Doing Politics with Animals
Sue Donaldson, Will Kymlicka
Social Research: An International Quarterly, Volume 90, Number 4,
Winter 2023, pp. 621-647 (Article)
Published by Johns Hopkins University Press
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/sor.2023.a916348
For additional information about this article
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/916348
Sue Donaldson and
Will Kymlicka
Doing Politics with
Animals
the western tradition of social and political thought is built on
human “exceptionalism”—and a human/nature divide. Whereas nature
is ruled by biological imperatives, humans are assumed to have the
capacity to rise above nature and animality through reason, language,
and culture. Humans make choices about how we want to live, and politics is the vehicle by which we exercise this supposedly unique human
capacity for jointly and deliberately shaping the life of the community.
As Aristotle put it, only humans are zoon politikon—animals capable of
formulating and debating different visions of the good life and the good
society. Human freedom and dignity, according to this tradition, are
measured by how far humans have distanced themselves from, and
risen above, animality.
This human exceptionalist view of politics is increasingly challenged on both empirical and normative grounds. Many commentators argue that it has played an important role in perpetuating the
ongoing moral catastrophe of human-animal relations and that living
justly with animals requires bringing them into the political realm.
But what does it mean to do politics with animals? We consider three recent developments that shed some light. These are (1)
proposals for the institutional representation of animals’ interests in
human political decision-making processes; (2) growing ethological
evidence for animals’ own capacities for language, culture, and collective decision-making; and (3) new theoretical accounts of political
© 2024 The New School
social research Vol. 90 : No. 4 : Winter 2023 621
agency and community that emphasize its embodied, emplaced, and
interdependent nature. Each, in its own way, illuminates potential
futures for animal politics and for just human-animal relations.
REPRESENTING AFFECTED ANIMAL INTERESTS
Every day, across the globe, human governments, businesses, NGOs,
and other organizations take actions that harm or kill innumerable
nonhuman animals, and yet these impacts barely register in policymaking decisions. When humans are debating the national interest
or public good, distributing the benefits and burdens of collective
life, or brokering social conflicts, animals’ interests aren’t taken
into account.
To rectify this situation, political theorists have offered proposals for ensuring that animals’ interests are counted in democratic
governance and decision-making. In the human case, being counted
is typically implemented through protecting individual rights of political assembly, speech, and the vote. Some theorists, deeming animals unable to vote or deliberate, believe they should instead be accorded a right to “political consideration” (e.g., Hooley 2018). Humans
can and should find a way to ensure consideration of animals’ interests when making political decisions, typically through some form
of trustee representation (such as appointing a human to serve as an
animal advocate in political deliberations). On this view, the core task
of democratic politics is to identify, weigh, and aggregate affected
interests, and since animals’ interests clearly are affected by political decisions, they must be counted. And since animals are unable to
self-represent their interests, they should be represented by others; in
other words, they are “political wards” or “political patients,” not active political subjects. Advocates of this position note that this situation is not unique to the animal case: liberal-democratic states already
have various examples of how guardians and trustees can represent
wards, such as children. And there are increasing calls to extend this
model of “political consideration” to future generations (of humans),
who cannot self-represent but whose interests are at risk from politi-
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cal decisions taken today. The task of including animals in politics,
therefore, is a matter of extending this trustee model to them.
One standard proposal is to appoint an animal ombudsperson
or other oversight body authorized to challenge legislative decisions
that might harm the basic interests or rights of animals. Others propose giving intervenor status for animal advocacy organizations in
legal or political processes. More ambitious proposals would set aside
a certain number of seats in the national legislature for animal representatives, to be elected either by voters at large or by a subset
of voters deemed particularly qualified to speak for animals, such
as members of animal protection organizations, veterinarians, and
others involved in animal care (Cochrane 2019; Garner 2017; Hooley
2018; Magaña 2022). All these propositions draw on related proposals
regarding the political representation of the interests of children or
future generations (González-Ricoy and Gosseries 2016; Reif 2020).
These proposals raise both theoretical and practical challenges. Would an animal ombudsperson have the power of veto over legislation or an advisory role only? How many seats in a parliament
should be set aside for animal representatives? Would they have a say
on all legislation or only on decisions affecting animals?1 Democracy
requires that affected interests are represented, but it also requires
that power is held accountable, so who would hold animal representatives accountable for the way they exercise their power? How do we
prevent them from simply advancing their own interests or those of
their political party rather than animals’ interests?
These are important challenges, but defenders respond that
there already exist successful examples of trustee representation, and
in any event, the only way to address these questions is to experiment
with different models and see what works. There is a risk that animal
advocates/representatives would abuse their powers, but this would
surely be more than offset by the way they can serve as a check on
the tendency of parliaments to entirely ignore interests that are not
formally represented.
