继伊尔玛和玛丽亚之后的跳跃:承认殖民主义、解决韧性问题和思考气候正义

A. Moulton, M. Machado
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引用次数: 48

摘要

2017年飓风季在中美洲、加勒比海和美国东南部造成了大范围的破坏。飓风“哈维”、“伊尔玛”和“玛丽亚”是大西洋强度最大的飓风之一,也是环加勒比地区损失最大的飓风。对于加勒比小岛屿来说,飓风凸显了气候变化的严重脆弱性。然而,物质破坏的规模和社会混乱的程度不仅反映了自然灾害的后果。持续的结构性依赖和殖民关系的彻底纠缠使该地区受影响社区的援助恢复和协调变得复杂。因此,我们认为,Harvey、Irma和Maria等灾害的经历和结果需要在气候灾害的讨论中审视持续存在的殖民权力动态。使用傅尔理论进行这样的研究,我们质疑仅仅支持韧性,而没有注意到它作为统治生活的生物政治制度的可能性。我们认为,这样的评估可能会澄清赔偿和气候变化正义的道路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bouncing Forward After Irma and Maria: Acknowledging Colonialism, Problematizing Resilience and Thinking Climate Justice
The 2017 hurricane season caused widespread devastation across Central America, the Caribbean and the South-Eastern United States. Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria were among the most intense Atlantic hurricanes and the costliest for the Circum-Caribbean region. For the small islands of the Caribbean, the hurricanes highlighted the acute vulnerability to climate change. The scale of physical ruin and level of social dislocation, however, do not just reflect the outcomes of a natural hazard. Continued structural dependency and outright entanglement in colonial relationships complicated recovery and coordination of aid to affected communities across the region. We argue that the experiences and outcomes of hazards like Harvey, Irma and Maria therefore invite examinations of persisting colonial power dynamics in discussions of climate hazard. Using Foucauldian theory for such an examination, we problematize simply championing resilience, without noting the possibilities for its use as a biopolitical regime of governing life. Such an appraisal, we suggest, might clarify a path toward reparations and climate change justice.
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