
International Cooperation Against All Odds
The Ultrasocial World
Mai'a K. Davis Cross(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 3. November 2023
Book
Hardback
318 pages
978-0-19-287390-3 (ISBN)
Description
International Cooperation Against All Odds: The Ultrasocial World recasts how we understand international relations through an examination of how the human evolutionary predisposition to be "ultrasocial" as a species impacts which political ideas succeed, transform, manipulate, and inspire on a global scale.
At a time when pessimism about our current world order is at an all-time high, this book overturns widespread assumptions that international relations is mainly about conflict, power, and national self-interest. In the last 10-20 years, scientists have discovered that as a species, we are biologically hard-wired, soft-wired, and pre-wired to be other-regarding and cooperative. Humans are an ultrasocial species, and yet this predisposition is completely ignored in governments across the world. Political leaders, experts, and the media have cultivated a myopic vision of global conflict, feeding an obsession on crises of the moment, rather than recognizing frequent and significant breakthroughs in peaceful cooperation and overall trends in the decline of violence.
This book shows how time and time again our ultrasocial predisposition has pushed us towards big ideas that inspire and bring us together around the power of possibility. Featuring original research on international cooperation in outer-space exploration, European Union integration, nuclear weapons, and climate change, among other examples, Mai'a K. Davis Cross shows ultrasociality at work in a range of contexts. Tracing the path from social neuroscience and evolutionary biology (among others) to the power of ideas to international agreements, International Cooperation Against All Odds opens up an entirely new understanding of world politics. If we recognize our nature as a species and the potential we have to work together, we can start to transform institutions, and devise policies that take advantage of this. The book ends with a roadmap to promote more international cooperation, and eventually, a more stable, peaceful world order.
At a time when pessimism about our current world order is at an all-time high, this book overturns widespread assumptions that international relations is mainly about conflict, power, and national self-interest. In the last 10-20 years, scientists have discovered that as a species, we are biologically hard-wired, soft-wired, and pre-wired to be other-regarding and cooperative. Humans are an ultrasocial species, and yet this predisposition is completely ignored in governments across the world. Political leaders, experts, and the media have cultivated a myopic vision of global conflict, feeding an obsession on crises of the moment, rather than recognizing frequent and significant breakthroughs in peaceful cooperation and overall trends in the decline of violence.
This book shows how time and time again our ultrasocial predisposition has pushed us towards big ideas that inspire and bring us together around the power of possibility. Featuring original research on international cooperation in outer-space exploration, European Union integration, nuclear weapons, and climate change, among other examples, Mai'a K. Davis Cross shows ultrasociality at work in a range of contexts. Tracing the path from social neuroscience and evolutionary biology (among others) to the power of ideas to international agreements, International Cooperation Against All Odds opens up an entirely new understanding of world politics. If we recognize our nature as a species and the potential we have to work together, we can start to transform institutions, and devise policies that take advantage of this. The book ends with a roadmap to promote more international cooperation, and eventually, a more stable, peaceful world order.
Reviews / Votes
Very rarely is there a book that challenges what we take for granted when studying and organizing world politics. This is one of these books. Cross' book is nothing less than a paradigm shift. It will undoubtedly become a classic * Marianne Riddervold, Innlandet University Norway and University of California Berkeley * International Cooperation Against All Odds: The Ultrasocial World offers the reader a refreshing and ground-breaking take on global politics, which powerfully and successfully counters the established assumptions about international co-operation. Cross effectively broadens the boundaries of academic discussion with her novel conceptualization of human behaviour, which gets to the very roots of international relations, offering wide-ranging and persuasive cases. It is also a much-needed ray of optimism in today's troubled world! * Karolina Pomorska, Leiden University * International Cooperation Against All Odds: The Ultrasocial World presents a groundbreaking perspective on international relations, offering a corrective to dominant rationalist IR theories that are ingrained with a baked in design flaw: the erroneous assumption of an individualistic and competitive 'market' model of social and organizational behavior. Instead, Cross provides a framework for understanding world politics that aligns with the emerging consensus in other social and biological sciences: that to be human means group identification and cooperation. It further argues that the human evolutionary algorithm to be "ultrasocial" shapes agenda setting, selecting optimistic over pessimistic political ideas to succeed, transform, manipulate, and inspire on a global scale. * Kaija Schilde, Boston University * She nonetheless succeeds in this meticulously researched work in bringing to the fore an interesting set of ideas worthy of consideration by scholars in the field...Highly recommended. * Choice *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
2
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
643 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-287390-3 (9780192873903)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
10/2023
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€24.99
Available for download

E-Book
10/2023
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€24.99
Available for download
Person
Mai'a K. Davis Cross is the Dean's Professor of Political Science, International Affairs, and Diplomacy and Director of the Center for International Affairs and World Cultures at Northeastern University. She is the author of four books, including The Politics of Crisis in Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2017) and Security Integration in Europe: How Knowledge-based Networks are Transforming the European Union (University of Michigan Press, 2011), which is the 2012 winner of the Best Book Prize from the University Association of Contemporary European Studies. She holds a PhD in Politics from Princeton University, and AB in Government from Harvard University. She is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Author
Dean's Professor of Political Science, International Affairs, and Diplomacy and Director of the Center for International Affairs and World CulturesDean's Professor of Political Science, International Affairs, and Diplomacy and Director of the Center for International Affairs and World Cultures, Northeastern University
Content
Introduction
Part I Humans are Ultrasocial Beings
1: The Micro Level
2: Biology Meets Culture
3: The Social in Social Science
4: In an Ultrasocial World, Certain Ideas Matter More
Part II European Integration
5: The Federalist Idea & The European Movement
6: European Transformation
7: Optimism, PessimismELand Repeat
Part III Space Exploration
8: The Spaceflight Idea & The Spaceflight Movement
9: International Cooperation & the Space Race
10: A Permanent Presence in SpaceELand Beyond
Part IV Nuclear Weapons
11: The Non-Use Idea & The Anti-Nuclear Movement
12: The Nuclear Taboo & Disarmament
13: The Taboo & Its Rivals
Part V Climate Change
14: The Climate Movement
15: The Net-Zero Idea & the Race to Save Earth
Conclusion
Bibliography
Part I Humans are Ultrasocial Beings
1: The Micro Level
2: Biology Meets Culture
3: The Social in Social Science
4: In an Ultrasocial World, Certain Ideas Matter More
Part II European Integration
5: The Federalist Idea & The European Movement
6: European Transformation
7: Optimism, PessimismELand Repeat
Part III Space Exploration
8: The Spaceflight Idea & The Spaceflight Movement
9: International Cooperation & the Space Race
10: A Permanent Presence in SpaceELand Beyond
Part IV Nuclear Weapons
11: The Non-Use Idea & The Anti-Nuclear Movement
12: The Nuclear Taboo & Disarmament
13: The Taboo & Its Rivals
Part V Climate Change
14: The Climate Movement
15: The Net-Zero Idea & the Race to Save Earth
Conclusion
Bibliography