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This trustee model for representing animals deemed incapable
of self-representation is one important vision of a more-than-human
politics. While no national parliament has yet set aside seats for representatives of animals, there are experiments at the local and regional level in appointing animal advocates, such as the office of the
Animal Protection Advocate in the canton of Zurich (Gerritsen 2013),
and this trend is likely to continue and expand.
Given how often the most basic interests of animals are sacrificed for the most trivial interests of humans, institutional reforms
that require representing and counting animals’ interests in political
decision-making could be truly revolutionary. For the past 50 years,
animal ethicists and animal advocates have often focused on defending the moral status of animals—“expanding the moral circle,” as it is
often called. And public opinion polls suggest that an increasing number of people do include animals in the moral circle. However, while
individual moral attitudes may be changing, animals remain entirely
excluded from the political circle, and proposals for trustee political
representation are a pivotal step in moving the animal question from
morality to politics.
In our view, however, this first vision of animal politics is incomplete and, if taken on its own, is potentially counterproductive.
For one thing, it still treats politics as something that is done to animals, not something that animals themselves engage in. Defenders
of this vision are often quite explicit that they accept Aristotle’s assumption that only humans can exercise political agency: animals
can only be “political patients,” not “political agents.” In its own way,
this plays into long-standing tropes of animals as voiceless and incompetent. It also rests on a narrow view of politics as an essentially
abstract, linguistic activity. It may indeed be true that animals cannot
exercise the sort of idealized and highly cognitivist political agency
that is celebrated in traditional political theory, premised on assumptions that political subjects are independent, self-sufficient, able-bodied, privileged, white, male, and adult. However, as feminists, disability advocates, children’s advocates, postcolonial theorists, and others
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have long argued, there are other forms of embodied, emplaced, and
relational political agency that should be attended to (Kallio and Häkli 2011; Krause 2013; Simplican 2015), and political theory should be
open to the possibility that animals exercise these broader forms of
political agency.
Moreover, this vision uncritically assumes that humans exercise sovereignty over animals. On this vision, it is right and proper
that humans govern animals and their territories, so long as animals’
interests are adequately represented. But who gave humans sovereignty over animals? Critics argue that it is precisely this assumption of human sovereignty over animals that makes possible mass
violence against them, and so any truly post-anthropocentric vision
of politics must start by questioning claims to human sovereignty
(Castello 2022; Wadiwel 2015).
This suggests a different way of thinking about more-than-human politics. Rather than trying to fit animals into existing ideas of
politics with their problematic assumptions that political subjectivity/agency requires rising above dependency, the body, and place, the
idea of politics should start from the realities of interdependence,
embodiment, and embeddedness in ecology and place. And rather
than asking how to represent animals’ interests in human decisionmaking, a better starting place is to ask what kinds of politics animals
themselves engage in.
ETHOLOGIES OF ANIMAL POLITICS
Consider the growing ethological evidence of how animal communities themselves do face-to-face politics. Many readers will be familiar
with the recent explosion of empirical evidence concerning animal
societies and cultures. A century of orthodoxy that viewed animals—
from horses to hyenas, from crows to cuckoos—as tightly scripted
and instinctive creatures is being overturned. It turns out that many
animals are genuinely social and cultural beings—reasoning, normcomplying, and behaviorally flexible individuals who come to be who
they are within a particular social and cultural group whose practices
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are passed down through social learning, not (or not just) instinct.
Birds speak in dialects—indeed, animal languages in general are far
more complex and variable than humans ever imagined, as is increasingly revealed by new technologies for listening to bats, birds, whales,
elephants, and others. Chimpanzees learn to use different tools
depending on what community they are born into (or join in late adolescence), orangutans learn different styles of nest construction, some
communities of orcas eat salmon while others eat seals, and so on.2
These variations within species exist despite similar ecological
conditions. By making different discoveries, and different decisions,
different groups develop different ways of doing things. Many animals are primed to learn “how we do things around here” (i.e., they
are motivated by a desire to learn and conform to local group norms,
rather than simply being compelled by instinct) and to put their own
spin on song repertoires, or bower-building skills, or hunting roles
and techniques. Sometimes individuals innovate entirely new skills—
for accessing or cleaning food, for example—skills that others in their
community witness and adopt. Indeed, some animals actively share
knowledge and ideas beyond their immediate group. Consider how
humpback whale song eventually travels around the world, shared
from one community to the next. Or how sperm whales learned how
to outwit nineteenth-century whaling boats and quickly disseminated
this knowledge between different communities (Whitehead, Smith,
and Rendell 2021). Also notable are the many animals who develop
cooperative arrangements across species boundaries, for hunting,
mutual protection, shelter, and so on. Some of these are evolved symbioses that may have a strong instinctive basis; others are minded and
deliberate adaptations to new situations and opportunities (Cantor,
Farine, and Daura-Jorge 2023).
