ABSTRACT

This book aims to pave the way for a new interdisciplinary approach to global cooperation research. It does so by bringing in disciplines whose insights about human behaviour might provide a crucial yet hitherto neglected foundation for understanding how and under which conditions global cooperation can succeed.

As the first profoundly interdisciplinary book dealing with global cooperation, it provides the state of the art on human cooperation in selected disciplines (evolutionary anthropology and biology, decision-sciences, social psychology, complex system sciences), written by leading experts. The book argues that scholars in the field of global governance should know and could learn from what other disciplines tell us about the capabilities and limits of humans to cooperate. This new knowledge will generate food for thought and cause creative disturbances, allowing us a different interpretation of the obstacles to cooperation observed in world politics today. It also offers first accounts of interdisciplinary global cooperation research, for instance by exploring the possibilities and consequences of global we-identities, by describing the basic cooperation mechanism that are valid across disciplines, or by bringing an evolutionary perspective to diplomacy.

This book will be of great interest to scholars and postgraduates in International Relations, Global Governance and International Development.

part I|87 pages

Why global cooperation research

chapter 1|44 pages

The evolution of human cooperation

Lessons learned for the future of global governance

chapter 3|22 pages

Cooperation in conflict

Ubiquity, limits, and potential of working together at the international level

part II|110 pages

Human behavior and cooperation across disciplines

chapter 6|16 pages

Can we think of the future?

Cognitive barriers to future-oriented decision making

chapter 8|18 pages

The concrete utopia of the gift

A genuine sociological approach to interdisciplinary cooperation theory

part III|67 pages

Interdisciplinary approaches to global cooperation

chapter 10|21 pages

Diplomatic cooperation

An evolutionary perspective 1

chapter 11|20 pages

Cognizing cooperation

Clues and cues for institutional design 1