From Incremental Change to Radical Disjuncture: Rethinking Everyday Household Sustainability Practices as Survival Skills

Chrissie Gibson, L. Head, Chantel Carr
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引用次数: 47

Abstract

Households within affluent countries are increasingly prominent in climate change adaptation research; meanwhile, social and cultural research has sought to render more complex the dynamics of domesticity and home spaces. Both bodies of work are nevertheless framed within a view of the future that is recognizable from the present, a future reached via socioecological change that is gradual rather than transformative or catastrophic. In this article, we acknowledge the agency of extreme biophysical forces and ask what everyday household life might be like in an unstable future significantly different from the present. We revisit our own longitudinal empirical research examining household sustainability and reinterpret key results in a more volatile frame influenced by political ecological work on disasters. We seek to move beyond incremental to transformative conceptions of change and invert vulnerability as capacity. Vulnerability and capacity are contingent temporally and spatially and experienced intersubjectively. The resources for survival are ultimately social and therefore compel closer scrutiny of, among other things, household life.
从渐进式变化到彻底的断裂:重新思考日常家庭可持续性实践作为生存技能
富裕国家的家庭在气候变化适应研究中日益突出;与此同时,社会和文化研究试图使家庭生活和家庭空间的动态变得更加复杂。然而,这两件作品都是在对未来的看法中构建的,从现在可以看出,未来是通过社会生态变化逐步实现的,而不是变革性的或灾难性的。在这篇文章中,我们承认极端生物物理力量的作用,并询问在一个与现在明显不同的不稳定的未来,日常家庭生活可能会是什么样子。我们重新审视了我们自己的纵向实证研究,考察了家庭可持续性,并在一个受政治生态工作影响的更不稳定的框架中重新解释了关键结果。我们寻求超越渐进式的变革概念,并将脆弱性转化为能力。脆弱性和能力在时间和空间上都是偶然的,是主体间经历的。生存的资源最终是社会性的,因此,除了其他方面,家庭生活也必须受到更密切的关注。
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