Organizational democracy is often grounded in humanist assumptions—such as individual rights, rational agency, and procedural equality—while overlooking the ecological and material entanglements that sustain both organizations and life itself. Framing this humanist foundation as the “ Anthropocentric Dilemma of Democracy ,” this article reimagines democratic organizing through the lens of Rosi Braidotti’s posthuman feminist theory. A speculative vignette set in 2050—featuring democratic organizing with previously excluded others, such as a heatwave, an extinct bee, or a future child—illustrates how organizations might engage with material interfaces, embodied and affective attunement, and ethical responsiveness to and with forgotten kin. At its core, the paper theorizes three interrelated registers of posthuman organizing that reposition democratic subjects within interdependence and vulnerability: (I) acknowledging “heterogeneous assemblages,” (II) attuning “zoe/geo/technobodies,” and (III) cultivating “affirmative relational ethics.” This contribution advances democratic organizing literature by embedding democracy within asymmetrical ecological and techno-material becoming. It further extends new materialist and posthuman organizational theorizing through a critical and feminist exploration of how organizing can understand itself as part of—and be driven by—planetary fragility, technological exuberance, and pervasive inequity that call for affirmative responses. Finally, the paper proposes a speculative and affirmative mode of theorizing.
Jonas Friedrich (Thu,) studied this question.