{"title":"The Anthropocene as framed by the far right","authors":"Dan Bailey, Joe Turner","doi":"10.1111/newe.12329","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>The ecological crisis is subject to a series of political discourses which each imperfectly capture the complex myriad of social, economic, and technological dynamics that are degrading planetary ecosystems. These discourses shape the public understanding of the environmental crisis and the appropriate strategies for its resolution, with each discourse purveyed by distinctive but evolving political factions and social forces.3<sup>,</sup>4</p><p>The far right discourse on the ecological crisis has historically been to deny its existence.5<sup>,</sup>6 This denial has taken many forms, but most commonly the science of ecological degradation has been disavowed and this has been matched by the refusal to accept any national responsibility for addressing the unfolding global ecological catastrophe. Customarily, the scientific evidence has been pronounced as a conspiracy designed to benefit ‘globalist elites’ or a plot to undermine national sovereignty through the ratification of multilateral agreements. This has served to bolster resistance to effective environmental policies.</p><p>However, this environmental discourse is no longer as central to the far right movement as it was in the 2000s and 2010s. Increasingly, climate science is tacitly accepted, but the finger of blame is being disingenuously pointed towards the far right's traditional enemies.</p><p>As environmental issues have risen up the political agenda (becoming salient to younger voters in particular), far right parties have seemingly shifted away from denialism of the science. This shift has not led to a recognition of the need for a just economic transformation or, indeed, any political action commensurate to the scale and character of the environmental crisis. Instead, the increasing (albeit belated) recognition of environmental issues (primarily those which exist within national borders) has been fused with an anti-immigration agenda to create a new invidious framing of environmental politics. The emerging discourse, which we have conceptualised as ‘ecobordering’ elsewhere,7 is characterised by climate nationalism and seeks to depict immigration (of which migration from the Global South is made hyper-visible) as a threat to local and national environments.</p><p>This discourse takes two primary forms. First, it aims to politicise the environmental impacts of ‘mass immigration’ from the Global South, while depoliticising the impacts of ‘natives’. This includes linking ‘mass immigration’ with rising demand for natural resources and local environmental problems such as the pollution resulting from greater traffic and consumption. Immigration, it is suggested, is to blame for such problems, which were not issues of concern for local areas prior to multiculturalism.</p><p>The lack of belonging is key to understanding this portrayal; as Le Pen explicitly put it: “environmentalism [is] the natural child of patriotism, because it's the natural child of rootedness… if you're a nomad, you're not an environmentalist… Those who are nomadic… do not care about the environment; they have no homeland”.20 The depiction of Global South migrants is juxtaposed with the depiction of ‘natives’ as responsible stewards of their ‘homeland’ and adept stewards of their ‘little platoons’ (to invoke the eco-fascist and Burkean logics which this framing draws upon). This typically entails glorifying the historic stewardship of pastoral national citizens (such as farmers21 or foresters22) and the proclaiming the sound management of domestic natural resources by ‘natives’23 over the ‘homeland’.24<sup>,</sup>25 The National Front and Golden Dawn have even established wings of their movements called ‘New Ecology’26 and ‘Green Wing’27 designed to protect “family, nature and race”28 and “the cradle of our race”29 respectively.</p><p>Both of these discursive traits have since been identified more recently in Marine Le Pen's recent presidential campaign in which she obtained 41.5 per cent of the vote. Dubbed ‘patriotic ecology’ by her followers, the fallacious depictions of culprits and saviours in the environmental crisis have become normalised in French politics to the extent that they are echoed by rival conservative politicians.</p><p>The purported threat posed by immigration and migrants to previously ‘pure’ and ‘sustainable’ spaces of European nature seeks to vindicate the notion that border policies are key forms of statecraft for the protection of the environment. As a senior figure in Marine Le Pen's National Rally, Jordan Bardella, declared in 2019: “borders are the environment's greatest ally… it is through them that we will save the planet”.30</p><p>This would be catastrophic on two fronts. On the one hand, the discourse prescribes a form of statecraft centred on border security rather than systemic economic transformation, which represents an apocryphal programme of environmental protection. It does so by focusing narrowly on ‘national’ nature (peripheralising global issues) and obscuring the material economic drivers of ecological degradation (such as the heavily polluting energy and aviation industries, for which Global North populations are primarily culpable). To ignore the root causes of the ecological crisis at this juncture would be catastrophic for the natural world, but that is precisely what this political framing inculcates.