TY - JOUR
T1 - Disaster Making in the Capitalocene
AU - O’Lear, Shannon
AU - Masse, Francis
AU - Dickinson, Hannah
AU - Duffy, Rosaleen
N1 - Funding information: This project was made possible with support from a European Research Council grant for the BIOSEC Project, number 694995.
PY - 2022/8/1
Y1 - 2022/8/1
N2 - We live in a new normal of increasing, crosscutting, and shifting patterns of disasters fueled by large-scale environmental change, from floods to wildfires to pandemics. Our intervention in this forum piece makes the case that disasters, and responses to disasters, must be understood within the context of the global political-economic system of capitalism. We situate disasters, their making, and their politics within the Capitalocene and argue that disasters and the physical processes that underpin them are not natural: they are unevenly produced through, and exacerbated by, processes inherent in the capitalist system, with uneven consequences. We suggest that the predominantly techno-managerial approaches to disasters pursued within the neoliberal state and multilateral governance institution system reveal the tensions in addressing the causes of environmental change and the new normal of disasters under capitalism. We argue that through an engagement with the Capitalocene, environmental politics could further contribute to nuanced, critical understandings of disasters and their making in ways that foreground their in/justice implications.
AB - We live in a new normal of increasing, crosscutting, and shifting patterns of disasters fueled by large-scale environmental change, from floods to wildfires to pandemics. Our intervention in this forum piece makes the case that disasters, and responses to disasters, must be understood within the context of the global political-economic system of capitalism. We situate disasters, their making, and their politics within the Capitalocene and argue that disasters and the physical processes that underpin them are not natural: they are unevenly produced through, and exacerbated by, processes inherent in the capitalist system, with uneven consequences. We suggest that the predominantly techno-managerial approaches to disasters pursued within the neoliberal state and multilateral governance institution system reveal the tensions in addressing the causes of environmental change and the new normal of disasters under capitalism. We argue that through an engagement with the Capitalocene, environmental politics could further contribute to nuanced, critical understandings of disasters and their making in ways that foreground their in/justice implications.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85135105135&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1162/glep_a_00655
DO - 10.1162/glep_a_00655
M3 - Article
SN - 1526-3800
VL - 22
SP - 2
EP - 11
JO - Global Environmental Politics
JF - Global Environmental Politics
IS - 3
ER -