Civil Rights in Times of Uncertainty (The Anthropocene)

IF 2.1 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Jeffrey Omari
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For many citizens across the globe, similar societal ills exist and are coupled with the challenges presented by our warming planet. Moreover, since the spring of 2020, these dilemmas have been embedded within the throes of an ostensibly unending global pandemic. Indeed, the COVID-19 virus has, in many ways, exacerbated our societal ills and amplified existing inequalities. For instance, more privileged global populations have priority access to lifesaving vaccines. Meanwhile, the risks presented by climate disruption are also unevenly distributed, with such risks being mitigated more by economic comfort than by geography or preparedness. As if these challenges were not enough, online disinformation is a growing concern in this era of COVID-19 and climate disruption. The spread of misleading or patently false information about both the pandemic and global warming poses significant threats to alleviating the harms of each. By creating collective uncertainty about the pandemic, climate change, and a host of other societal issues, disinformation undermines public trust in governmental institutions and, in many cases, adversely affects the already frayed relationship these institutions have with vulnerable populations. Moreover, in a world where communication increasingly happens online, digital disinformation challenges the meaning of truth and breathes life into the extremist ideas that often proliferate on social media. Yet attempting to curb the harms of online disinformation implicates concerns over free speech and free association in cyberspace, which in turn implicates broader concerns over digital rights. Along with climate change, both of these emergent themes—COVID-19 and online disinformation—represent the uncertainty of our changing times and, because they often disproportionately or adversely impact vulnerable populations, pose new challenges for civil rights and democracy. Each of these themes also links two different but interconnected affairs: one that focuses on the civil rights issues of our local and national communities, and the other that focuses on the related wellness of our global neighbors and larger concerns over planetary life. Connecting local civil rights–based issues to similar global matters is of increasing importance because it coincides with the emergence of the Anthropocene: the “catch-all description of the overwhelming impact of human activity on the planet.” While often viewed through the lens of climate change, the Anthropocene is also a theoretical tool for contesting the deep-rooted political and socioeconomic inequalities of the present. Social scientists have employed this theory to examine such socioeconomic and governmental issues arising from systematic inequalities and injustices on a global scale. This Foreword therefore highlights how recent transnational debates regarding issues presented by COVID-19 and online disinformation implicate broader civil and human rights concerns. It argues that being mindful of these pervasive issues—which affect the local, the global, and the planetary—is paramount to the ethos of civil rights and democracy in the uncertain times of the Anthropocene. As the Articles in this Colloquium reveal, promoting civil rights at home is an ongoing, multi-dimensional project. 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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Although there have been significant civil rights gains made in recent decades, the United States is now experiencing a resurgence of many of the societal ills that have plagued the country for decades. From an insurrection that was seemingly inspired by white supremacist ideology to ongoing examples of police brutality against Black people, anti-Asian violence, anti-LGBTQ violence, and recurring islamophobia, the country sits at an apparent crossroads. There is an urgent need to advance a civil rights agenda that addresses the impact of these societal ills on the affected communities. At the same time, however, we are confronting these ills during a point in history that urges us to think both within and beyond our national borders and boundaries. For many citizens across the globe, similar societal ills exist and are coupled with the challenges presented by our warming planet. Moreover, since the spring of 2020, these dilemmas have been embedded within the throes of an ostensibly unending global pandemic. Indeed, the COVID-19 virus has, in many ways, exacerbated our societal ills and amplified existing inequalities. For instance, more privileged global populations have priority access to lifesaving vaccines. Meanwhile, the risks presented by climate disruption are also unevenly distributed, with such risks being mitigated more by economic comfort than by geography or preparedness. As if these challenges were not enough, online disinformation is a growing concern in this era of COVID-19 and climate disruption. The spread of misleading or patently false information about both the pandemic and global warming poses significant threats to alleviating the harms of each. By creating collective uncertainty about the pandemic, climate change, and a host of other societal issues, disinformation undermines public trust in governmental institutions and, in many cases, adversely affects the already frayed relationship these institutions have with vulnerable populations. Moreover, in a world where communication increasingly happens online, digital disinformation challenges the meaning of truth and breathes life into the extremist ideas that often proliferate on social media. Yet attempting to curb the harms of online disinformation implicates concerns over free speech and free association in cyberspace, which in turn implicates broader concerns over digital rights. Along with climate change, both of these emergent themes—COVID-19 and online disinformation—represent the uncertainty of our changing times and, because they often disproportionately or adversely impact vulnerable populations, pose new challenges for civil rights and democracy. Each of these themes also links two different but interconnected affairs: one that focuses on the civil rights issues of our local and national communities, and the other that focuses on the related wellness of our global neighbors and larger concerns over planetary life. Connecting local civil rights–based issues to similar global matters is of increasing importance because it coincides with the emergence of the Anthropocene: the “catch-all description of the overwhelming impact of human activity on the planet.” While often viewed through the lens of climate change, the Anthropocene is also a theoretical tool for contesting the deep-rooted political and socioeconomic inequalities of the present. Social scientists have employed this theory to examine such socioeconomic and governmental issues arising from systematic inequalities and injustices on a global scale. This Foreword therefore highlights how recent transnational debates regarding issues presented by COVID-19 and online disinformation implicate broader civil and human rights concerns. It argues that being mindful of these pervasive issues—which affect the local, the global, and the planetary—is paramount to the ethos of civil rights and democracy in the uncertain times of the Anthropocene. As the Articles in this Colloquium reveal, promoting civil rights at home is an ongoing, multi-dimensional project. This Foreword advocates a broader view of that project as encompassing the range of issues that define our current struggle with planetary and global justice.
