Thank you Professor Castellani for agreeing to be interviewed
 about your new Routledge book, The Defiance of Global Commitment. By 
drawing on Freud’s Civilization and Its Discontents (as well as the 
latest advances in cognitive science, evolutionary biology, social 
psychology and the complexity sciences) it certainly makes for an 
innovative, highly original and challenging read. You certainly got me 
thinking and digging deep into my social science memory and the hidden 
corners of my bookshelves.
1. As human beings, we are not very good at saving ourselves 
and the planet… give us a quick summary of your argument about why this 
is the case.
Freud’s big point in Civilization and Its Discontents, which I 
develop in regards to globalization, is that our best chance at even the
 smallest degree of happiness in life comes from the advances of civil 
society; but all such advances – particularly in terms of social justice
 – require people to make sacrifices to get along; and people don’t like
 doing that, as they think they are somehow giving up more than they are
 getting (which they often are), and so they rebel against their global 
social commitments; which, ironically enough, threatens the very chance 
most people have at happiness.  In other words, the success of global 
civil society, it seems, is built on a social psychological conundrum: a
 sort of psychic catch-22 if you will.
And, vis-à-vis globalization today (circa 2018), this Freudian 
catch-22 appears to have crossed a negative tipping point, with many 
segments of the world (albeit not everyone!) falling prey to one type of
 unhealthy social psychology or another – and all of it helping to 
adversely reinforce, worldwide, the escalating fears, conflicts, 
resentments, inequalities, cruelties, and aggressions brought on by the 
current phase of globalization.
The result, to go to your point, and which we see almost daily in the
 news, is a rise in the number of people who are willing to raze their 
respective communities to the ground in order to satisfy their contempt 
for the global success and wellbeing of others.  Or, alternatively, how 
this contempt is emboldening people to actively resist their role in (or
 the reality of) the global social problems we presently face.  And, 
what is particularly disturbing is that, while much of this contempt 
comes from those feeling left behind by globalization (which is 
understandable); it is equally embraced by those who have benefitted the
 most – namely, those privileged few living in the most technologically 
and economically advanced parts of the world.  And it does not stop 
there, as it seems this contempt for others and the planet (a sort of 
culture of cruelty, if you will) is becoming a model for living for 
many, leading to a worldwide backlash against the establishment of a 
more just and equitable civil society.  But, as with all such stories, 
these negative social psychologies aren’t the only thing going.
2. Which takes me to my next question.  Like Freud, many 
sociologists are quite deterministic and fatalistic about the path 
humanity is taking. While you challenge the optimism of writers like 
Steven Pinker (i.e., The Better Angels of Our Nature and Enlightenment 
Now), do you think a complexity theory analysis still leaves the global 
fate in our own hands? – so lots of different possibilities?
As complexity science teaches us, in any complex system (such as our 
global society) there is always the adjacent possible – that is, the 
chance that the system is traveling in multiple and different 
directions, and all at the same time!
And, in fact, that is what is happening today.  Our globalized world 
is a very complex place; with different groups the world-over (i.e., 
communities, countries, companies, etc) carving out all sorts of 
different but simultaneous social psychological paths.  In my book, for 
example, I chart the trajectory of several of them – from 
eco-primitivism and affluent resentment to patriarchal nostalgia and 
ethnic nationalism to globalism and global civil service.  And for each 
of these social psychologies, it is important to note, I also explore 
its counter-force: its opposing social psychology of globalization, if 
you will.  It is also for this reason that I developed, in the third 
part of my book, a basic model of global power relations and resistance,
 based on the work of Freud, Foucault and Sylvia Walby.
And, again to your point, using this model to organize my data, it 
seems to me that, contrary to writers like Steven Pinker, the negative 
social psychologies of the world are winning across many domains of 
global socio-ecological life today, particularly given how well they are
 “propped up” by the current strong-arms throughout the world – from the
 global east and north to south and west.
