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Transformational Technology and the Green Political Community: Rethinking Green Political Theory for the Digital Transition

Democracy
Governance
Green Politics
Political Theory
Climate Change
Normative Theory
Technology
Michael Keary
Research Institute for Sustainability (RIFS) - Helmholtz Center Potsdam (GFZ)
Michael Keary
Research Institute for Sustainability (RIFS) - Helmholtz Center Potsdam (GFZ)

Abstract

Digitalisation is one of the major processes shaping the contemporary world. It is also a major research focus across a whole range of academic disciplines. Yet political theory has little to say about it. It is especially surprising that green political theory has yet to engage in significant analysis of it. Digitalisation is seen by countless scholars and policymakers as key to resolving the environmental crisis. Moreover, digitalisation is heralded as a new technological ecosystem, one that is replacing the technology against which green thought has defined itself from its beginning. This article thus asks what digitalisation means for green political theory. To answer, the article employs a concept-based approach to ecologism, inspired by Freeden’s analysis of ideology. It finds the most optimistic appraisals of digitalisation’s green credentials to be dubious, but also that some digital technologies may have a place in a green political community. Digitalisation enlivens the debate about the proper scale of a green political community and challenges advocates of a green deliberative democracy. Throughout, the article highlights the many questions digitalisation raises for green beliefs and values and describes the research agenda that must be pursued if greens are to answer them.