it is necessary to radically modify the institutional structure of cooperation, based on international regimes: the transition from environmental politics to global governance. The fundamental milestone of this path is the overcoming of the international system of conservative hegemony, that is, the abandonment of the sovereignist tendencies - egotistical and short-term - on the part of its actors, particularly the great powers. Finally, a series of premises for the governance of the Anthropocene is proposed from the point of view of International Relations, with the post-sovereign transition as the main pillar.

2003 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-49

The Harrison Symposia are products of the University of Maryland's Harrison Program on the Future Global Agenda. The Program's mission is to promote research, teaching, and public dialogue on ecological security, long-term sustainability, energy and environmental policy, and global governance — and on the ideas that influence them. Editors for the Symposia are Dennis Pirages, the Horace Harrison Professor of International Environmental Politics, and Ken Conca, Director of the Harrison Program. These symposia are to be ongoing discussions; readers are encouraged to submit comments, reactions, and suggestions, including topic suggestions, to the editors.


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