But, the current “wins” for these negative psychologies doesn’t mean 
things necessarily end there, as complex systems are not deterministic –
 for example, significant countervailing changes often go unseen until 
they reach a critical point, as in the #MeToo and BlackLivesMatter 
movements, for example.  Neither is it the case that these “negative 
psychologies” are everywhere or across everything, as negotiated 
progress is always simultaneously taking place around the world.
As such, the current global dominance of these “negative 
psychologies” only means that the capacity for global civil society and 
healthy resistance to move the world in the right direction is limited. 
 But, given the constant conflict on which our global system is 
tenuously and chaotically balanced, these dominating conditions can tip 
in a different direction – which is why I think, from a policy 
perspective, we need to keep pushing hard for various types of “engaged 
governance,” as in the case of global civil society.  Still, I must 
admit, at least on the ecological front, I am worried, as time is not on
 our side.
3. You are inspired a lot by Freud, who is central to your 
book and argument. Do you think he was actually a complexity theorist 
without knowing it?
No, I don’t.  Freud was very much part of the grand narrative 
tradition of industrialized modernity, seeking to create a single model 
that explained the full of human psychology.  And that goal, more than 
anything, blinded him to the complexities of human existence.
The same problem of embracing complexity seems true for a lot of 
public policy today – which is why applied research centres and 
networks, such as CECAN, are so important: they are advancing the field 
to improve its capacity to evaluate and, in turn, develop public 
policies that are more sensitive to initial conditions, path 
dependencies, the nexus of things, and the multiple and different 
trajectories along which the impact of a policy flows.
4. Relative to your point, do you see your work, then, as a 
normative turn in complexity theory, to assist its move from the 
sciences into the social sciences?
Yes I do.  For me, Byrne and Callaghan’s, Complexity Theory and the 
Social Sciences: The State of the Art, is the first real push to go 
beyond a sales pitch for complexity – which was very important! – to 
saying, “Okay, we’ve got all of this complexity science stuff, so what 
are we to make of it?  How does it actually help us get on with the job 
of doing social science?”
Of course, you had others, particularly during the late 1900s, 
seeking to establish a normative social complexity, such as Edgar Morin 
and his distinction between restrictive and general complexity – as well
 as, for example, the work of Talcott Parsons and Niklas Luhmann in 
sociology, and Paul Cilliers in philosophy, and Peter Checkland in 
managerial studies.  But all of these approaches, despite their 
brilliance, ignore three important issues that I have sought to bring 
forth in my work:
First, there is the role of power relations and conflict in complex 
systems.  There is little in complexity science today, for example, that
 addresses power, particularly its negative states, as in the case of 
domination, exploitation, oppression, cruelty, aggression, etc – which 
is why my work leans so heavily on Foucault.  The same is true of 
conflict: you do not see complexity scientists studying conflict in 
complex networks, for example, as it is not part of the vocabulary of 
physics and computer science. Which is why I turned to Immanuel 
Wallerstein and, more important, to Sylvia Walby, who does an absolutely
 brilliant job of integrating intersectionality theory and feminism with
 complexity science and globalization studies.
Second, there is the role of social psychology in complex systems.  
For example, other than Manuel Castells, there is little work on 
identity and its links to complex systems, let alone the role of group 
conflict or in-group/out-group behaviour.  The only exception is 
agent-based modeling, which does an excellent job with swarm behaviour, 
predator-prey models, social segregation, economic competition, 
contagions in networks, and so forth.  But, still, a lot more could be 
done to incorporate the work of symbolic interactionism, for example, 
into complexity science models – all of which is why, in my work, I 
sought to develop (and argued for) a social psychology of globalization 
and, more specifically, a social psychology of policy research.  More 
specifically, I argued for a mental health model of globalization; which
 takes me to my next point.
