• From Critical Theory to Planetary Politics; Rethinking Power, Knowledge and Ecology – A conversation with Ian Manners
    Jun 28 2026

    For episode six of this season, “Global Governance Beyond Neoliberalism”, we had the pleasure of hosting Ian Manners, professor of political science at Lund University. Manners has decades of experience in teaching in Denmark, Britain and Sweden and is widely known for his work on normative power, European integration, and global politics. His research explores how values, identities, and political norms shape international relations and governance beyond traditional state-centered approaches.

    Through his conversation with our host, Hagen Schulz-Forberg, Manners delves into the role of norms and values in global governance at a time marked by geopolitical tensions, democratic challenges, and planetary crises. This episode invites listeners to rethink the relation between Europe and the wider world, not only through a lens of institutional coordination but of global interdependence.

    Academic Reference:

    Ian Manners, Hagen Schulz-Forberg; From Critical Theory to Planetary Politics; Rethinking Power, Knowledge and Ecology – A conversation with Ian Manners. Global Perspectives 29 June 2026; 7 (1): 162775. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2026.162775

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    57 mins
  • Rethinking Global Governance with the Planetary Compendium – A Conversation with Jonathan Blake
    Jun 14 2026

    For the fifth episode of this season on “Global Governance Beyond Neoliberalism,” our host, Hagen Schulz-Forberg, had the pleasure of speaking with political scientist, Jonathan Blake. Blake is the Associate Director of the Planetary Program at the Berggruen Institute, an international network of experts focusing on developing innovative, foundational frameworks that tackle questions involving the future of global governance. Through the Planetary Program, Blake and his colleagues have developed the Planetary Compendium: a website made in collaboration with Dark Matter Labs that showcases interactive, audio-visual case-studies concerning issues of planetary governance, health, economics, ecology, and more. This episode explores some of these case-studies and navigates questions of thinking outside of the boundaries of democracy, the possible evolution of political processes, and working together towards planetary governance.

    Academic Reference:

    Jonathan Blake, Hagen Schulz-Forberg; Rethinking Global Governance with the Planetary Compendium—A Conversation with Jonathan Blake. Global Perspectives 13 May 2026; 7 (1): 161510. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2026.161510

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    58 mins
  • Rethinking Russia: Transnational Perspectives on Authoritarianism, Society & Resistance – A Symposium
    Jun 1 2026

    In this special Symposium edition of our podcast series Beyond Neo-Liberalism, we dive into Anna Schwenck’s monograph, Flexible Authoritarianism, alongside a panel of leading scholars: Jeremy Morris, Greg Yudin, and Johanna K. Bockman.

    How do ambition, loyalty, status, and inequality take shape inside an authoritarian regime? Can neoliberal aspirations thrive under authoritarian rule? And how does everyday life—and innovation—unfold within a war-driven economy? Our guests unpack these questions, debate the concepts we use to understand Russian society today, and offer fresh perspectives on authoritarianism, social change, and resistance.

    Academic Reference:

    Anna Schwenck, Jeremy Morris, Johanna Bockman, Greg Yudin, Hagen Schulz-Forberg; Rethinking Russia: Transnational Perspectives on Authoritarianism, Society & Resistance—A Symposium. Global Perspectives 14 May 2026; 7 (1): 161510. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2026.161510

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    1 hr and 39 mins
  • Bitcoin Nation? Assessing El Salvador’s Crypto Experiment — A Conversation with Vladimir Pacheco Cueva
    May 18 2026

    In the third episode of our new season, Global Governance Beyond Neoliberalism, we sit down with Vladimir Pacheco Cueva, Associate Professor in the Global Studies Department at Aarhus University.

    Drawing on research in political economy and social policy, with a particular focus on Latin America, Cueva takes us through one of the most striking economic experiments of recent years: El Salvador’s adoption of Bitcoin under President Nayib Bukele.

    Together with our host, Hagen Schulz-Forberg, the two explore what this unprecedented crypto-project means for governance, development, financial sovereignty, and everyday life in a country marked by political disruptions and environmental fragility. From the promises of innovation to the risks of deepening inequality, Cueva helps us understand how El Salvador’s Bitcoin project fits into longer histories of neoliberal reform and what its trajectory might reveal about the future of post-neoliberal politics across the region.