Animal cultures aren’t just about tools, survival skills, and
language. They also concern social and political norms and arrangements. Striking evidence of animal social norms has emerged in the
study of play, as in the path-breaking research of Mark Bekoff and
Jessica Pierce on canids (2009). Wolves, coyotes, and dogs develop
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play-specific rules and norms. Actions (like biting, growling, rolling,
mounting) that have one meaning in the context of hunting or sex
can be modified and deployed differently in the play context, by mutual agreement of the participants. This means that members of the
group need signals to indicate that they are playing (and stopping
play). It also requires that participants submit equally to the requirements of play. High-rank individuals need to accept what would be
considered insults or failures of deference to their rank in other contexts, for play to succeed. And physically strong individuals need to
restrain their power to level the playing field. The normative world
of play provides insight into the ways coordination, decision-making,
and power work in animal societies more generally.
So, there is growing evidence that many animals exhibit social learning, behavioral flexibility, and innovation, as well as cultural
practices and social norms that play an important role in shaping
both individuals and communities. But can one talk about animal
politics? Do animals have political cultures—that is, norm-governed
practices for navigating the complexities of group living? It is important not to reduce the idea of animal politics to standard tropes
about the brute exercise of power, such as the idea of “dominance
hierarchies” where the strongest or most aggressive animals make
all the decisions, exercising power through coercive threat (although
this is certainly a dimension of politics in many animal societies, as
in the human case). Animal politics is much broader than this, involving myriad practices for navigating the complexities of group living,
especially when the group is made up of diverse individuals with both
shared and competing interests.
Imagine a herd of wild horses in which some of the mares are
expending energy nursing foals and therefore need to eat and drink
more than other members of the group. This gives rise to different
preferences—some horses might prefer to sleep, while the nursing
mothers wish to move to a new grazing spot. What does the herd do?
This is not an unusual scenario. Indeed, many kinds of animal communities must make ongoing decisions in the face of diverse interests
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about when to move, where to go, where to sleep for the night, how
best to evade predators and other risks, how to organize eating and
mating to avoid conflict, how to play safely, and so on. And it turns
out that animal communities have developed a fascinating variety of
practices not just for coordinating one-to-one behavior, but also for
navigating group-level decisions (Conradt and List 2009; Kerth 2010;
Meijer 2019).3
One general strategy is fission-fusion. This means that sometimes an animal group in which members have different interests
breaks down into smaller subgroups of individuals whose choices are
more aligned—for example, the nursing mares who have a common
desire to find nutrient-dense pasture, while other members of the
herd prefer to rest. At other times, the group comes together and
makes decisions for the whole, especially when collective security is
concerned. Decisions might be made by leaders (e.g., elders recognized
as having special knowledge or skills for avoiding conflict or acting in
the best interests of the group) or by voting, to achieve either quorum
or majority decision. Such voting is accomplished in various ways. In
some cases, animals orient their bodies in the direction they think
the group should move. There are African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus)
who announce their desire to move by a sneezing sound, deploying
complicated rules for achieving quorum (with “votes” of high-status
individuals given greater weight) (Walker et al. 2017). From a political
theory perspective, fission-fusion in animal societies looks something
like federalism in human political arrangements—in other words, different levels or scales of decision-making that correspond to different
kinds of shared, overlapping, or conflicting interests.
This entire area of research is in its infancy, and we don’t wish
to overstate commonalities between human politics and the ways different animal communities resolve the challenges of group living,
and the balancing of individual interests and collective flourishing.
But the research to date is sufficient to disrupt received ideas of who
can do politics and what politics is. Many animals actively, consciously, and purposefully navigate group living. As humans better under-
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stand the fascinating and ingenious ways animal societies manage to
cooperate and coordinate, despite the inevitable conflicts of group
living, it becomes clear that humans are not the only zoon politikon.
If animals have the capacity to act politically, do they also have
a right to politics? Glimmers of this idea are emerging within the field
of wildlife conservation. It is increasingly recognized that if wild animals are to survive and flourish, they must be able to maintain and
adapt their processes of cultural transmission and collective decisionmaking. This has direct policy implications. Wildlife conservation
used to prioritize the protection of young animals with the highest
reproductive potential, but it is older animals who are the bearers
of cultural knowledge and political authority. The evidence in relation to elephant herds is particularly striking. Where elder elephants
have been hunted, disrupting the normal forms of authority, younger
elephants turn “rogue” in ways that increase violence among the elephants and between elephants and members of other species (Bradshaw et al. 2005). Forms of conservation that preserve reproductive
potential but disrupt cultural transmission and collective authority
are therefore self-defeating (Brakes et al. 2021).
Also crucial are the ways animal politics is embedded in ecological and material environments. Consider the case of an elephant
matriarch whose authority in the herd is based on her long experience and ability to make good decisions for the group. When a generational drought occurs, the group’s survival depends on her ability to
remember the existence of a distant, reliable water source and how to
get there. If humans, meanwhile, have obliterated this route (by building a dam or an uncrossable highway), this not only diminishes the
chances of survival but also undermines the basis of the matriarch’s
leadership (McComb et al. 2011). The flourishing of the group, the integrity of its cultural and social structures, and some level of stability
and resilience in its ecological and material situation are interwoven.
