Publication | Closed Access
The global tree: Forests and the possibility of a multispecies IR
24
Citations
9
References
2022
Year
EngineeringForestryHealthy Earth SystemForest GovernanceSocial SciencesPolitical EcologyCommunity ForestrySymbolic PowerForest ConservationMultispecies IrAbstract Forest EcosystemsBiodiversityGeographyGlobal TreeDeforestationReforestationCultureIndigenous Knowledge SystemsForest Resource ManagementAnthropologyAfforestation
Abstract Forest ecosystems are crucial to survival on Earth. This article argues that trees and forests are both vital components of a healthy Earth system and productive examples for expanding International Relations’ disciplinary boundaries. The article discusses the forest in three contexts: the global, the (post)colonial, and from the tree itself. From tree planting as a practice of social and environmental justice, to postcolonial and Indigenous science and knowledge, to the mycorrhizal ‘wood wide web’, a focus on trees, forests, and biosphere opens the possibility for a multispecies IR. Through a consideration of trees and forests in law, treaty, culture, and science at the local and global level, this article adds to a growing literature in IR that strives to bring the non-human, more-than-human, or other-than-human creatively and productively into the discipline. Foregrounding the forest's materiality and trees’ symbolic power for human cultures opens important pathways to understanding how the non-human is, and should, alter and affect global politics.
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