All dried up: The materiality of drought in Ladismith, South Africa

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Elisabetta Savelli, Maria Rusca, H. Cloke, T. Flügel, Abdulrazak Karriem, G. di Baldassarre
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper conceptualises droughts as socioecological phenomena coproduced by the recursive engagement of human and non-human transformations. Through an interdisciplinary approach that integrates political ecology, material geographies and hydroclimatology, this work simultaneously apprehends the role of politics and power in reshaping drought, along with the agency of biophysical processes – soil, vegetation, hydrology and microclimate – that co-produce droughts and their spatiotemporal patterning. The drought-stricken Ladismith in Western Cape, South Africa, is the instrumental case study and point of departure of our empirical analysis. To advance a materiality of drought that seriously accounts for the coevolution of biophysical and political transformations, we alter the spatiotemporal and empirical foci of drought analyses thereby retracing Ladismith’s socioecological history since colonial times. In turn, such extended framework exposes the agency of soil, vegetation, hydrology and microclimate and their metabolic exchanges with processes of colonisation, apartheid, capitalist and neoliberal transformations of South African economy. We argue that the narrow pursuit of profits and capital accumulation of the few has produced a fundamental disruption between nature and society which contributed to transform Ladismith’s drought into a socioecological crisis. Whilst advancing debates on materiality, we note two fundamental contributions to the study of drought. First, our approach makes hydrological accounts of droughts less politically naive and socially blind. Second, it develops a political ecology of droughts and socioecological crises more attuned to the materiality of drought. We contend that apprehending the materiality of drought and the active role of its non-human processes can further understandings of the workings of power and the production of socioecological injustices.
全部干涸:南非拉迪史密斯干旱的实质
本文将干旱概念化为人类和非人类转化递归参与共同产生的社会生态现象。通过整合政治生态学、物质地理学和水文气候学的跨学科方法,这项工作同时理解了政治和权力在重塑干旱中的作用,以及生物物理过程(土壤、植被、水文和小气候)的作用,这些过程共同产生干旱及其时空模式。南非西开普省遭受旱灾的拉迪史密斯是我们实证分析的工具性案例研究和出发点。为了推进干旱的物质性,从而严肃地解释生物物理和政治转变的共同进化,我们改变了干旱分析的时空和经验焦点,从而追溯了拉迪斯史密斯自殖民时代以来的社会生态历史。反过来,这种扩展的框架暴露了土壤、植被、水文和小气候的作用,以及它们与殖民、种族隔离、资本主义和南非经济新自由主义转型过程的代谢交换。我们认为,少数人对利润和资本积累的狭隘追求已经在自然与社会之间产生了根本性的破坏,这有助于将拉迪史密斯的干旱转变为社会生态危机。在推进关于重要性的辩论的同时,我们注意到对干旱研究的两个基本贡献。首先,我们的方法使干旱的水文描述在政治上不那么幼稚和社会上不那么盲目。其次,它发展了干旱和社会生态危机的政治生态,更适应干旱的物质性。我们认为,理解干旱的物质性及其非人类过程的积极作用可以进一步理解权力的运作和社会生态不公正的产生。
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
6.00
自引率
13.80%
发文量
101
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