The social sciences emerged during the twentieth century at
the height of human exceptionalism, but the growing recognition
that many animals are also social, cultural, and political beings sug-
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gests that core concepts of social and political theory need to be reinterpreted. For example, given that animals’ decision-making processes and collective agency are vital to their flourishing yet highly
vulnerable to social, cultural, and ecological disruption, some theorists suggest that wild animals should be viewed as self-determining
political communities or “nations,” with rights of self-government,
territorial sovereignty, or grounded jurisdiction (e.g., Donaldson and
Kymlicka 2011; Papadopoulos 2022; Rizzolo and Bradshaw 2019), and
that relations between humans and wild animals should be seen on
the model of international diplomacy. This is a radical departure from
mainstream Western political theory, which takes for granted human
sovereignty over animals, but it is a familiar idea in some Indigenous
cultures, which have long understood their relations with wild animals as “nation-to-nation” treaty-based relations (Simpson 2008).
This, then, is a second vision of more-than-human politics,
which starts from the idea that wild animals are competent political
actors who form their own self-governing communities and who have
the right to political autonomy. It offers a strikingly different image
of more-than-human politics from the first vision, which emphasizes
representing animals as “political patients” within existing human
political institutions and decision-making processes. However, they
share a gap: neither offers a vision of politics as something humans
and animals do together. The first insists humans should take animals’
interests into account while continuing to exercise sovereignty over
their lives; the second insists animals have the right to exercise their
own forms of collective political agency. But neither offers an account
of how humans and animals can exercise political agency together
as part of shared political communities, how they can be mutually
responsive and accountable and coauthor social norms and ideas of
the public good.
AN OVERLAPPING POLITICS OF SHARED PLACES
What might a model of joint politics look like? This is a complicated
question, given the dizzying diversity of human-animal relations
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around the world. A useful first step is to distinguish two dimensions along which humans and animals can be entangled. First, there
are varying degrees of shared sociability. At one end of this spectrum,
humans and domesticated animals typically share the enabling conditions for thick interspecies sociability: safe proximity, mutual communicative intelligibility, and reduced fear. At the other end, there are
animals with whom this sort of sociability is unlikely or inadvisable
(e.g., cobras, grizzly bears) and many wild animals who avoid contact
with humans due to either experience or more evolutionary fight-orflight responses. Second, there are varying degrees of territorial overlap
or spatial entanglement. At one end, there are animals who live and
thrive in human homes and urban backyards (e.g., pigeons, squirrels),
agricultural areas, and other human-modified environments; at the
other end, there are animals who live in habitats that are inhospitable
to humans—in the deep sea, desert, or mountains—or whose ecological niche is simply too fragile to withstand human presence.
These distinctions matter for joint politics. In our view, the
more humans and animals share a common social world and/or a common territorial and ecological space, the more joint politics is called
for.4 It is important to note that some animals are neither socially nor
physically entangled with humans. We might call these “truly wild”
animals, living on ever-shrinking parts of the earth that humans have
not yet colonized and settled. In such cases, the priority should be
halting further human encroachment and, where possible, reversing
it through rewilding, connectivity corridors, marine sanctuaries, and
so on. The goal in this case is not to further entangle humans and
truly wild animals, but to keep them disentangled, through strong
rights to territorial autonomy.
However, an ever-increasing number of animals are now entangled with humans, socially and territorially, to varying degrees,
generating a need for joint politics. As noted, this includes both domesticated animals and many undomesticated animals who live in
physical proximity to humans, because they have either gravitated to
human settlement for the opportunities it affords or survived being
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enveloped by ever-expanding human development of cities, suburbs,
and industrialized areas. These animals may not have the shared sociability with humans that many domesticated animals do and may
actively avoid human contact (e.g., by becoming more nocturnal to
avoid crossing paths in the city), just as many humans adapt their
houses and behavior to minimize contact with so-called pests. We use
the term “liminal” animals to capture this combination of physical
proximity / territorial overlap without strong sociability.5
How can humans do joint politics with the domesticated and liminal animals who are entangled with us along these social and physical
dimensions? Consider two real-world examples where humans have
committed to sharing power to shape joint living arrangements with
animals: sanctuaries for formerly farmed animals and cities where
planners and architects engage in codesign with animal residents.
Farmed animal sanctuaries provide a permanent home for domesticated animals rescued (or escaped) from farming. Many of the
humans who live and work at these sanctuaries are committed to
ideas of animal liberation and to allowing animals to decide how
to lead their own lives. (There is enormous variation in the ethos of
sanctuaries; our focus is on those with a commitment to animals’
self-determination.) But this raises questions. What kinds of lives do
cows and chickens and pigs want to lead? What kinds of social relationships and norm-governed communities do they want to form
within and across species lines? What kinds of physical spaces and
environments do they want to explore and appropriate? What kinds
of activities do they want to engage in? And to what extent do they
want to do all of this in community with humans, and when do they
instead want to lead their lives apart from humans?