不确定时期的公民权利(人类世)
尽管近几十年来美国在民权方面取得了重大进展,但困扰美国数十年的许多社会弊病现在正在卷土重来。从看似受到白人至上主义意识形态启发的叛乱,到持续不断的警察对黑人的暴行、针对亚洲人的暴力、针对lgbtq群体的暴力,以及反复出现的伊斯兰恐惧症,这个国家显然正处于一个十字路口。迫切需要推进一项民权议程,解决这些社会弊病对受影响社区的影响。然而,与此同时,我们在一个历史时刻面对这些弊病,这促使我们在我国境内外进行思考。对于全球各地的许多公民来说,类似的社会弊病存在,并且伴随着地球变暖带来的挑战。此外,自2020年春季以来,这些困境一直植根于一场表面上永无止境的全球大流行的阵痛之中。事实上,COVID-19病毒在许多方面加剧了我们的社会弊病,放大了现有的不平等。例如,全球更有特权的人群可以优先获得挽救生命的疫苗。与此同时,气候破坏带来的风险也分布不均,这种风险更多地是由经济上的舒适程度而不是地理位置或准备程度来减轻的。似乎这些挑战还不够,在这个COVID-19和气候破坏的时代,网上虚假信息越来越令人担忧。关于大流行病和全球变暖的误导性或明显虚假信息的传播对减轻两者的危害构成了重大威胁。虚假信息造成对大流行病、气候变化和许多其他社会问题的集体不确定性,破坏了公众对政府机构的信任,并在许多情况下对这些机构与弱势群体之间本已紧张的关系产生不利影响。此外,在一个沟通越来越多发生在网上的世界里,数字虚假信息挑战了真相的意义,并为经常在社交媒体上扩散的极端主义思想注入了活力。然而,试图遏制网络虚假信息的危害意味着对网络空间言论自由和结社自由的担忧,这反过来又会引发对数字权利的更广泛担忧。与气候变化一样,这两个新兴主题——covid -19和网络虚假信息——代表了我们这个不断变化的时代的不确定性,并且由于它们往往对弱势群体产生不成比例或不利的影响,对公民权利和民主构成了新的挑战。这些主题中的每一个都与两个不同但相互关联的事务联系在一起:一个关注我们地方和国家社区的民权问题,另一个关注我们全球邻居的相关健康以及对地球生命的更大关注。将当地的民权问题与类似的全球问题联系起来变得越来越重要,因为它恰逢人类世的出现:“对人类活动对地球的压倒性影响的全面描述”。虽然人类世经常从气候变化的角度来看待,但它也是对抗当今根深蒂固的政治和社会经济不平等的理论工具。社会科学家利用这一理论来研究全球范围内由系统性不平等和不公正引起的社会经济和政府问题。因此,本前言强调了最近关于COVID-19和网络虚假信息所带来的问题的跨国辩论如何涉及更广泛的公民和人权问题。它认为,在人类世这个不确定的时代,关注这些无处不在的问题——它们影响着地方、全球和地球——对民权和民主的精神至关重要。正如本次研讨会的文章所揭示的那样,在国内促进公民权利是一项持续的、多方面的工程。本前言主张以更广泛的视角看待这一项目,包括我们当前与地球和全球正义斗争的一系列问题。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
3.70%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Michigan Law Review is a journal of legal scholarship. Eight issues are published annually. Seven of each volume"s eight issues ordinarily are composed of two major parts: Articles by legal scholars and practitioners, and Notes written by the student editors. One issue in each volume is devoted to book reviews. Occasionally, special issues are devoted to symposia or colloquia. First Impressions, the online companion to the Michigan Law Review, publishes op-ed length articles by academics, judges, and practitioners on current legal issues. This extension of the printed journal facilitates quick dissemination of the legal community’s initial impressions of important judicial decisions, legislative developments, and timely legal policy issues.
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