{"title":"Class, climate change, and closed systems: inverted quarantine on Nantucket Island","authors":"Elise Largesse","doi":"10.1080/23251042.2022.2042887","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT Environmental sociologists have debated the role of individual versus societal responses to climate change impacts and threats. Some are critical of all individual consumption-driven private responses; others see some value in conscious consumption. One characterization of private threat response is ‘inverted quarantine’: attempting to isolate an individual from a ‘sick’ world by purchasing safe products or spaces. Inverted quarantine scholars theorize this can have unintended consequences such as harm displacement onto the unprotected and redirection of resources toward privilege. Little work, however, has empirically documented the causal relationship between inverted quarantines and unintended consequences, which are typically spatially and temporally distant. This multi-method ethnography of Nantucket Island fills that gap by leveraging characteristics of ‘islandness,’ enabling observation of sequential processes of inverted quarantine, consequences, and responses. The study confirms that harm displacement and resource redirection occur. It also finds an additional, insidious consequence of inverted quarantines: a double bind impeding effective public solutions. Public solutions threaten the private-threat-response industry and therefore the livelihoods of laborers producing inverted quarantines. While creating the conditions for its own eventual failure, inverted quarantines may also guarantee their continued manufacture at the expense of public solutions, by monopolizing the means of economic and social reproduction.","PeriodicalId":54173,"journal":{"name":"Environmental Sociology","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environmental Sociology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/23251042.2022.2042887","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACT Environmental sociologists have debated the role of individual versus societal responses to climate change impacts and threats. Some are critical of all individual consumption-driven private responses; others see some value in conscious consumption. One characterization of private threat response is ‘inverted quarantine’: attempting to isolate an individual from a ‘sick’ world by purchasing safe products or spaces. Inverted quarantine scholars theorize this can have unintended consequences such as harm displacement onto the unprotected and redirection of resources toward privilege. Little work, however, has empirically documented the causal relationship between inverted quarantines and unintended consequences, which are typically spatially and temporally distant. This multi-method ethnography of Nantucket Island fills that gap by leveraging characteristics of ‘islandness,’ enabling observation of sequential processes of inverted quarantine, consequences, and responses. The study confirms that harm displacement and resource redirection occur. It also finds an additional, insidious consequence of inverted quarantines: a double bind impeding effective public solutions. Public solutions threaten the private-threat-response industry and therefore the livelihoods of laborers producing inverted quarantines. While creating the conditions for its own eventual failure, inverted quarantines may also guarantee their continued manufacture at the expense of public solutions, by monopolizing the means of economic and social reproduction.
期刊介绍:
Environmental Sociology is dedicated to applying and advancing the sociological imagination in relation to a wide variety of environmental challenges, controversies and issues, at every level from the global to local, from ‘world culture’ to diverse local perspectives. As an international, peer-reviewed scholarly journal, Environmental Sociology aims to stretch the conceptual and theoretical boundaries of both environmental and mainstream sociology, to highlight the relevance of sociological research for environmental policy and management, to disseminate the results of sociological research, and to engage in productive dialogue and debate with other disciplines in the social, natural and ecological sciences. Contributions may utilize a variety of theoretical orientations including, but not restricted to: critical theory, cultural sociology, ecofeminism, ecological modernization, environmental justice, organizational sociology, political ecology, political economy, post-colonial studies, risk theory, social psychology, science and technology studies, globalization, world-systems analysis, and so on. Cross- and transdisciplinary contributions are welcome where they demonstrate a novel attempt to understand social-ecological relationships in a manner that engages with the core concerns of sociology in social relationships, institutions, practices and processes. All methodological approaches in the environmental social sciences – qualitative, quantitative, integrative, spatial, policy analysis, etc. – are welcomed. Environmental Sociology welcomes high-quality submissions from scholars around the world.