As some farmed animal sanctuaries confront these questions,
they are discovering that there is no way to answer them except to engage in politics with animals (jones 2014). A number of recent studies
have explored how sanctuaries are micro-sites of joint human-animal
politics, revealing a rich world in which animals are making proposals to humans (and to other animal members of the sanctuary com-
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munity), communicating preferences, resisting oppressive norms,
and negotiating new norms—as well as where and how the humans
are responding in kind (Blattner, Donaldson, and Wilcox 2020; Donaldson and Kymlicka 2015; Gillespie 2019; Meijer 2021).
Consider, for example, freedom of association. Some farmed
animal sanctuaries routinely segregate animals by species, each in
its own confined area, arranged to be visible and accessible to human visitors. Sanctuaries committed to animals’ self-determination,
on the contrary, exercise the least restriction possible, and only when
in the interests of the animals themselves, allowing them to freely
roam large and diverse territories and choose their own company,
often leading to surprising interspecies relations in unpredictable
spaces. Restrictions and impositions are inevitable—to protect animals from injury and disease, or from each other—but they can be
negotiated and responsive to animals’ proposals. For example, many
chickens dislike being picked up by humans, especially in open areas. However, selective breeding has made chickens susceptible to a
great number of health problems that must be addressed immediately when they are manifest. This means the birds have to be checked
daily by a human who lifts them up and examines them briefly. At
VINE Sanctuary (Vermont), it was clear to human care providers that
most of the chickens disliked being handled, and so they worked to
find the best solution. Through careful observation they discovered
that the chickens are far less troubled if humans pick them up as
they exit the coop in the morning, rather than in open areas, and this
was adopted as sanctuary policy. VINE offers many such examples
of careful observation and response to what animals propose about
how to organize space, how to use objects, how to engage newcomers
to the community, how to alter routines, and many other practices
(Blattner et al. 2020). In this way, sanctuaries prefigure the kind of
joint human-animal politics that will become possible and necessary
once domesticated animals’ right to self-determination is recognized
and supported more broadly.
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Such prefiguration is also occurring in relation to liminal animals within the world of urban design and planning. All too often,
humans have either tried to expel liminal animals from what they
consider human places or ignored them if they aren’t seen as a threat
(and, equally, ignored their needs and interests). But there is growing
recognition that liminal animals, too, have a “right to place”—and
hence a “right to the city” (Shingne 2022). It is their home, and they
know no other. Numerous city planners, architects, and designers are
actively exploring what it means, not just to design cities and buildings with liminal animals’ needs in mind, but also to engage animals
in the process of design. This can involve simple observation—for
instance, watching how animals use spaces and things (e.g., creating paths to water sources, using rail lines as travel corridors, avoiding crossing roads by using overhead wires instead), treating these as
proposals, and designing with them in mind. For example, architect
Joyce Hwang’s careful observation of how bats repurpose abandoned
buildings in Detroit directly inspires her own work of designing new
buildings and structures with their needs in mind (Hwang 2017). Another way involves embodied consultation by creating options and
opportunities for animals and seeing how they respond (e.g., experimenting with an overpass and underpass option for animals to safely
navigate a road crossing to see what choices they make). For example,
from 2011 to 2016 the Mayor’s Alliance for NYC’s Animals sponsored
an annual design fair to construct winter shelters for feral cats, involving many of the city’s top architects. This was primarily an awareness/funding initiative, but an obvious follow-up would be to monitor
whether and how free-roaming cats use the shelters, then refine the
designs accordingly. Thus, even in the case of animals with whom
humans don’t share a social world of trusting intimate relations, it
is possible to engage in forms of direct consultation and deliberation
for political purposes such as negotiating shared use of place and resources (Meijer 2019; Roudavski 2020; Westerlaken 2020).
Sanctuaries and interspecies urban design offer glimpses of
what joint politics could look like, and many other sites of interspe-
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cies politics remain to be explored. Indeed, we argue that humananimal politics exists all around us. Unfortunately, people often fail
to see this reality due to a number of theoretical blinders. Making
sense of joint politics requires rethinking many of the concepts used
to describe politics, but we focus on two concepts in particular: political community and political agency.
First, human-animal politics requires rethinking what is meant
by political community. Mainstream Western political theory conceives the world as neatly divided into separate and independent
polities (typically nation-states), each of which is seen as occupying
its own exclusive territory and exercising its own exclusive political
jurisdiction. As philosopher Cara Nine (2022) has argued, this model
fails even in relation to humans, ignoring how political communities
exist at multiple, overlapping levels. The inhabitants on either side
of an international boundary may occupy the same watershed, for
example, making them acutely interdependent with respect to drinking water, sanitation, power generation, recreation, and so on even
though they belong to different states. The conflicts and questions
that inevitably arise in situations of entanglement like this generate
an obligation to form a new political body of overlapping communities to govern the place (the watershed) that is shared. This new
political community does not replace preexisting states (and the citizenship and public goods they are empowered to create). But all those
who share the watershed have a responsibility to enter a new political
relationship with each other, regardless of their national citizenship,
specifically to address the issues arising from shared occupation of
a place that grounds its own specific relations and responsibilities.
