气候的新自由主义化?在紧缩的城市化背景下推进气候政策

P. North, A. Nurse, T. Barker
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引用次数: 20

摘要

虽然城市被认为是应对气候变化的有效场所,但“后政治”批评认为气候政策是一种空洞的话语,它模糊了权力关系和排斥,捍卫了既定的新自由主义秩序,并使挑战沉默。本文认为,城市气候政策与在紧缩的城市主义背景下重新点燃经济增长的需要之间存在冲突,而不是共识,但我们也不应该假设对新自由主义对“明智”的理解的挑战将永远被忽视。相反,城市气候政策可以通过利用“合作生产”技术的伙伴关系进程来推进,这需要大量的竞争,如果不是对抗的话。本文以英国利物浦紧缩性城市主义背景下的气候政策制定为例进行了论证。虽然利物浦的精英们用新自由主义的术语将“低碳”概念化为新的低碳工作和商业的来源,强调能源安全和燃料贫困,但这种观点并非没有挑战。该文件讲述了该市的一个特设小组如何聚集在一起,形成一个伙伴关系,倡导更多的战略性脱碳,这应该通过竞标该市成为欧洲绿色之都来推进。围绕这一议程出现的争议表明,在紧缩城市主义的背景下,城市采取行动缓解危险的气候变化的必要性并不像后政治概念所暗示的那样没有争议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The neoliberalisation of climate? Progressing climate policy under austerity urbanism
While the urban is identified as a productive site for addressing climate change, the ‘post-political’ critique dismisses climate policy as a vacuous discourse that obscures power relations and exclusion, defends the established neoliberal order, and silences challenges. This paper argues that rather than consensus, there is a conflict between urban climate policy and the need to reignite economic growth in the context of austerity urbanism, but also that we should not assume that challenges to neoliberal understandings of the ‘sensible’ will always be disregarded. Rather, urban climate policy can be progressed through partnership processes utilising ‘co-production’ techniques which entail significant agonistic, if not antagonistic, contestation. The argument is illustrated with a case study of climate policy making in the context of austerity urbanism in Liverpool, UK. While ‘low carbon’ is conceptualised by elite actors in Liverpool in neoliberal terms as a source of new low carbon jobs and businesses, with an emphasis on energy security and fuel poverty, this view is not unchallenged. The paper recounts how an ad hoc group of actors in the city came together to form a partnership advocating for more strategic decarbonisation, which should be progressed through a bid for the city to be European Green Capital. The disputes that emerged around this agenda suggest that in the context of austerity urbanism the need for cities to act to mitigate against dangerous climate change is not as uncontested as conceptions of the post-political suggest.
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