洪水中的民主:瓦哈卡州风暴治理中边缘化声音的认知代理

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Environment and Planning. E, Nature and Space Pub Date : 2022-11-07 DOI:10.1177/25148486221132219
Anna Bridel
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引用次数: 1

摘要

尽管一再呼吁基层参与气候政策制定,但边缘化声音的认知作用仍鲜为人知。虽然地方知识越来越被视为自上而下的气候专业知识的解毒剂,但它往往没有被听到,或者最终强化了占主导地位的风险框架。公民认识论(ce)的概念通常被理解为社会授权知识主张的社会文化规范,可以提供对气候治理中边缘化行动者的认识论代理的见解,但很少应用于此类问题。与此同时,这些问题影响了学者如何概念化公民权利,在公民支离破碎或被边缘化的地方,这一点很少得到研究。在本文中,我认为将ce理解为“民主的期望”可以表明它们如何在这种情况下授权气候专业知识。我通过考察墨西哥埃斯孔迪多港(Puerto Escondido)的飓风治理来说明这一论点。在那里,脆弱的渔民在社会政治和经济上被排除在支离破碎的公民之外,而这些公民塑造了风险专业知识的生产。在这里,渔民对政府行为腐败的预期,以及政府对渔民倾向于在社会经济上与国家保持分离的预期,具体化了生物物理学的风险方法。这一分析有助于理解为什么许多将边缘化声音纳入气候政策的尝试未能达到预期结果,并扩大了对在有争议的政治背景下,ce如何调解认知代理的理解。此外,通过对民主期望的考察,可以了解政治认知秩序变化的条件,揭示干预气候风险治理的机会。
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Democracy in a deluge: Epistemic agency of marginalized voices in Oaxaca's storm governance
Despite repeated calls for grassroots participation in climate policy making, the epistemic agency of marginalized voices remains little understood. While local knowledge is increasingly regarded as an antidote to top-down climate expertise, it is often not heard, or ends up reinforcing dominant framings of risk. The concept of civic epistemologies (CEs), often understood as the sociocultural norms by which societies authorize knowledge claims, can provide insights into the epistemic agency of marginalized actors in climate governance, but has rarely been applied to such concerns. At the same time, such questions affect how scholars conceptualize CEs, which have seldom been examined where civics are fragmented or marginalized. In this article, I argue that understanding CEs as “expectations of democracy” can indicate how they authorize climate expertise in such settings. I illustrate this argument by examining hurricane governance in Puerto Escondido, Mexico, where vulnerable fishers constitute a sociopolitically and economically excluded part of a fragmented civic that shapes the production of risk expertise. Here, fisher expectations that the government will behave corruptly, and government expectations that fishers prefer to remain socioeconomically separate from the state reify biophysical approaches to risk. This analysis contributes to understanding why many attempts to include marginalized voices in climate policy fail to achieve their anticipated outcomes, expanding understanding of how CEs mediate epistemic agency in contested political contexts. Furthermore, examining CEs as expectations of democracy can inform upon conditions under which political-epistemic orders change, revealing opportunities for intervention in climate risk governance.
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13.80%
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101
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