The Anthropocene: Action and agency for preventing collapse 

The Anthropocene is suggested as a new geological epoch (Crutzen, 2002) where human impacts have crossed six of nine planetary boundaries, the biosphere integrity, climate change, novel anthropogenic entities, biochemical flows, freshwater and land system (Richardson et al., 2023). While transgressing these boundaries does not mean that we will rapidly go to drastic collapse, altogether they mark a critical threshold for increasing risks to people, species, cultures and the social-ecological systems of Planet Earth (Rees, 2014).

Studies on the Anthropocene propose that since the 18th century—with the rise of capitalism—Western economic and political systems have gradually become dominant over multiple and diverse cultures on our planet. This has led to over-exploiting natural resources, over-producing waste and eliminating the state of the biological and sociological diversity. While humans as a species have created ecological destruction, not all cultures have equally contributed to the problem. To acknowledge this, Anthropocene studies should be complemented with a more culturally sensitive examination and inclusiveness of diverse approaches of the society and environment at issue (Farhana, 2023; Heikkurinen, 2017; Hornborg, 2024). While the Anthropocene remains a concept, it offers an opportunity for transdisciplinary discussion on action and agency for cultural critique and alternative forms of social organizing (Albareda and Branzei, 2023; Heikkurinen et al., 2016; 2021), in particular to find ways to support action and agency of the marginalized voices of the global society (Farhana, 2023a). Furthermore, agency of the powerful is needed, as until governments, CEOs and company owners act, little happens.

Action is commonly understood as individual action, but it can also be—for instance—collective (Ostrom, 1990), communicative (Habermas, 1984) and organizational (King et al., 2010), as well as something non-humans do (Latour, 2005; Barad, 2003). It is a core concept in environmental social sciences concerned with action as a form of praxis. Agency, again, commonly refers to actors’ capacity to act. It is another key concept in environmental social sciences and is often discussed together with the notion of structure. Dating back to Hume and Aristotle, agency is that which allows agents to overcome structural constraints and thereby shape social organization. Emirbayer and Mishe (1998), for instance, disaggregate agency into different components to demonstrate different ways agency interpenetrates structure and the implications for empirical research. 

In the context of the Anthropocene, the notions of action and agency invite us to rethink the traditional subject-object distinction and discuss the role of both human and non-human viewpoints and doings (Dürbeck et al., 2015). If agencies are extended to mountains, rivers, landscapes, animals, and the natural environment, then what does that mean for preventing collapse? Latour (2014a) notes: ‘the great philosophical contribution of the Anthropocene is that narrativity, what I call geostory, is not a layer added to the brutal “physical reality” but what the world itself is made of.’ The debate on agency has resurfaced and reformulated to understanding the pressing problems of the Anthropocene—opening new ways of theorizing relational, collective or human/non-human agency among others (see e.g., Heikkurinen et al., 2021; Hirvensalo et al., 2021; Teerikangas et al., 2021; Jokinen et al., 2021). 

References 

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Heikkurinen, P., Clegg, S., Pinnington, A. H., Nicolopoulou, K., & Alcaraz, J. M. (2021). Managing the Anthropocene: Relational agency and power to respect planetary boundaries. Organization & Environment, 34(2), 267-286.

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Teerikangas, S., Onkila, T., Koistinen, K., & Mäkelä, M. (2021). Research Handbook of Sustainability Agency. London: Edward Elgar.