记录在案:谈论零日及其后:水危机对脆弱性、风险和安全问题的影响

IF 0.2 Q4 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY South African Crime Quarterly-SACQ Pub Date : 2018-04-20 DOI:10.4314/SACQ.V63I0
Nolundi Luwaya, Kelley Moult, Diane Jefthas, Vitima Jere
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引用次数: 0

摘要

很少有开普敦人会反对这样一种说法,即这座城市受到了当前许多人称之为现代历史上最严重的水危机的冲击。关于节水技术的讨论、“水勇士”俱乐部的成员资格、家庭日常用水量的比较、厕所习惯的讨论(冲还是不冲?)以及疯狂购买25升的水箱,已经成为我们这些人日常生活的一部分,因为我们面临着迫在眉睫的(但以前是不合情理的)水龙头干涸的威胁。就连这位以“油”自豪的西开普省省长也夸口说,她每三天才洗一次澡,以帮助抵御“归零日”。但水危机不仅提出了居民用水权利和责任的重要问题。它也让一些有趣的问题浮出水面,比如犯罪和犯罪控制,以及我们个人和集体与水的关系。在取水点和超市发生的暴力和不文明事件引起了社交媒体的关注,城市居民对有组织犯罪的威胁、禁止重新装瓶和转售市政用水的法律以及西开普省政府的水灾难计划进行了激烈的辩论,该计划赋予警察和军队维持取水点安全和秩序的责任。当然,虽然节水、风险和安全问题对许多开普敦人来说还很新鲜,但学者、活动家和政策制定者(包括犯罪学家)早就在写这些问题了。法律与社会中心联系了两位学者/活动家,讨论水危机及其对脆弱性、风险和安全问题的影响。环境与人类发展顾问Nick Simpson(开普敦大学博士后学者)讨论了人类世时代的犯罪学问题,西开普大学杜拉奥马尔研究所妇女与民主倡议的研究员兼促进者Vivienne Mentor-Lalu向我们讲述了干旱对性别的影响。Nolundi Luwaya, Kelley Moult, Diane Jefthas和Vitima Jere对本文也有贡献。
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On the record: Talking about Day Zero and beyond: the impact of the water crisis on questions of vulnerability, risk and security
Few Capetonians would argue against the claim that the City has been rocked by the current water crisis that many have dubbed the most severe in modern history. Discussions about water saving techniques, membership of the ‘Water Warriors’ club, dinner party comparisons of family daily usage figures, discussion of toilet habits (to flush or not to flush?) and frenzied buying to secure 25-litre water containers have become part of daily life for those of us faced by the imminent (but previously unconscionable) threat of our taps running dry. Even the ‘proudly oily’1 premier of the Western Cape has boasted that she only showers every three days to help beat back Day Zero. But the water crisis has not only raised important questions about residents’ rights to, and responsibility for, the water they use. It has also brought to the surface interesting issues about criminality and crime control, and our individual and collective relationship to water. Stories of violence and incivility at water collection points and in supermarkets have captured attention on social media, and city dwellers have hotly debated the threat of organised crime, laws against rebottling and reselling of municipal water, and the Western Cape government’s Water Disaster Plan, which gives the police and army responsibility for maintaining safety and order at water collection points. Of course, while questions of water saving, risk and safety feel quite new to many Capetonians, scholars, activists and policymakers (including criminologists) have been writing about these issues for much longer. The Centre for Law and Society approached two scholars/activists to discuss the water crisis and its impact on questions of vulnerability, risk and security. Nick Simpson, an environmental and human development consultant (and post-doctoral scholar at the University of Cape Town), discussed questions of criminology in the age of the Anthropocene, and Vivienne Mentor-Lalu, a researcher/facilitator for the Women and Democracy Initiative at the Dullah Omar Institute at the University of the Western Cape, spoke to us about the gendered impact of the drought. Nolundi Luwaya, Kelley Moult, Diane Jefthas and Vitima Jere contributed to this piece.
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来源期刊
South African Crime Quarterly-SACQ
South African Crime Quarterly-SACQ CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
自引率
20.00%
发文量
6
审稿时长
16 weeks
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