范围转移:官僚主义,能源正义和达科他输油管道

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Environment and Planning. E, Nature and Space Pub Date : 2023-08-25 DOI:10.1177/25148486231192096
Brittany A. Bondi, L. Horowitz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

通过对美国陆军工程兵团(USACE)环境评估(EA)的研究,本文探讨了监管机构的“解释性实施”。我们发现,在执行《国家环境政策法》和《12898环境正义行政命令》时,USACE“范围转移”——临时扩大和缩小其空间、科学和成本效益影响分析的范围——以加速工业扩张,违背了政策的初衷。在这样做的过程中,USACE的EA通过排除当地部落(特别是立岩苏族和夏延河苏族)和他们的关注,例如条约权利,当地历史,气候变化,特别是潜在的石油泄漏对人类健康和生存资源的影响,创造了各种能源不公正。我们通过卡尔·波莱尼在社会环境保护和资本主义发展之间的双重运动来分析这种范围转移。我们通过分析意识形态、权力关系和政策的三螺旋模型进一步阐述了这一框架(在这里,“法律”和“解释”的线索进一步复杂化了这一框架),这三条交织在一起的线相互拉扯或相互对抗,共同向弱势群体争取更大的权利,“倒退”到更早的压迫性条件,或者只是停滞不前。最后,我们认为,将范围转移和其他形式的解释性实施理解为三螺旋政策链中的线程,与其他线程和线程动态张力或同步,可以帮助解释机构决策过程。我们希望这种概念化能够阐明看似平凡的官僚做法加剧或可能减轻能源不公正的能力。
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Scope-shifting: Bureaucracy, Energy Justice and the Dakota Access Pipeline
Through a study of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' (USACE) environmental assessment (EA) of the Dakota Access Pipeline's crossing of Lake Oahe near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, this paper explores regulatory agencies’ “interpretive implementation.” We find that, in implementing the National Environmental Policy Act and Executive Order 12898 on Environmental Justice, USACE “scope-shifted”—facultatively expanding and contracting the scopes of its spatial, scientific and cost–benefit impact analyses—to expedite industrial expansion, contravening the policies’ original intents. In doing so, USACE's EA created various energy injustices by excluding local tribes (especially the Standing Rock Sioux and Cheyenne River Sioux Tribes) and their concerns, e.g. treaty rights, local histories, climate change and especially potential oil spills with impacts on human health and subsistence resources. We analyze this scope-shifting through the lens of Karl Polayni's double movement between socioenvironmental protections and capitalist development. We elaborate this framework further via a triple-helix model that analyses ideologies, power relations and policies (here further complicated by both “law” and “interpretation” threads), as three intertwined strands that pull with or against each other, jointly progressing toward greater rights for vulnerable communities, “retrograding” toward earlier, oppressive conditions or simply stagnating. Ultimately, we argue that understanding scope-shifting and other forms of interpretive implementation as threads within the triple-helix policy strand, in dynamic tension or synchrony with other threads and strands, can help explicate agency decision-making processes. We hope that this conceptualization can elucidate the capacity of seemingly mundane bureaucratic practices for exacerbating, or potentially alleviating, energy injustice.
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CiteScore
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13.80%
发文量
101
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