Affiliation:
1. Department of Politics, University of York, UK
Abstract
Harm does not happen to humans in isolation, but rather to worlds composed of diverse beings. This article asks how worlds and the conditions of worldliness should be framed as ‘subjects of security’. It explores three possible pathways: rejecting anthropocentrism; expanding existing ethical categories; and adopting ‘new materialist’ ontology and ethics. Ultimately, it argues for a fusion of the key elements of each of these pathways. This offers the basis for a new concept of harm (‘mundicide’) specifically intended to reflect harms to worlds and the conditions of worldliness. The value of this concept is demonstrated in the light of an empirical example: the ‘Rainforest Chernobyl’ case. The article concludes that a worldly approach is necessary if we are to capture the full enormity of the harms confronted by international security.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
106 articles.
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