适应海平面上升的时间性

R. Fincher, J. Barnett, S. Graham
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引用次数: 34

摘要

参与适应气候变化的当地居民、商界人士和政策制定者往往对采取行动的时间持不同看法。他们对时间的理解,以及他们诉诸时间的实践,形成了适应环境变化的复杂的、有时是相互冲突的暂时性。他们以各种方式将过去的条件与现在和未来的条件联系起来,而他们的当代实践则或明或暗地依赖于这种联系。然而,在适应环境变化的科学和政策中,地方现在和遥远未来之间的时间联系理论不足,考虑不足。在本文中,我们通过将社会和环境地理学的论点与澳大利亚东南部小型沿海社区的证据结合起来,解决了这一理论和实践挑战。我们表明,过去造就了居民想象中的未来,而这些地方性的、想象中的未来与科学、大众和政策对未来的描述是不一致的。因此,我们认为适应的时间性包括不相称和未被承认的认识方式,这些方式影响适应实践。我们建议,政府为适应环境变化而制定的战略需要使适应的各种时间性变得可见,并根据这些时间性来调整政策。在此基础上,现在和长期未来之间的时间可以通过一系列短期和协商的政策步骤来更好地驾驭。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Temporalities in Adaptation to Sea-Level Rise
Local residents, businesspeople, and policymakers engaged in climate change adaptation often think differently of the time available for action. Their understandings of time, and their practices that invoke time, form the complex and sometimes conflicting temporalities of adaptation to environmental change. They link the conditions of the past to those of the present and the future in a variety of ways, and their contemporary practices rest on such linking explicitly or implicitly. Yet the temporal connections between the present and distant future of places are undertheorized and poorly considered in the science and policy of adaptation to environmental change. In this article we address this theoretical and practical challenge by weaving together arguments from social and environmental geography with evidence from small coastal communities in southeastern Australia. We show that the past conditions residents’ imagined futures and that these local, imagined futures are incongruent with scientific, popular, and policy accounts of the future. Thus we argue that the temporalities of adaptation include incommensurate and unacknowledged ways of knowing and that these affect adaptation practices. We propose that strategies devised by governments for adapting to environmental change need to make visible—and calibrate policies with—the diverse temporalities of adaptation. On this basis, the times between the present and the long-term future can be better navigated as a series of short and negotiated policy steps.
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