Producing nationalized futures of climate change and science in India

被引:1
|
作者
Szczurek, Anthony [1 ]
机构
[1] Saddleback Coll, Polit Sci, Mission Viejo, CA 92692 USA
关键词
India; climate science; temporality;
D O I
10.1080/14747731.2020.1859765
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
The complex relationship between climate knowledge production and political action has long been discussed. Critical and post-colonial analyses have looked at how models, used to produce scientific projections of climatic shifts, produce novel concepts of territory by the nation-state. The production of novel political temporalities has largely been ignored, however. This chapter critically analyses and compares two climate reports produced by the Indian Government. These reports, the first climatology reports developed in India, represent two significant shifts in the State's temporal imaginary of climate change and climate politics. First, the State, through these reports, temporally orients itself to the future (models of potential climates-to-be), rather than the past (attribution of historical responsibility to Northern states) as it had during the first half of international climate negotiations at the United Nations. Second, by focusing on the development of regional-specific models, the Indian government subtly continues to resist the imposition of a synchronized, global time of climate change, albeit through a nationalist framework. If the meaning of climate change is ultimately derived from a clash of competing temporalities between Global South and North, as well as between humanity and Nature, it speaks to the necessity of post-colonial scholars to engage directly with the meanings of the future in the Anthropocene.
引用
收藏
页码:995 / 1008
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Social futures of global climate change: A structural phenomenology
    Hall, John R.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CULTURAL SOCIOLOGY, 2016, 4 (01) : 1 - 45
  • [32] Social futures of global climate change: A structural phenomenology
    John R Hall
    [J]. American Journal of Cultural Sociology, 2016, 4 (1) : 1 - 45
  • [33] The climate change of your desires: Climate migration and imaginaries of urban and rural climate futures
    Paprocki, Kasia
    [J]. ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D-SOCIETY & SPACE, 2020, 38 (02): : 248 - 266
  • [34] Climate change attention and carbon futures return prediction
    Gong, Xu
    Li, Mengjie
    Guan, Keqin
    Sun, Chuanwang
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FUTURES MARKETS, 2023, 43 (09) : 1261 - 1288
  • [35] US Food Security and Climate Change: Agricultural Futures
    Takle, Eugene S.
    Gustafson, David
    Beachy, Roger
    Nelson, Gerald C.
    Mason-D'Croz, Daniel
    Palazzo, Amanda
    [J]. ECONOMICS-THE OPEN ACCESS OPEN-ASSESSMENT E-JOURNAL, 2013, 7
  • [36] Young people, climate change and fast fashion futures
    Jones, Verity
    Podpadec, Tessa
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION RESEARCH, 2023, 29 (11) : 1692 - 1708
  • [37] Mediterranean badlands: Their driving processes and climate change futures
    Nadal-Romero, Estela
    Rodriguez-Caballero, Emilio
    Chamizo, Sonia
    Juez, Carmelo
    Canton, Yolanda
    Garcia-Ruiz, Jose M.
    [J]. EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, 2022, 47 (01) : 17 - 31
  • [38] Migration, climate change and the futures of global population redistribution
    Skeldon, Ronald
    [J]. NEW ZEALAND ECONOMIC PAPERS, 2024,
  • [39] Chinese Food Security and Climate Change: Agriculture Futures
    Ye, Liming
    Tang, Huajun
    Wu, Wenbin
    Yang, Peng
    Nelson, Gerald C.
    Mason-D'Croz, Daniel
    Palazzo, Amanda
    [J]. ECONOMICS-THE OPEN ACCESS OPEN-ASSESSMENT E-JOURNAL, 2014, 8
  • [40] Climate change, capitalism and science
    Menezes, Daniel Francisco Nagao
    Contipelli, Ernani
    [J]. REVISTA DIREITO AMBIENTAL E SOCIEDADE, 2022, 12 (03): : 30 - 30