Dismantling the Juggernaut: Assessing the Potential of an Ecosocialist Green New Deal
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Open Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Masters by ResearchAuthor/s
Atkins, Benjamin AlexanderAbstract
The Green New Deal proposes a holistic solution to an immense problem, arguing that the radical transformation of capitalism is the only option if humanity is to save itself from ecocide. The logical underpinnings of GND proposals are varied: Keynesian economists, environmental ...
See moreThe Green New Deal proposes a holistic solution to an immense problem, arguing that the radical transformation of capitalism is the only option if humanity is to save itself from ecocide. The logical underpinnings of GND proposals are varied: Keynesian economists, environmental justice groups, Indigenous activists, and ecosocialists have contributed to its development and debate. The platform promises to impact many immediate appearances of climate-changing capitalism, from income distributions to fossil emissions. I ask whether it sufficiently addresses the underlying economic and political form-determinations that necessitate capitalist extraction, exploitation, and expansion, constituting limits to what can be achieved under this social metabolic order. The first research contribution is theoretical. ‘Ecological state-derivation’ combines ecological Marxism with a vein of state theory rooted in Marx’s third volume of Capital. It explains the capitalist state as a necessary mediation of capital’s economic and environmental contradictions. The resulting political forms are socially restrictive, yet contradictory and vulnerable to change. This enables a second, policy-oriented research contribution: a ‘form-analysis’ of the GND. I analyse three proposals according to their own terms and in the terms of ecological state-derivation. The result is an immanent understanding of the policy platforms and a deep interrogation of their adequacy. My ‘positive criticism’ finds the GND framework’s most radical variants to align with the insights of ecological state-derivation. A ‘radical’ or ‘ecosocialist’ GND installs an intersectional ‘working-class general interest’ into the very constitution of the state, intensifying the labour-capital contradiction in politics and the economy by way of ‘democratised decommodification,’ and as appropriate, decolonised forms of self-determination.
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See moreThe Green New Deal proposes a holistic solution to an immense problem, arguing that the radical transformation of capitalism is the only option if humanity is to save itself from ecocide. The logical underpinnings of GND proposals are varied: Keynesian economists, environmental justice groups, Indigenous activists, and ecosocialists have contributed to its development and debate. The platform promises to impact many immediate appearances of climate-changing capitalism, from income distributions to fossil emissions. I ask whether it sufficiently addresses the underlying economic and political form-determinations that necessitate capitalist extraction, exploitation, and expansion, constituting limits to what can be achieved under this social metabolic order. The first research contribution is theoretical. ‘Ecological state-derivation’ combines ecological Marxism with a vein of state theory rooted in Marx’s third volume of Capital. It explains the capitalist state as a necessary mediation of capital’s economic and environmental contradictions. The resulting political forms are socially restrictive, yet contradictory and vulnerable to change. This enables a second, policy-oriented research contribution: a ‘form-analysis’ of the GND. I analyse three proposals according to their own terms and in the terms of ecological state-derivation. The result is an immanent understanding of the policy platforms and a deep interrogation of their adequacy. My ‘positive criticism’ finds the GND framework’s most radical variants to align with the insights of ecological state-derivation. A ‘radical’ or ‘ecosocialist’ GND installs an intersectional ‘working-class general interest’ into the very constitution of the state, intensifying the labour-capital contradiction in politics and the economy by way of ‘democratised decommodification,’ and as appropriate, decolonised forms of self-determination.
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Date
2022Rights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, School of Social and Political SciencesDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Discipline of Political EconomyAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare