从灾难到共识:气候适应中的霸权表演性

Catastrophe to Consensus: Hegemonic performativity in climate adaptation

ORGANIZATION STUDIES · 2024
被引 14
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

研究波士顿气候适应案例,提出霸权表演性概念,揭示政治压力如何使人类与非人类行动者网络达成共识,排除极端风险以维持现状,并压制社区声音与公平关切。

Abstract

As the impacts of climate change unfold, coastal cities are beginning to adapt to the emerging physical and financial risks. In our case study of climate adaptation in Boston, we advance the concept of hegemonic performativity, which shows how political pressures lead an assemblage – a network of human and nonhuman actors, including models, algorithms, instruments, market devices, and experts – to converge on a consensus in ways that privilege particular goals, actors, interests, and forms of knowledge. Our findings show how an assemblage is performative in building consensus around a particular climate response that tames uncertainty by excluding extreme risks and incorporating more palatable scenarios and parameters so that adaptation appears manageable and compatible with business-as-(almost)-usual. The mechanism of silencing facilitates consensus by downplaying community voices, equity concerns, and more extreme climate scenarios. Our study highlights how the operation of an assemblage is performative in shaping adaptation plans, physical interventions in urban infrastructure, and associated financial mechanisms with considerable effects on who and what is protected.

气候变化城市适应政治经济学环境治理社会学