Forced Emplacement

Eric Hirsch
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Abstract

Abstract As intensifying floods and other climate extremes proliferate, narratives of unidirectional climate migration have become ubiquitous in media coverage and policy debates. This article reviews new scholarship that attends to an underreported dimension of climate change impact exposure. Emerging conversations in Indigenous climate justice research, mobility studies, and critical urban adaptation scholarship seek to understand why so many marginalized communities find themselves immobilized in the face of climate extremes. I argue that these scholars are building a concept of forced emplacement to politicize and historicize the uneven distribution of climate harms. Drawing on this scholarship and brief ethnographic sketches from my work in Peru and the Maldives, I follow forced emplacement across diverse case studies that root devastating immobilizations from flooding in local histories of colonial confinement, unevenly policed mobility, and varied efforts to control marginalized populations. I also illuminate how climate-exposed communities contest adaptation projects that reproduce their immobilization.
迫使侵位
随着洪水加剧和其他极端气候的扩散,单向气候移民的叙述在媒体报道和政策辩论中无处不在。这篇文章回顾了新的奖学金,出席了气候变化影响暴露的一个被低估的维度。土著气候正义研究、流动性研究和批判性城市适应学术领域的新兴对话试图理解为什么这么多边缘化社区发现自己在极端气候面前动弹不得。我认为,这些学者正在建立一种强制安置的概念,将气候危害的不均匀分布政治化和历史化。根据我在秘鲁和马尔代夫的工作中获得的学术知识和简短的人种学素描,我通过不同的案例研究来追踪强迫安置,这些案例研究从当地历史的殖民禁闭、不均匀的警察流动和控制边缘化人口的各种努力中找出洪水造成的破坏性固定。我还阐明了气候暴露社区如何与重现其固定化的适应项目竞争。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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