</p><p>Just as importantly, ecobordering seeks to inflict further structural violence on those who those exploited at the peripheries of the global economy. The nationalistic framing emerges at a time when immigration is rising <i>because</i> of climate change, and the discourse thus seeks to diagnose the symptoms of ecological degradation as the causes of it. There is already evidence that the rise of the far right strengthens political resistance to climate migration,31 and this framing serves to justify this resistance from an environmental perspective. At a global scale, these framings threaten to rationalise a <i>de facto</i> climate apartheid; with Global North populations and elites in the Global South enjoying the spoils of an environmentally deleterious global economy, while poorer Global South populations become confined to increasingly uninhabitable areas facing escalating risks of climate shocks and deteriorating health conditions.</p><p>The meaning and practical implications of climate justice will become an increasingly hot topic in the Anthropocene. Challenging the depictions of culprits and saviours purveyed by far right figures is only an initial step to preventing injustices mounting further.32 Recognising the historical constitution of the global economy and the inequalities and vulnerabilities resulting from it underlines the injustices of far right framings and the need for progressive actors to advance more transformative approaches.33 Progressive responses to the rise of the far right in the Anthropocene requires formulating and advancing notions of a just transition which accounts for the movement of people affected by climate change as well as other less privileged groupings in society.34 This will require far more progressive forms of statecraft which are a world away from those advocated in the framings of the far right.</p>","PeriodicalId":37420,"journal":{"name":"IPPR Progressive Review","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/newe.12329","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"IPPR Progressive Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/newe.12329","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The ecological crisis is subject to a series of political discourses which each imperfectly capture the complex myriad of social, economic, and technological dynamics that are degrading planetary ecosystems. These discourses shape the public understanding of the environmental crisis and the appropriate strategies for its resolution, with each discourse purveyed by distinctive but evolving political factions and social forces.3,4
The far right discourse on the ecological crisis has historically been to deny its existence.5,6 This denial has taken many forms, but most commonly the science of ecological degradation has been disavowed and this has been matched by the refusal to accept any national responsibility for addressing the unfolding global ecological catastrophe. Customarily, the scientific evidence has been pronounced as a conspiracy designed to benefit ‘globalist elites’ or a plot to undermine national sovereignty through the ratification of multilateral agreements. This has served to bolster resistance to effective environmental policies.
However, this environmental discourse is no longer as central to the far right movement as it was in the 2000s and 2010s. Increasingly, climate science is tacitly accepted, but the finger of blame is being disingenuously pointed towards the far right's traditional enemies.
As environmental issues have risen up the political agenda (becoming salient to younger voters in particular), far right parties have seemingly shifted away from denialism of the science. This shift has not led to a recognition of the need for a just economic transformation or, indeed, any political action commensurate to the scale and character of the environmental crisis. Instead, the increasing (albeit belated) recognition of environmental issues (primarily those which exist within national borders) has been fused with an anti-immigration agenda to create a new invidious framing of environmental politics. The emerging discourse, which we have conceptualised as ‘ecobordering’ elsewhere,7 is characterised by climate nationalism and seeks to depict immigration (of which migration from the Global South is made hyper-visible) as a threat to local and national environments.
This discourse takes two primary forms. First, it aims to politicise the environmental impacts of ‘mass immigration’ from the Global South, while depoliticising the impacts of ‘natives’. This includes linking ‘mass immigration’ with rising demand for natural resources and local environmental problems such as the pollution resulting from greater traffic and consumption. Immigration, it is suggested, is to blame for such problems, which were not issues of concern for local areas prior to multiculturalism.
The lack of belonging is key to understanding this portrayal; as Le Pen explicitly put it: “environmentalism [is] the natural child of patriotism, because it's the natural child of rootedness… if you're a nomad, you're not an environmentalist… Those who are nomadic… do not care about the environment; they have no homeland”.20 The depiction of Global South migrants is juxtaposed with the depiction of ‘natives’ as responsible stewards of their ‘homeland’ and adept stewards of their ‘little platoons’ (to invoke the eco-fascist and Burkean logics which this framing draws upon). This typically entails glorifying the historic stewardship of pastoral national citizens (such as farmers21 or foresters22) and the proclaiming the sound management of domestic natural resources by ‘natives’23 over the ‘homeland’.24,25 The National Front and Golden Dawn have even established wings of their movements called ‘New Ecology’26 and ‘Green Wing’27 designed to protect “family, nature and race”28 and “the cradle of our race”29 respectively.
