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Futurities Rethought: On the Political Imminences of Runaway Nature.

Authors :
Petryna, Adriana
Beneduce, Roberto
Boyer, Dominic
Fuentes, Agustin
Grant, Silas
Hoag, Colin
Kelly, Ann H.
Ulturgasheva, Olga
Vilaça, Aparecida
Source :
Current Anthropology; 2024, Vol. 65 Issue 4, p583-606, 24p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The impacts of climate change are accelerating worldwide, but emergency agencies and political bodies are not always equipped to anticipate where, when, or how severe the next unnatural disaster will be. Amid megafire seasons, for example, scientists are revising models of fire behavior that were calibrated to natures that increasingly diverge from known baselines and trends. Emergency responders' trust in patterns has become an occupational hazard. At these edges of knowledge, struggles to maintain responsive capacity in disrupted ecologies are at play; a larger reckoning with runaway climate change as a relational problem space is in order. Rather than making me resort to despair about the world's "end," such labors redirect my attention toward horizons of expectation in which knowledges are still actionable, not obsolete, and where capacities for future interventions are viable and not denied. These activities, enmeshed in a rubric of horizon work, shift expert authority and promote critical realignments across political, activist, and Indigenous spheres. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00113204
Volume :
65
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Current Anthropology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179082536
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/731564