新西兰奥特罗阿的日常青年气候政治和气候公民的表现

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Meg Parsons, Gautami Bhor, Roa Petra Crease
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引用次数: 0

摘要

世界各地的年轻人正在为气候行动创造自己的空间、战略和政治。在这篇文章中,我们探讨了来自新西兰最大城市奥克兰的年轻人的气候行动主义的日常非正式政治。我们研究了年轻人如何在缺乏全球和国内政治惰性的情况下,将他们对气候变化的担忧转化为日常生活中旨在减少温室气体排放的行动。通过关系定性方法,我们记录了青年的矛盾立场,特别是作为行动者和环境公民,他们意识到并通过多种行动模式寻求气候行动,包括抗议、生态消费、影响他人和生态保护工作。我们的青年参与者报告说,他们参与各种形式的气候行动有助于减少他们的生态焦虑,并使他们对自己应对气候变化的集体能力更有希望。我们的参与者强调了一种充满希望的观点,即他们小规模的个人行动将在系统层面上形成大规模的变化。然而,他们高度意识到并批评了国家和企业行为者试图将采取行动减缓气候变化的责任转嫁给个人的做法。我们的青年参与者没有将自己仅仅定位为参与环保购买实践的生态消费者,而是将他们有时相互矛盾的气候行动(抗议,购买或抵制,改变他们使用商品和服务的方式)描述为对社会经济现状(高碳,新自由主义和资本主义)的抵抗行为,这些行为可以作为更广泛变革的触发点。在本文中,我们确定了年轻人参与日常气候政治和展示其能动性的各种方法,这在他们的各种亲环境导向和气候缓解行动中是显而易见的;所有这些都证明了年轻人正在努力成为良好的气候公民。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Everyday youth climate politics and performances of climate citizenship in Aotearoa New Zealand
Young people around the world are creating their own spaces, strategies, and politics for climate action. In this article we explore the everyday informal politics of climate activism by youth from Aotearoa New Zealand's largest city (Auckland). We examine how young people, frustrated by the lack of global and domestic political inertia, are operationalizing their concerns about climate change into actions in their daily lives directed at mitigating their greenhouse gas emissions. Through a relational qualitative approach, we document the contradictory standing of youth, specifically as agentic actors and environmental citizens, who are aware of and seeking climate action through multiple modes of action including protesting, eco-consuming, influencing others, and eco-caring work. Our youth participants reported how their participation in various forms of climate activism helped to reduce their eco-anxiety and made them more hopeful about their collective abilities to address climate change. Our participants highlighted a hopeful view that their small-scale individual actions will collectively add up to large-scale changes at a systemic level. However, they were highly aware of and critical of state and corporate actors attempts to shift responsibility for taking actions to mitigate climate change onto individuals. Rather than situating themselves solely as eco-consumers engaging in eco-friendly purchasing practices, our youth participants narrated their sometimes contradictory climate actions (protesting, buy-cotting or boycotting, changing how they used goods, and services) as acts of resistance against the socio-economic status quo (high-carbon, neoliberal, and capitalist) that could act as trigger points for wider change. In this article we identify the various methods by which young people are participating in daily climate politics and demonstrating their agency, which are evident in their diverse pro-environmental-oriented and climate mitigation actions; all of which is evidence of how youth are seeking to be good climate citizens.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
13.80%
发文量
101
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