Both of these discursive traits have since been identified more recently in Marine Le Pen's recent presidential campaign in which she obtained 41.5 per cent of the vote. Dubbed ‘patriotic ecology’ by her followers, the fallacious depictions of culprits and saviours in the environmental crisis have become normalised in French politics to the extent that they are echoed by rival conservative politicians.
The purported threat posed by immigration and migrants to previously ‘pure’ and ‘sustainable’ spaces of European nature seeks to vindicate the notion that border policies are key forms of statecraft for the protection of the environment. As a senior figure in Marine Le Pen's National Rally, Jordan Bardella, declared in 2019: “borders are the environment's greatest ally… it is through them that we will save the planet”.30
This would be catastrophic on two fronts. On the one hand, the discourse prescribes a form of statecraft centred on border security rather than systemic economic transformation, which represents an apocryphal programme of environmental protection. It does so by focusing narrowly on ‘national’ nature (peripheralising global issues) and obscuring the material economic drivers of ecological degradation (such as the heavily polluting energy and aviation industries, for which Global North populations are primarily culpable). To ignore the root causes of the ecological crisis at this juncture would be catastrophic for the natural world, but that is precisely what this political framing inculcates.
Just as importantly, ecobordering seeks to inflict further structural violence on those who those exploited at the peripheries of the global economy. The nationalistic framing emerges at a time when immigration is rising because of climate change, and the discourse thus seeks to diagnose the symptoms of ecological degradation as the causes of it. There is already evidence that the rise of the far right strengthens political resistance to climate migration,31 and this framing serves to justify this resistance from an environmental perspective. At a global scale, these framings threaten to rationalise a de facto climate apartheid; with Global North populations and elites in the Global South enjoying the spoils of an environmentally deleterious global economy, while poorer Global South populations become confined to increasingly uninhabitable areas facing escalating risks of climate shocks and deteriorating health conditions.
The meaning and practical implications of climate justice will become an increasingly hot topic in the Anthropocene. Challenging the depictions of culprits and saviours purveyed by far right figures is only an initial step to preventing injustices mounting further.32 Recognising the historical constitution of the global economy and the inequalities and vulnerabilities resulting from it underlines the injustices of far right framings and the need for progressive actors to advance more transformative approaches.33 Progressive responses to the rise of the far right in the Anthropocene requires formulating and advancing notions of a just transition which accounts for the movement of people affected by climate change as well as other less privileged groupings in society.34 This will require far more progressive forms of statecraft which are a world away from those advocated in the framings of the far right.