Third is the role of psychology in complex systems.  Type in the 
words “complexity” and “psychology” in Google, for example, and you will
 get next to nothing.  It is as if the two fields don’t know that, 
presently, each the other exists.  The only exception, today, is in 
cognitive science and the embodied mind literature, given their strong 
links to the work of Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela and the 
fields of distributed artificial intelligence and cybernetics.  And that
 is particularly upsetting, given that many of the systems science 
founders – such as Margaret Mead, Anatol Rapoport, Kurt Koffka, Murray 
Bown and Gregory Bateson – made such important advances in a “systems” 
approach to psychology, including the development of family systems 
theory and gestalt psychology.
As such, in terms of establishing a normative social complexity, I 
see my work as both an advance and a rapprochement, insomuch as I have 
tried to link a complex systems view of the world with the inner psychic
 life of humans, including their primitive paleomammalian emotions, 
cognitive biases, irrationalities, anxieties, aggressions, embodied 
minds, psychopathologies and personalities; as well as their social 
psychologies and power relations and group-based conflicts.
5. As you just demonstrated, your work spans many 
disciplines, but notably the domains of sociology and psychology. You 
have a dialogue with social psychology that is philosophical and macro 
social (in terms of the role of the individual).  Is there a place, 
then, for social psychology in policy?
Absolutely!  We don’t discuss it much, but the social psychology and 
mental health of a community is just as important as its economic and 
political wellbeing.  And, just like the psychology of an individual, 
the mental health (and healthy awareness) of a community can become 
dysfunctional, particularly in the face of widespread change – as we see
 with globalization today – and in the face of the escalating conflicts,
 fears, resentments and aggressions that often surround it, as I just 
mentioned.
Equally Important, when the mental health of a community becomes 
problematic, people fall prey to feel-good decisions and unhealthy 
choices – as well as the political strongarms of the world – which seem,
 on the face of it, self-preserving, but are often, in the long-run, not
 good.  We see this, for example, in the growing embraces of ethnic 
nationalism, global capitalism, the fight against ecological 
preservation, and the negative reactions against the civil rights of 
women, ethnic minorities, refugees, and the LGBT communities.
The challenge, then, is to counteract this pathology by improving the
 mental health (and healthy outlook) of communities – hence the role of 
global civil society and public policy.  And, it is important, to point 
out, we already have good models for doing this work.  They come from 
the fields of community and public health, which have always been in the
 business of developing (and evaluating) policies that seek to improve 
the mental and physical wellbeing of communities.  And, given such 
transformative goals, these fields have always had to deal with 
politics, power, and conflicts, as well as the emotional irrationalities
 and cognitive biases and social psychologies of people.  So, it has 
been and can be (and also very much needs to be) done.
6. I grew up in an age of cognitive social psychology and was
 inducted in applied social practice concepts like self-efficacy, 
self-esteem, locus of control, learned hopelessness, etc…  It did get 
very frustrating trying to make these concepts relevant in therapeutic 
practice. Is there any place left for such social psychology?
I was raised in the same era of thinking and, like you, found the 
clinical utility of these concepts problematic.  Still, I think that out
 of these ideas the social sciences have evolved significantly.
For example, cognitive science and the sociology of emotions have 
helped us make major strides in understanding the highly irrational and 
biased ways that the human mind and social groups work. 
And, in turn, 
identity theory has proven very useful in demonstrating the significant 
role that social support plays in self-efficacy and psychological 
development – particularly as linked with LGBT and gender studies.  The 
same is true of intersectionality theory, which has demonstrated how the
 mental health of individuals is significantly impacted by the larger 
organizational, geo-spatial and societal arrangements in which they are 
situated – as well as the corrosive impact that institutional racism and
 economic discrimination have on self-esteem, locus of control, etc.  
And, finally, there is the stress and coping literature and the social 
psychology of healthy behaviours.  So, yeah, I think there is still a 
place for these ideas.
7. The philosophical conclusion of your research is that we 
need to communicate a clear and simple concept of global collectivism 
and commitment, ‘loving others as ourselves’. And that this needs to 
become a totalising, dominant logic.  Does this have implications for 
how we teach and communicate social science, in that there is no point 
in a hyperrational and empirical approach – if we have no normative 
guide for our student’s journey?
