日本的极端基础设施:堡垒化、弹性和极端自然

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES Social Science Japan Journal Pub Date : 2022-06-30 DOI:10.1093/ssjj/jyac011
Michael R. Fisch
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引用次数: 1

摘要

巨大的混凝土墙是如何成为极端自然的弹性基础设施的?在这种混凝土弹性的阴影下,集体生活将成为什么?随着世界各地的城市和国家考虑建造巨大的混凝土屏障来抵御极端天气和海平面上升的力量,这些问题变得越来越重要。本文以2011年东日本大地震后日本东北海岸的巨大混凝土海堤“堡垒化”为例,探讨弹性思维、混凝土墙和极端自然的融合。本文将“堡垒化”作为一种经验现象和分析,追溯了“堡垒化”作为一种源于防灾减灾逻辑综合的弹性思维的表现形式的出现。最后,该论点认为,堡垒化背后的弹性思维导致了对极端自然的适应,而没有提供有意义的环境缓解。其结果是,灾难基础设施的效率非常值得怀疑,将人口封闭在一个生态空洞的现状中,同时限制了人们进入更好的生态未来。
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Japan’s Extreme Infrastructure: Fortress-ification, Resilience, and Extreme Nature
How have massive concrete walls become thinkable as resilient infrastructure for an extreme nature, and what will collective life become in the shadow of such concrete resilience? These questions hold increasing importance as cities and nations throughout the world contemplate the construction of giant concrete barriers to resist the forces of extreme weather and rising sea levels. This article turns to Japan’s ‘fortress-ification’ of its northeast coast with giant concrete seawalls in wake of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake in order to explore the convergence of resilience thinking, concrete walls, and extreme nature. Treating fortress-ification as an empirical phenomenon and analytic, the argument tracks the emergence of fortress-ification as a manifestation of a kind of resilience thinking that derives from a synthesis of logics of disaster prevention and disaster reduction. Ultimately, the argument posits that the resilience thinking behind fortress-ification engenders adaptation to extreme nature without providing meaningful environmental mitigation. The result is disaster infrastructure with highly questionable efficacy that seals the population within an ecologically empty present while restricting access to better alternative ecological futures.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Social Science Japan Journal is a new forum for original scholarly papers on modern Japan. It publishes papers that cover Japan in a comparative perspective and papers that focus on international issues that affect Japan. All social science disciplines (economics, law, political science, history, sociology, and anthropology) are represented. All papers are refereed. The journal includes a book review section with substantial reviews of books on Japanese society, written in both English and Japanese. The journal occasionally publishes reviews of the current state of social science research on Japanese society in different countries.
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