On Nine’s account, place-based polities, defined by reference to interdependence arising from physical proximity, coexist alongside more
familiar polities defined in terms of thicker norms of citizenship and
social membership.
Nine’s account has resonances with Elinor Ostrom’s influential
theory of “the commons” (1990). The commons are not intended to
provide a full-service government concerned with the full spectrum
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of citizens’ needs and desires. That is the task of the political communities that are built upon ideas of citizenship or social membership.
Rather, commoning arrangements arise when people from different
social groups depend on the same physical space and resources and
need to ensure that everyone can access resources without conflict,
and without degrading the place to the cost of all. Norms emerge
from the ground up in such contexts and tend to focus narrowly on
place-based use rights and responsibilities.
In short, for both Ostrom and Nine, there are plural and overlapping forms of governance, with a division of labor between them.
Not all political communities need to be “dense” (to encompass the
full spectrum of responsibilities and authorities from defense to
health care to education to justice) to be recognized as self-originating sources of authority. The commons as a form of political community may have a narrow mandate or jurisdiction, tied to the rights to
place of residents and their responsibility to care for that place, but
within that jurisdiction its authority should be upheld, not assumed
to be subordinate to the authority of nation-states.
Nine and Ostrom only apply their theories to human politics,
but these are helpful in understanding interspecies politics, including the examples of sanctuaries and urban interspecies design. In the
sanctuary case, there are (at least) two overlapping forms of political community. One political community is composed of the sanctuary’s members (rescued farm animals and humans), bound together
by certain thick forms of interspecies sociability, with shared social
norms and close social relationships of affection, care, interdependence, and cooperation. At their best, sanctuaries are committed to
the self-determination of their members—and to coauthorship of this
shared social world. However, sanctuaries are also a particular kind of
territorial community, and as such, they are home to various liminal
animals, such as wild turkeys, rats, skunks, deer, foxes, and myriad
other animals. These animals also have a right to place, even if they
do not share in the thick forms of sociability that connect the resident humans and formerly farmed animals. In that sense, sanctuaries
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are both a thickly social membership-based community (linking humans and domesticated animals) and a thinner interspecies commons
that includes liminal animals as well.
To mark this distinction, we describe all those who physically
reside in the territory of the sanctuary—humans, formerly farmed
animals, and liminal animals—as denizens of the interspecies commons, with distinctive place-based rights and responsibilities to the
commons. But within that space, and within the limits set by their
duties as denizens of the commons, humans and formerly farmed animals are also building relations of co-citizenship tied to ideas of social
membership. The “citizen” members of the sanctuary have diverse
relations with the liminal animal denizens—some cordial, some less
so—requiring the creation of specific practices to maintain the peace
or at least establish a modus vivendi. Liminal denizens may not be
part of the dense webs of sociality connecting citizen members, but
they share an attenuated connection related to joint occupation and
navigation of place and the interdependencies arising from this.
Thus, sanctuaries are a microcosm of the complexity of boundaries and political community—of complicated layers of ecological,
social, and place-based overlap of individuals and communities with
often widely diverging interests. A sanctuary is not a single community, but a messier place of overlapping communities, and this requires
a way of understanding communal self-determination that starts from
interdependence and overlap, not separation and independence.
Cities raise similar challenges of overlap. Humans and domesticated animals living in cities often share thick social relationships of
cooperation and mutual responsibility, and as such can enter relations
of co-citizenship in a membership-based political community authorized with a broad spectrum of shared concerns (e.g., social services,
distributive justice, inculcation of norms of civility, etc.). But the city
is also a territory that operates as a commons for a wider range of
liminal animals like peregrine falcons, monkeys, rats, squirrels, and
blue jays who live in the same place, use the same resources, are ecologically connected, and in many cases share place-based meanings,
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practices, and norms (like not defecating in the drinking fountain, or
not stealing out of someone’s hands and instead waiting until they
drop a piece of food). This multispecies commons has a narrower political remit: it is focused on maintaining the peace between the different human and animal residents who need to coordinate their use
of space and resources and ensure the resilience of their ecosystem.
So here too we can think of two overlapping political communities. At one level, humans, domesticated animals, and liminal
animals are all co-denizens of the city understood as a multispecies
commons. But within that space and within its limits, humans and
domesticated animals can seek to establish thicker relations of cocitizenship in the city as a membership-based demos.
The Western political tradition contains rich discussions of the
rights and duties associated with citizenship in political communities
built around ideas of shared social membership and peoplehood, but
it has failed to explain the rights and duties associated with sharing a place and caring for that place. This idea does resonate with
some traditional Indigenous ideas of right relationship to the land.
