介绍性文章:“我们可以在什么条件下说话?”拒绝、复兴和气候正义

Coolabah Pub Date : 2018-05-03 DOI:10.1344/CO201824
T. Birch
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引用次数: 8

摘要

澳大利亚和全球其他国家和社区一样,面临着制定切实应对气候变化措施的艰巨任务。澳大利亚的土著人民处于这一问题的最前沿,他们既是受气候变化影响最大的社区,又是科学和哲学知识的保管人,能够协助其他社区努力实现国家的健康和保护。土著社区还与负责开采化石燃料的矿业公司有着历史上的关系,他们面临着允许或拒绝在传统土地上采矿的决定,这可能会导致这些社区的物质损失,同时也会为地球带来长期利益。澳大利亚土著人民和非土著人民之间未来的关系将决定应对气候变化倡议的成功与否。要实现这一点,富有成效和公平的关系将需要超越象征性的姿态,超越一种仅仅维持现有殖民关系的承认形式。近年来,土著学者,特别是来自北美的土著学者,将“拒绝政治”作为一种赋予土著人民权力和保护国家的战略。在这样做的过程中,出现了一些重要的问题:我们能拒绝可能对国家有利的与“外部”接触的行为吗?或者,拒绝的行为是一个必要的步骤,可能会使殖民社会面对这样一个现实,即是殖民主义本身拒绝改变?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
INTRODUCTORY ESSAY: “On what terms can we speak?” Refusal, resurgence and climate justice
Australia, along with nations and communities across the globe, faces the difficult task of formulating genuine responses to climate change. Indigenous people in Australia are at the forefront of the issue, both as communities majorly impacted on by climate change, and the custodians of knowledge, scientific and philosophical, able to assist other communities in working towards the health and protection of country. Indigenous communities also have historical relationships with mining companies responsible for the mining of fossil fuels, and face a decision of allowing or refusing mining on traditional land, which may result in a material loss for these communities, while producing a long-term benefit on behalf of the planet. Future relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Australia will determine the success of initiatives in combating climate change. For this to occur, productive and equitable relationships will need to move beyond the symbolic gesture, beyond a form of recognition that does little more than maintain existing colonial relationships. In recent years, Indigenous scholars, particularly from North America, have articulated ‘the politics of refusal’ as a strategy of empowering Indigenous people and protecting country. In doing so, important questions arise: Can we afford to refuse acts of engagement with ‘outsiders’ that may benefit country? Or is the act of refusal a necessary step that may confront colonial society with the reality that it is colonialism itself that refuses change?
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