生态危机受到一系列政治话语的影响,每一种话语都不完美地捕捉到正在退化的地球生态系统的复杂的无数社会、经济和技术动态。这些话语塑造了公众对环境危机的理解和解决环境危机的适当策略,每一种话语都由不同但不断发展的政治派别和社会力量提供。从历史上看,极右翼关于生态危机的论述一直是否认它的存在。5,6这种否认有多种形式,但最常见的是否认生态退化的科学,与之相对应的是拒绝承担任何国家应对正在展开的全球生态灾难的责任。通常,科学证据被宣称为旨在造福“全球主义精英”的阴谋,或者是通过批准多边协议来破坏国家主权的阴谋。这加强了对有效环境政策的抵制。然而,这种环境话语不再像2000年代和2010年代那样是极右翼运动的核心。气候科学越来越被默认,但指责的矛头却不诚实地指向了极右翼的传统敌人。随着环境问题在政治议程上的上升(尤其是在年轻选民中变得尤为突出),极右翼政党似乎已经摆脱了对科学的否认。这种转变并没有导致人们认识到有必要进行公正的经济改革,也没有导致人们认识到有必要采取任何与环境危机的规模和性质相称的政治行动。相反,对环境问题(主要是存在于国家边界内的问题)的日益认识(尽管姗姗来迟)与反移民议程融合在一起,创造了一种新的令人反感的环境政治框架。新兴的话语,我们在其他地方将其概念化为“生态秩序”,7以气候民族主义为特征,并试图将移民(其中来自全球南方的移民变得非常明显)描述为对地方和国家环境的威胁。这种论述主要有两种形式。首先,它旨在将来自全球南方的“大规模移民”对环境的影响政治化,同时将“本地人”的影响非政治化。这包括将“大规模移民”与不断增长的自然资源需求和当地环境问题(如交通和消费增加造成的污染)联系起来。有人认为,移民是这些问题的罪魁祸首,在多元文化主义出现之前,这些问题并不是当地关注的问题。缺乏归属感是理解这一形象的关键;正如勒庞明确指出的那样:“环境保护主义是爱国主义的自然产物,因为它是扎根的自然产物……如果你是一个游牧民族,你就不是一个环境保护主义者……那些游牧民族……不关心环境;他们没有家园”对全球南方移民的描述与对“当地人”的描述并列,他们是“家园”的负责任的管家,也是他们“小排”的熟练管家(援引生态法西斯主义和伯克逻辑,这一框架借鉴了)。这通常需要颂扬牧民国民(如农民或护林员)的历史管理,并宣称“本地人”对“家园”的国内自然资源进行了良好的管理。国民阵线和金色黎明党甚至在各自的运动中建立了名为“新生态”和“绿色之翼”的分支,旨在分别保护“家庭、自然和种族”和“我们种族的摇篮”。马琳•勒庞(Marine Le Pen)在最近的总统竞选中获得了41.5%的选票,这两种话语特征在她最近的竞选中得到了体现。她的追随者称之为“爱国生态”,对环境危机的罪魁祸首和救世主的错误描述已经在法国政治中变得常态化,以至于他们得到了竞争对手保守派政治家的回应。所谓的移民和移民对以前“纯粹”和“可持续”的欧洲自然空间构成的威胁,试图证明边界政策是保护环境的关键治国方式的观点是正确的。正如马琳·勒庞(Marine Le Pen)领导的全国集会(National Rally)的高级人物乔丹·巴尔德拉(Jordan Bardella)在2019年宣布的那样:“边界是环境最伟大的盟友……我们将通过它们拯救地球。”这将在两个方面造成灾难性的后果。一方面,该论述规定了一种以边境安全为中心的治国方略,而不是系统性的经济转型,后者代表了一种虚假的环境保护计划。 它通过狭隘地关注“国家”性质(将全球问题边缘化)和模糊生态退化的物质经济驱动因素(例如污染严重的能源和航空工业,全球北方人口是罪魁祸首)来做到这一点。在这个关键时刻忽视生态危机的根本原因对自然界来说将是灾难性的,但这正是这种政治框架所灌输的。同样重要的是,生态秩序试图对那些处于全球经济边缘的被剥削者施加进一步的结构性暴力。民族主义的框架出现在气候变化导致移民增加的时候,因此,话语试图将生态退化的症状诊断为其原因。已经有证据表明,极右翼的崛起加强了对气候移民的政治抵制,而这种框架从环境的角度证明了这种抵制是合理的。在全球范围内,这些框架有可能使事实上的气候种族隔离合理化;全球北方的人口和全球南方的精英们享受着对环境有害的全球经济带来的好处,而较贫穷的全球南方人口则被限制在越来越不适宜居住的地区,面临着气候冲击和健康状况恶化的风险日益加剧。气候正义的意义和现实意义将成为人类世日益热门的话题。挑战极右翼人物对罪犯和救世主的描述只是防止不公正进一步加剧的第一步33 .认识到全球经济的历史构成及其导致的不平等和脆弱性,凸显了极右翼框架的不公正,以及进步行动者推进更具变革性方法的必要性对人类世极右势力崛起的进步回应,需要制定和推进公正过渡的概念,这种过渡要考虑到受气候变化影响的人们以及社会中其他特权较少的群体的流动这将需要更加进步的治国之道,与极右翼所倡导的治国之道相去甚远。
期刊介绍:
The permafrost of no alternatives has cracked; the horizon of political possibilities is expanding. IPPR Progressive Review is a pluralistic space to debate where next for progressives, examine the opportunities and challenges confronting us and ask the big questions facing our politics: transforming a failed economic model, renewing a frayed social contract, building a new relationship with Europe. Publishing the best writing in economics, politics and culture, IPPR Progressive Review explores how we can best build a more equal, humane and prosperous society.