According to Shiri Pasternak (2017), the idea of “grounded authority” is at the heart of the conception of politics among the Algonquin
peoples of Barriere Lake in Canada: to claim authority or jurisdiction
in a territory one must be knowledgeable and respectful of the land
and the environment. This idea of responsibility for place is in stark
contrast to traditional Western political theory, in which the land is
conceptualized strictly as resource (a view that has brought us all to
the brink of extinction). And if political authority over territory is
tied to knowledge of and respect for land, then animals too should
clearly qualify for grounded jurisdiction (Papadopoulos 2022). Indeed,
if anything, animals have a much better track record than humans
of living in an ecologically responsible way, and various Indigenous
traditions have insisted that humans need to learn from animals how
to live respectfully on the land (Simpson 2008).
This, then, is one theoretical blinder that needs to be overcome. Envisaging human-animal politics requires moving beyond
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unitary and exclusive notions of the political community to recognize
that there are multiple and overlapping forms of political community, some more tied to citizenship arising from shared social membership, others more tied to denizenship arising from proximity and
interdependence in occupying the same particular place or territory.
This leads to the second key theoretical blinder, which is about
political agency. As noted earlier, the traditional conception of political agency is highly cognitivist, focusing on the individual capacity
to articulate and evaluate abstract propositions about competing visions of the future, and animals have been assumed to be incapable
of political agency in this sense. However, here again, there are good
reasons to think that this model fails even in the human case. Feminist theorists, among others, have long argued that political agency is
not the activity of independent, atomistic individuals exercising their
autonomous will. Rather, as Sharon Krause (2013) argues, political
agency is often “relational” and “distributed,” coproduced in interdependent social relations.6 Humans become agents if and when other
subjects are willing and able to be the “bearers” and “holders” of our
subjectivity, providing “uptake” of our expressions and actions, interpreting, responding, supporting, and extending them. (Consider,
for example, how the speech of a high-status person is “taken up”
by others in deliberation.) Agency also depends on whether and how
the material environment bears our agency. (Consider how an ablebodied person has easier access to the council chamber located up a
flight of steps compared to a person using a wheelchair or how the destruction of an open and accessible gathering space for large crowds
undermines the possibility of engaging in certain kinds of protest.) In
short, agency depends on the “holding environment” and how the social and material context holds people’s identities and subjectivities.
Understanding this holding environment of agency and identity has been the focus of innovative work in recent political theory. According to Bonnie Honig (2017), for example, politics requires “public things,” from playgrounds to courts to railways, which operate as
the durable repositories of collective identities and aspirations and
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639
remind individuals who they are and how they belong together. There
is also a growing literature on how the material environment operates as “extended mind.” Insofar as humans have stable and enduring
identities, these are not solely located within our (easily distracted
and forgetful) individual minds. Rather, the material environment
plays an essential role in holding subjectivities and identities. As Cara
Nine (2022) notes, this is one central function of “the home,” to serve
as the extended mind of an individual, and the same applies at a collective level: the shared territory of self-governing groups serves as
the holder and bearer of collective identities. As she and others have
noted, this is one reason dispossession is such a great political injustice, even if the dispossessed are offered other places to move to, and
why humans have such strong rights to place. Material and ecological environments in this sense are not just the containers or settings
within which politics takes place, but also play a central role in bearing and holding individual and collective subjectivities.
As we have noted, these ideas about distributed agency have
been elaborated to make better sense of human politics and, in particular, to help illuminate the political agency of traditionally excluded groups like children (e.g., Kallio and Häkli 2011). In our view,
however, they apply equally to animals—and to joint human-animal
politics. Indeed, one could argue that animal politics illustrates all
the ideas we have just been discussing about what makes for good
politics. Animals are political agents when their social relations and
material environments provide uptake of their subjectivity and serve
as the holders of their identities. Just as for humans, specific places
serve as the “public things” and “extended mind” for animals, holding and bearing their subjectivity. Perhaps even more than humans,
animals have located lives tied to specific habitats. And so they too
should be seen as having powerful place-based rights.
This is true not just of the truly wild animals who depend on
specific habitats, but also of many liminal animals living in the city.
Consider the peregrine falcons who now use tall buildings instead of
cliff faces as nesting areas or animals who rely on human food waste
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to feed themselves or on human presence to guard against (other)
predators. Some of these adaptations occur at the evolutionary level,
but many seem to be cases of animals purposefully innovating “city
ways” for finding safe shelter, food sources, or entertainment, as well
as norms for limiting conflict with humans and others in the sharing
of space. “Relocation” of city animals is notoriously unsuccessful, and
this is hardly surprising. A raccoon who has lived her life in central
Toronto and has social networks and survival skills emplaced there
will be completely at a loss if removed to a wild area outside the city.
