Do We Have Time for Democracy? Climate Action and the Problem of Time in the Anthropocene

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Do We Have Time for Democracy? Climate Action and the Problem of Time in the Anthropocene. / Ejsing, Mads; Tønder, Lars; Jensen, Ingrid Helene; Hansen, Janus Porsild.

In: The Anthropocene Review, 08.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ejsing, M, Tønder, L, Jensen, IH & Hansen, JP 2024, 'Do We Have Time for Democracy? Climate Action and the Problem of Time in the Anthropocene', The Anthropocene Review.

APA

Ejsing, M., Tønder, L., Jensen, I. H., & Hansen, J. P. (Accepted/In press). Do We Have Time for Democracy? Climate Action and the Problem of Time in the Anthropocene. The Anthropocene Review.

Vancouver

Ejsing M, Tønder L, Jensen IH, Hansen JP. Do We Have Time for Democracy? Climate Action and the Problem of Time in the Anthropocene. The Anthropocene Review. 2024 Aug.

Author

Ejsing, Mads ; Tønder, Lars ; Jensen, Ingrid Helene ; Hansen, Janus Porsild. / Do We Have Time for Democracy? Climate Action and the Problem of Time in the Anthropocene. In: The Anthropocene Review. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{93ac85e0d9ab4337b963d050e8db6f00,
title = "Do We Have Time for Democracy? Climate Action and the Problem of Time in the Anthropocene",
abstract = "The urgency of climate change has brought democracy to a critical juncture. Existing democratic systems struggle to address the pressing time frames required for effective climate action. This article explores a fundamental shift in temporal orientation caused by climate change. Democracy's linear and progressive image of time clashes with the expanding scales of temporality, encompassing both planetary and microscopic processes. More specifically, the article examines the theoretical links between democracy, climate change, and time in the Anthropocene through empirical engagements with the climate politics associated with deliberative assemblies, community organizing, and activist movements. The core argument is that within these democratic innovations, new future-oriented responses to the crises are beginning to emerge. These innovations experiment with extending democracy's temporal image beyond its conventional boundaries, paving the way for a multi-trajectory democratic politics. The article concludes by discussing the tensions and potential consequences of these democratic practices, ultimately arguing in favor of a multiple and layered understanding of democratic time that extends beyond distinctly human temporalities.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Democracy, Temporality, Climate politics, Anthropocene, Democratic innovation, Activism",
author = "Mads Ejsing and Lars T{\o}nder and Jensen, {Ingrid Helene} and Hansen, {Janus Porsild}",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
language = "English",
journal = "The Anthropocene Review",
issn = "2053-0196",
publisher = "Sage Journals",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Do We Have Time for Democracy? Climate Action and the Problem of Time in the Anthropocene

AU - Ejsing, Mads

AU - Tønder, Lars

AU - Jensen, Ingrid Helene

AU - Hansen, Janus Porsild

PY - 2024/8

Y1 - 2024/8

N2 - The urgency of climate change has brought democracy to a critical juncture. Existing democratic systems struggle to address the pressing time frames required for effective climate action. This article explores a fundamental shift in temporal orientation caused by climate change. Democracy's linear and progressive image of time clashes with the expanding scales of temporality, encompassing both planetary and microscopic processes. More specifically, the article examines the theoretical links between democracy, climate change, and time in the Anthropocene through empirical engagements with the climate politics associated with deliberative assemblies, community organizing, and activist movements. The core argument is that within these democratic innovations, new future-oriented responses to the crises are beginning to emerge. These innovations experiment with extending democracy's temporal image beyond its conventional boundaries, paving the way for a multi-trajectory democratic politics. The article concludes by discussing the tensions and potential consequences of these democratic practices, ultimately arguing in favor of a multiple and layered understanding of democratic time that extends beyond distinctly human temporalities.

AB - The urgency of climate change has brought democracy to a critical juncture. Existing democratic systems struggle to address the pressing time frames required for effective climate action. This article explores a fundamental shift in temporal orientation caused by climate change. Democracy's linear and progressive image of time clashes with the expanding scales of temporality, encompassing both planetary and microscopic processes. More specifically, the article examines the theoretical links between democracy, climate change, and time in the Anthropocene through empirical engagements with the climate politics associated with deliberative assemblies, community organizing, and activist movements. The core argument is that within these democratic innovations, new future-oriented responses to the crises are beginning to emerge. These innovations experiment with extending democracy's temporal image beyond its conventional boundaries, paving the way for a multi-trajectory democratic politics. The article concludes by discussing the tensions and potential consequences of these democratic practices, ultimately arguing in favor of a multiple and layered understanding of democratic time that extends beyond distinctly human temporalities.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Democracy

KW - Temporality

KW - Climate politics

KW - Anthropocene

KW - Democratic innovation

KW - Activism

M3 - Journal article

JO - The Anthropocene Review

JF - The Anthropocene Review

SN - 2053-0196

ER -

ID: 401663914