    Academic Reference:

    Vladimir Pacheco Cueva, Hagen Schulz-Forberg; Bitcoin Nation? Assessing El Salvador's Crypto Experiment — A Conversation with Vladimir Pacheco Cueva. Global Perspectives 25 March 2026; 7 (1): 158699. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2026.158699.

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    47 mins
  • Rethinking Education for Transnational Governance — A Conversation with Fabrizio Tassinari
    May 4 2026

    In the latest episode of Beyond Neo-liberalism, our host Hagen Schulz-Forberg is joined by political scientist and executive director, Fabrizio Tassinari, as we explore his work at European University Institute’s School of Transnational Governance and his works on developing new forms of diplomatic training, suitable for an age of planetary polycrisis.

    Throughout the episode we explore questions of what it means to educate our future diplomats in times of planetary crisis, what is left of the old forms of transnational governance and what can guide future visions of global governance.

    Academic Reference:

    Fabrizio Tassinari, Hagen Schulz-Forberg; Rethinking Education for Transnational Governance — A Conversation with Fabrizio Tassinari. Global Perspectives 25 March 2026; 7 (1): 158897. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2026.158897

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    58 mins
  • The Shifting Tides of Global Governance — A Conversation with Michael Zürn
    Apr 20 2026

    In our very first episode in our series Beyond Neo-liberalism, our host Hagen Schulz-Forberg sits down with political scientist Michael Zürn as they explore the intersections of global governance and international relations in the current political climate. The two discuss Zürn’s work with the analytical categories of NALFI (Normativity, Authority, Liberalism, Fragmentation, Inequality), democratic regression and the tensions between national democracy and transnational authorities.

    Are we moving beyond our traditional understandings of Global Governance? Do transnational authorities have too big of a grasp on national democracies? Are we moving towards a post-democracy understanding of international relations? If so, what will happen?

    Academic Reference:

    Michael Zürn, Hagen Schulz-Forberg; The Shifting Tides of Global Governance—A Conversation with Michael Zürn. Global Perspectives 2 January 2026; 7 (1): 159010. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2026.159010

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Planetary Thought in the Early Soviet Union —A Conversation with Daniela Russ
    Jan 4 2026

    In the final episode of Mapping the Planetary, Daniela Russ, Junior Professor at the University of Leipzig, joins hosts Hagen Schulz-Forberg and James Quilligan to explore the fascinating intersections of energy, science, and planetary thoughts in the early Soviet Union (1917–1945). Drawing on the pioneering work of scientists Vladimir Vernadsky and Boris Veinberg, the conversation reveals how Soviet thinkers imagined planetary transformation, in both scientific and political contexts and how these early renditions of planetary thinking, still resonate in today’s debates on the environmentalism, globalism and the Anthropocene.

    Academic Reference:

    Daniela Russ, Hagen Schulz-Forberg, James Quilligan; Planetary Thought in the Early Soviet Union—A Conversation with Daniela Russ. Global Perspectives 10 March 2025; 6 (1): 150340. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2025.150340

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    58 mins
  • The Ecology of Happiness —A Conversation with Stefano Bartolini
    Jan 4 2026

    In episode 9 of Mapping the Planetary, hosts Hagen Schulz-Forberg and James Quilligan welcome Stefano Bartolini, Associate Professor at the University of Siena, whose research explores Political Economy, Social Economy, and the Economics of Happiness. Together, they ask a fundamental question: Can economic prosperity coexist with genuine human well-being and planetary sustainability? The conversation examines how modern economies might evolve beyond growth-centered models to embrace a more holistic understanding of prosperity, one that values social connection, leisure, environmental balance, and happiness as much as material wealth.

    Academic Reference:

    Stefano Bartolini, Hagen Schulz-Forberg, James Quilligan; The Ecology of Happiness—A Conversation with Stefano Bartolini. Global Perspectives 10 March 2025; 6 (1): 150338. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/gp.2025.150338

    Any Questions? Send us a text

    This podcast was created and produced by the Research Center for New Critical Politics and Governance (CPG).

    To watch the video version of this episode, please visit the link below:
    https://cas.au.dk/en/cpg/podcast/mapping-the-planetary

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    34 mins