Academics who specialise political science are frequently not taking the implications of their discipline seriously when it comes to climate change.
Going to academic conferences is always interesting; sometimes fun. While the general public may view such events with a healthy degree of scepticism⎯ they generally foot the bill, after all⎯they do offer an opportunity to take the intellectual temperature and see what one’s peers are up to.
After recently attending one of the biggest political science jamborees this country has ever hosted, I found the results somewhat deflating, especially for anyone hoping for innovative ideas about how to address climate change. The unfortunate reality is that the academic community is usually (very) long on rhetoric and rather short of ideas about how to stop the planet from becoming an unliveable wasteland.
There were, to be sure, no end of earnest, well-intentioned discussions about the ‘securitisation’ of the environment and the importance of discursive practices. Indeed, it is impossible not to like and rather admire the seriousness with which one’s colleagues address such issues: they are undoubtedly some of the smartest people one could hope to meet and possessed of uniformly impeccable morals and values.
Unfortunately, many of the people causing the problems are not. On the contrary, the likes of Donald Trump, and his recently departed Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt, are seemingly entirely without morals or any sense of shame. Even more alarmingly, they are also either genuinely ignorant about basic climate science or dismissive of its importance because it conflicts with their personal political and/or economic interests.
Pruitt’s replacement as EPA head is Andrew Wheeler, a former coal industry lobbyist who has earned more than $700,000 spruiking the benefits of continuing coal use.
Much the same sorts of points could be made about the Australian situation where the government continues to champion the merits of the industry and its role as a reliable and cheap source of energy. Even more improbably, Resources Minister Josh Frydenberg argues that there is a ‘moral imperative’ for Australia to follow the US lead because coal can allow countries such as India to escape energy poverty. This ought to be one moral debate my colleagues could win.
Yet anyone who has been paying attention to the debate in this country or the US will be entirely unsurprised by these facts – yes, there still are such things in the world. While my clever colleagues may be right to highlight the importance of the discursive production of knowledge, they seem less concerned about thinking about its consequences. No matter how brilliantly argued their disquisitions about the moral imperative of applying notions of universal justice and equality may be, they are almost laughably at odds with the political reality we collectively face.
At a time when popular confidence in expert knowledge has never been lower, arcane debates about epistemology and ontology are not going to resonate outside the seminar room. This is not an argument for dumbing down the conclusions of our research, but it is a plea for making it a little more accessible and relevant. While we are locked in our self-referential intellectual universe and largely immune to the consequences of the problems we claim to be concerned about, the planet’s beginning to fry.
Unfortunately, much of the academic debate about climate change resolutely ignores the fact that saving the planet is as much a political problem as it is an environmental one. The popular discourse around this issue is important, no doubt, but at present it is dominated by the likes of Fox News and the very industries that currently profit from business as usual. No amount of banging on about moral imperatives is going to change that.
One thing the academic community could do, of course, is to stop flying around the world to conferences that could be conducted by Skype – or not at all. Who, after all, other than the academic community and the growing conference industry would notice the difference?
A cheap shot and not a little hypocritical? No doubt. But if all these smart people can’t come up with a ‘counter hegemonic discourse’ that actually shifts the debate, what’s the point? If people working in political science and international relations don’t take the politics of climate change seriously, why should we expect ‘ordinary’ people to do so, or even recognise the problems? Taking on the likes of the coal industry may mean coming down from the ivory towers and getting our hands dirty.
Mark Beeson is Professor of International Politics at the University of Western Australia.
Mark Beeson is an Adjunct Professor at the University of Technology Sydney and Griffith University. His latest book is Environmental Anarchy? International Relations Theory and Practice in the Anthropocene, (Bristol University Press: 2021) He has also written Environmental Populism: The Politics of Survival; in the Anthropocene Palgrave 2019
Comments
4 responses to “MARK BEESON. Politics and climate change: Academia’s missing contribution”
I agree with Mark that the focus of many political sciences academics has shifted from ‘why’ to ‘how’. We can describe perfectly how scenarios will unfold, comparing modern politicians to their historical counterparts (of which, apparently, there always have been many in history) etc. But we do not offer an opinion of where politics should head, what it should be trying to achieve. We tend to treat political science theories like scientific laws, to be observed and understood, rather than principles that can be amended or thrown overboard when necessity demands it. In the words of Captain Barbossa: “The code is more what you’d call ‘guidelines’ than actual rules.” Academics are quite often told they should not be activists. But, like mark, I make an exception for political scientists, as politics has a very direct impact on everyone’s lives. And those impacts can be changed if sufficient numbers of people can create the required counterbalance.
The key challenges our generation faces today seem to be: (i) climate change, (ii) fostering inclusive growth, both within and across nations, and (iii) ending the refugee crisis.
I hope political scientists help humanity find a way to address these challenges.
Academics are trained in analysis and to value certainty.
Not part of the problem? Was the conference venue using air-con? How many drove to it (how many of these car pooled)?
While a lot of research is conducted in Australia regarding the physical aspects global warming, including in Universities, CSIRO and BOM, most academics are unable or unwilling to engage in public debate, as some have suffered or lost their positions as a consequence. Factors which discourage scientists from going public include: (1) The psychological reluctance to deal with an issue of a magnitude which amounts to a demise of the biosphere conditions and of civilization as we know it; (2) Adverse reactions of many when faced with an issue which overtakes other issues; (3) a sense of hopelessness when confronted with the ‘powers to be’, mostly in denial; (4) the repeated betrayal of the issue by members of the political elites; (5) the danger of losing one’s job.