Being so heavily influenced by Foucault, I am not sure I would say my
 usage of the term “love” is a totalizing discourse or logic.  Instead, I
 think it points to the positive role that socialization, in all of its 
various cultural and political forms, has on the psychology of people, 
mainly through the inscription of morals and mores and values and 
beliefs.  And I think Freud’s point was similar: the psychological 
absurdity of loving others, including our enemies, is his therapeutic 
challenge to the catch-22 of our human existence – which I discussed 
earlier, in regards to your first question.  In other words, the only 
real counter-point to the defiance of our social commitments, at least 
at the psychological level, is to socialize people to better manage 
themselves and to see the value in it.
For Foucault, the word “love” is translated into “care” and, in turn,
 leads him to a meditation on how communities – historically speaking – 
have variously thought it best to care for ourselves and others; as in 
the great Delphic precept, “to take care of yourself; or to be 
concerned, to take care of yourself.”
And, as Foucault demonstrates throughout his writings, through such 
meditations society is constantly up against such key sociological 
questions such as: How does love or care translate into justice?  And, 
what is being just?  And, what is a just community or society?  For 
example, in the policy realm, these mediations lead to such questions 
as: What is a just social policy?  Or, what constitutes equity or parity
 on the part of a government or some piece of legislation?  And, should 
governments and policy makers even be in the business of being just?  
Which, in turn, leads to the examination of such core sociological 
themes as domination and exploitation and inequality and so forth.
Related – and to the main point of your question – in our era, one 
such way we think it “best” to examine issues of care and social justice
 in social policy is through the lens of social science.  That is our 
normative approach; or at least the one in which I was trained.  For 
example, as colleagues, you and I both place emphasis on developing 
data-driven policies and procedures, which seek to procure the best 
possible results for the greatest good, etc; as well as identifying 
evidence-based outcomes and effective methods and measures of utility.  
And, as applied researchers, we put equal emphasis on being reasonably 
objective or at least as true to the data as possible; as well as 
teaching our students to be up front about their methodological 
limitations and sharing results, etc.  In similar fashion, as social 
scientists I think we both place pride on being professional in our 
work.
However, we also know as sociologists, policies (including the 
normative social science upon which they are based) are often governed 
by deeply irrational, dysfunctional and non-therapeutic purposes and 
desires, and that relations of power are everywhere in policy; and that 
bad things can (and often do) come from good intentions.  We also know 
how patriarchy and racism and cruelty and economic aggression and fear 
and resentment, as well as emotional and psychological dysfunction, 
infiltrate the discursive fabric of our policies and procedures.  
Alternatively, pace Durkheim and cultural anthropology, we also know 
that the socialization of our individual and cultural super-egos, along 
with teaching morality and social norms, can work to counteract these 
forces.  So, I think that, as a normative guide, social science give us 
the best tools for doing our work in a caring way.  And so I would 
continue to advocate for them….  Anyway, that gives a sense of it.
8. Your father was a big influence as a minister of religion, did you ever think about taking a similar path?
Not in terms of religion, as I have always been largely secular in my
 views.  But, in terms of social justice, absolutely!  I think all of my
 work – be it as a therapist, researcher or teacher – has had, as its 
primary theme, the issue of social justice, which was what my father was
 all about!
9. What is your next academic focus, any previews for your next book!
I am already working on a follow-up to my current book, as there are a
 number of questions that my book raised that I want to address.  First,
 how is social justice becoming hostage to identity politics, such that 
so many people struggle, today, to endorse the human rights of others 
and, more widely, people in general?  Second, and related, why are so 
many people embracing a culture of cruelty today; and how does that link
 to the social psychology of global fear, cultural resentment, nostalgic
 political retreat and economic aggression?  Third, while I discussed in
 detail the need for a social psychology of politics and policy, I never
 really outlined in detail what such an endeavor would look like.  So, I
 want to articulate what such a thing would entail, mainly by drawing on
 the literature in public and community health and education, which have
 given considerable time to addressing the social psychology of such 
health issues as smoking, obesity, safety, and so on.