“Jobbos” and the “wageless life”: Exploring work and responsibility in the anti-fracking movement in Lancashire, United Kingdom

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Economic Anthropology Pub Date : 2022-12-10 DOI:10.1002/sea2.12276
Sarah G.P. O'Brien
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Abstract

Drawing on ethnographic research at an anti-fracking encampment at Preston New Road (PNR) in Lancashire, England, this article explores activists' perceptions of work and responsibility. I examine their protest activities and explore how work is understood, disrupted, and contested; what this means for my interlocutors' engagement with monetary compensation; and how this is reinforced by the extractive nature of the activity they are contesting. I show how through protesting, monitoring, and maintaining a presence on site, interlocutors worked to ethically and materially disentangle themselves from the reality fueled by hydrocarbon extraction. While paid work was deemed ethically problematic in this context, at stake for my interlocutors was the web of relationships in which financial and practical support was received and shared. By drawing on research on activism and dynamics of prefiguration, I show how the work of activism at PNR was predicated on balancing agency with responsibility in a complex and powerful web of responsible relationships. Reconciling agency and responsibility was integral to the ethical orientations on which the anti-fracking community was built and the realities it aspired to create.

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“工作族”与“无薪生活”:探究英国兰开夏郡反水力压裂运动中的工作与责任
在英国兰开夏郡普雷斯顿新路(PNR)的一个反水力压裂营地进行的人种学研究中,本文探讨了活动家对工作和责任的看法。我研究了他们的抗议活动,并探讨了工作是如何被理解、破坏和争议的;这对我的对话者参与货币补偿意味着什么;以及他们所竞争的活动的采掘性质如何强化了这一点。我展示了对话者如何通过抗议、监控和维持现场的存在,在道德上和物质上努力将自己从碳氢化合物开采推动的现实中解脱出来。虽然在这种情况下,有偿工作被认为是有道德问题的,但对我的对话者来说,获得和分享经济和实际支持的关系网络处于危险之中。通过对行动主义和预见动态的研究,我展示了PNR行动主义的工作是如何基于在一个复杂而强大的责任关系网络中平衡代理与责任的。协调机构和责任是反水力压裂社区建立的道德取向和它渴望创造的现实的组成部分。
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来源期刊
Economic Anthropology
Economic Anthropology ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
42
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