Home>InDocSem with Charlotte DESMASURES & Christos ZOIS
16.06.2025
InDocSem with Charlotte DESMASURES & Christos ZOIS
About this event
16 June 2025 from 16:00 until 17:30
Jeannie de Clarens Amphitheatre
27 rue Saint-Guillaume, 75007, ParisThis seminar is part of InDocSem, the first interdisciplinary doctoral meeting at Sciences Po, which promotes dialogue across disciplines within the Sciences Po Doctoral School. It aims to challenge approaches and methodologies, connecting doctoral candidates from diverse fields of study around a common topic or area of research, fostering a vibrant scientific community.
Charlotte DESMASURES
Second-year doctoral student in Political science
at Center for International Studies (CERI)
Title: Linking climate and security? The integration of climate-related issues into a military alliance’s mandate: the case of NATO.
Abstract: This thesis explores the multifaceted features of climatization in the framework of intergovernmental security organizations, by looking at why, and how, has NATO incorporated the issue of climate change into its mandate. It traces the sources and effects of the climatization process in conceptual, functional, and organizational terms, since the Alliance’s creation. Theoretically, this work is situated at the intersection of the sociology of international organizations, critical security studies, and historical institutionalism. Conceptually, it puts securitisation into perspective, a process that is only recent at NATO, and which is preceded by other framing processes such as scientisation, (de-)politicisation and militarisation.
Christos ZOIS
First-year doctoral student in Law,
Sciences Po Law School PhD Program
Title: Futurity narratives in international climate change law: Deciphering the rights of 'future generations'.
Abstract: The thesis aims to discuss the role of temporality narratives, especially futurity as a legal device in international climate change law by focusing on the rights of future generations. Although conceptions of time are central in international law, constituting the environment within which it operates and being constituted in law’s effort to manage externalities, the function of time as a legal device to strengthen and reproduce specific notions, rules, and assumptions -while silencing others- has been severely under-theorised. The project aims to shed light to the assumptions underlying the concept of future generations and their rights in international climate change law beginning from the hypothesis that futurity as narrativity correlates to a legal normativity based on a modernist, heteronormative tradition which places humans above nature. Utilising conceptions of non-Western temporal spirality, queer futurities and posthuman new materialistic legalities of human-nature co-existence, the thesis aims to further scrutinise the disciplinary turn towards temporality notions in international climate change law.
SAVE THE DATE
Santé, environnement et régulation sociale
Jeudi 25 septembre 2025 de 14h à 16h
InDocSem avec Zoé JAN et Dan SANAREN