Lessons From Rojava for the Paradigm of Social Ecology

This essay addresses two related questions raised by the editors of the research topic for “Beyond the Frontiers of Political Science: Is Good Governance Possible in Cataclysmic Times?” In particular, it explores: 1) how we can identify new tools and perspectives from which to address the multiple a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cihad Hammy, Thomas Jeffrey Miley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Political Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2021.815338/full
_version_ 1818283357655531520
author Cihad Hammy
Thomas Jeffrey Miley
author_facet Cihad Hammy
Thomas Jeffrey Miley
author_sort Cihad Hammy
collection DOAJ
description This essay addresses two related questions raised by the editors of the research topic for “Beyond the Frontiers of Political Science: Is Good Governance Possible in Cataclysmic Times?” In particular, it explores: 1) how we can identify new tools and perspectives from which to address the multiple and mutually reinforcing problems accumulating around climate change; and 2) what institutional alternatives to the nation-state need to be created and empowered to tackle such complex problems. It does so through an in-depth treatment of the paradigm of “social ecology” and the associated political project of “democratic confederalism.” It begins with an overview of the argument, first advanced by Murray Bookchin and subsequently adopted and adapted by the imprisoned Kurdish leader Abdullah Öcalan, that building an ecological society requires an assault on hierarchy in all its forms, and the construction of alternative, direct-democratic institutions capable of transcending the system of the capitalist nation-state. It sketches the institutional architecture of popular assemblies central to this project, both emphasizing their potential to contest capitalist social-property relations and hierarchies intrinsic to the nation-state and pointing out some sources of resilience of the existing system. It hones in on the experience of the revolutionary forces in control of the Autonomous Administration of North East Syria (AANES), who have been directly inspired by Öcalan’s ideas. It highlights both the AANES’s achievements as well as the significant obstacles it has encountered in the attempt to bring into being a radically-egalitarian, ecological society. It concludes by drawing lessons from these difficulties.
first_indexed 2024-12-13T00:35:38Z
format Article
id doaj.art-6c6795bd790c4367b79185750625eb6f
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2673-3145
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-13T00:35:38Z
publishDate 2022-01-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Political Science
spelling doaj.art-6c6795bd790c4367b79185750625eb6f2022-12-22T00:05:13ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Political Science2673-31452022-01-01310.3389/fpos.2021.815338815338Lessons From Rojava for the Paradigm of Social EcologyCihad Hammy0Thomas Jeffrey Miley1Independent Researcher, Hamburg, GermanyDepartment of Sociology, Faculty of Human, Social and Political Science, School of the Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United KingdomThis essay addresses two related questions raised by the editors of the research topic for “Beyond the Frontiers of Political Science: Is Good Governance Possible in Cataclysmic Times?” In particular, it explores: 1) how we can identify new tools and perspectives from which to address the multiple and mutually reinforcing problems accumulating around climate change; and 2) what institutional alternatives to the nation-state need to be created and empowered to tackle such complex problems. It does so through an in-depth treatment of the paradigm of “social ecology” and the associated political project of “democratic confederalism.” It begins with an overview of the argument, first advanced by Murray Bookchin and subsequently adopted and adapted by the imprisoned Kurdish leader Abdullah Öcalan, that building an ecological society requires an assault on hierarchy in all its forms, and the construction of alternative, direct-democratic institutions capable of transcending the system of the capitalist nation-state. It sketches the institutional architecture of popular assemblies central to this project, both emphasizing their potential to contest capitalist social-property relations and hierarchies intrinsic to the nation-state and pointing out some sources of resilience of the existing system. It hones in on the experience of the revolutionary forces in control of the Autonomous Administration of North East Syria (AANES), who have been directly inspired by Öcalan’s ideas. It highlights both the AANES’s achievements as well as the significant obstacles it has encountered in the attempt to bring into being a radically-egalitarian, ecological society. It concludes by drawing lessons from these difficulties.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2021.815338/fullsocial ecologydemocratic confederalismKurdish movementRojavaMurray BookchinAbdullah Ocalan
spellingShingle Cihad Hammy
Thomas Jeffrey Miley
Lessons From Rojava for the Paradigm of Social Ecology
Frontiers in Political Science
social ecology
democratic confederalism
Kurdish movement
Rojava
Murray Bookchin
Abdullah Ocalan
title Lessons From Rojava for the Paradigm of Social Ecology
title_full Lessons From Rojava for the Paradigm of Social Ecology
title_fullStr Lessons From Rojava for the Paradigm of Social Ecology
title_full_unstemmed Lessons From Rojava for the Paradigm of Social Ecology
title_short Lessons From Rojava for the Paradigm of Social Ecology
title_sort lessons from rojava for the paradigm of social ecology
topic social ecology
democratic confederalism
Kurdish movement
Rojava
Murray Bookchin
Abdullah Ocalan
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2021.815338/full
work_keys_str_mv AT cihadhammy lessonsfromrojavafortheparadigmofsocialecology
AT thomasjeffreymiley lessonsfromrojavafortheparadigmofsocialecology