The rural woodland does not operate as a holding environment for
her; rather, her possibilities for being part of a self-determining community evaporate.
The distributed account of political agency also helps to explain
how and when joint human-animal politics is possible. In the case of
many wild animals, the bearers and holders of their subjectivity are
other conspecifics within their herd or pod or flock—for example,
the other wild African dogs who sneeze together to decide on where
to move. But in the case of many domesticated animals, because of
the accumulated knowledge and adaptations of a long history of living and working together, humans can be the bearers and holders of
animals’ subjectivity, just as animals can be bearers and holders of
humans’ subjectivity. In the case of domesticated dogs, for example,
studies have shown that humans are capable of distinguishing a remarkable range of different dog barks, often without even realizing
that they have this knowledge (Pongrácz et al. 2005). And conversely,
dogs are capable of distinguishing and interpreting many different
human sounds and bodily movements. Of course, the vast majority
of domesticated animals are kept in factory farm conditions that do
not allow them to express themselves or humans to respond to those
expressions. But in contexts like farmed animal sanctuaries, humans
and animals are becoming the bearers of each other’s agency, providing “uptake” of each other’s expressions of subjectivity, enabling matters of common concern to be identified and addressed.
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641
Moreover, as the example of urban interspecies design shows,
even where this strong interspecies sociability is lacking, it may
still be possible to do politics together with liminal animals. In both
farmed animal sanctuaries and urban design, the actions of humans,
far from compromising animals’ autonomy or self-determination, are
crucial to maintaining the holding environment of extended and relational agency. This sort of joint politics may not always be possible
or desirable—the preconditions for effective joint politics may not be
present with some truly wild animals or can only be created through
wrongful acts of capturing and confining them. In these cases, politics may take the forms discussed earlier: trustee representation of
animals’ interests and respect for wild animals’ own self-governance.
But where humans and animals live together in a shared social world
and/or shared commons, joint politics is possible and necessary. And
the political reforms that would make that possible—namely, a shift
toward a more pluralistic conception of political community and a
more emplaced, relational, and distributed conception of political
agency—are precisely the reforms we need in any event to have any
prospect of an ecologically sustainable and inclusive politics.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thank you to the wonderful members of the animal studies workin-progress group at Queen’s University for helping us improve this
article.
NOTES
1. For example, would they be able to engage in logrolling politics, agreeing to support a proposal that doesn’t affect animals in exchange for
other parliamentarians’ support for an animal cause? For speculations on how animal representatives might operate in parliamentary
politics, see Hooley 2018; Vink 2020.
2. For reviews of the “cultural turn” in ethology, see Safina 2020; Whiten
2021.
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3. Because these processes are learned within specific groups, they do
not necessarily exist at the level of species: there is no one “wolf politics” or “whale politics.” Rather, as in the human case, there are the
politics of specific wolf packs and whale pods. As Rafi Youatt notes,
“Just as human politics requires subspecies concepts such as nations,
communities, and networks, so too does nonhuman life benefit from
a richer subspecies vocabulary” (2020, 5).
4. Of course, social relations are often inseparable from the “place” in
which they are embedded (Ochoa Espejo 2016).
5. Even where sociability in a thick sense doesn’t exist, humans and
liminal animals often share a thinner sense of sociability, along the
lines of Erving Goffman’s “interaction order”—mutual awareness,
respecting the other’s space, signaling “no threat,” and in other ways
engaging in mutually intelligible behavior. There are many instances
of humans and liminal animals developing personal friendships and
other forms of thick sociability. This is precisely as one would expect
given that animals and humans are minded individuals, not automatons playing out a species script. Similarly, there is great variation in
the shared sociability of humans and domesticated animals, depending on interplays of genes, culture, context, and individual inclination. We are describing broad patterns of relationship here, not
inherent traits and limits.
6. There are now several versions of “distributed” agency in the literature. They all share a commitment to decentering the idea of a sovereign will as the unique source of agency and to emphasizing how
agency emerges out of social and material interactions in ways that
exceed intentionality. However, there is disagreement about whether
decentering the sovereign also requires decentering the idea of
subjectivity. For Krause, distributed agency still involves subjectivity; agency is “the affirmation of one’s subjective existence through
concrete action in the world” (2013, 197)—even if this affirmation
of subjectivity exceeds intentionality. By contrast, some theorists—
including some posthumanists (e.g., Donna Haraway), new materialists (e.g., Jane Bennett), and actor-network theorists (e.g., Bruno
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643
Latour)—want to decenter subjectivity and attribute “agency” to
non-sentient life or even to nonliving matter. Critics have argued that
these latter accounts of agency-without-subjectivity are conceptually
incoherent and politically paralyzing (e.g., Giraud 2019; Lemke 2018).
We would just add that in a world where the exploitation of animals
is built upon denying their subjectivity, posthumanist and materialist theories that decenter subjectivity, and that lump animals in
with bacteria, soil, and technology, are at risk of simply reinscribing
animal exploitation.
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