Environmental Political Theory. Steve Vanderheiden
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Название: Environmental Political Theory

Автор: Steve Vanderheiden

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Афоризмы и цитаты

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isbn: 9781509529643

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СКАЧАТЬ along with vicious ad hominem attacks against Carson herself. Half a century later, the Competitive Enterprise Institute (which has also been active in climate science denial) continues to malign Carson by falsely claiming on its rachelwaswrong.org website that her “false alarm” on the dangers of DDT is responsible for the suffering and death of millions from bans on its anti-malarial uses14 (in fact, the chemical’s use to combat malaria was explicitly allowed in the 1996 Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, and it continues to be used for such purposes in Africa and Asia).

      This model was also used in the US tobacco industry’s strategy for avoiding smoking-related lawsuits by what the majority opinion in United States v. Philip Morris (2006) describes as a conspiracy to defraud the public “with zeal, with deception, with a single-minded focus on their financial success, and without regard for the human tragedy or social costs that success exacted.” The industry’s regulatory avoidance strategy of contesting the scientific consensus and creating doubt about the scientific basis for the dangers of smoking created a playbook that would later be used to contest the existence of ecological limits or resist pressures for regulatory responses to them. David Michaels notes of this strategy of “manufacturing uncertainty” that “the vilification of threatening research as ‘junk science’ and the corresponding sanctification of industry-commissioned research as ‘sound science’ has become nothing less than the standard operating procedure for parts of corporate America.”15 Climate science denial is perhaps the most prominent use of this model, but it has also been used against scientific research on acid rain, biodiversity loss, and animal pain and suffering.

      Under the Trump administration, this politicization of science has included not only the president’s own expressed climate science denialism but also the replacement of scientists with industry advocates on key regulatory bodies, the termination of numerous science advisory posts and commissions, the muzzling of government scientists and scrubbing of their research from agency websites, and even the pressuring of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather forecasters to corroborate a false claim by the president about whether Hurricane Dorian was expected to threaten Alabama in September of 2019. Its disregard and disdain for science-based decision making became so anomalous and alarming that the bipartisan National Task Force on Rule of Law & Democracy describes Trump administration politicization of government science and research as having reached a “crisis point” in obfuscation and denialism that includes “almost weekly violations of previously respected safeguards” and “undermine[s] the value of objective facts themselves.”19

      Rejecting the call for governments to proactively anticipate and respond to ecological limits with conservation and efficiency policies, this version acknowledges the need for change but denies that it needs to be directed by states, instead vesting markets and voluntary rather than regulatory efforts with the power to transform production and consumption. An associated view invokes the environmental Kuznets curve (discussed in chapter 5) to suggest that continued promotion of economic growth will eventually rectify any environmental impacts of growth once a tipping point has been reached, again rationalizing business as usual against calls to more proactively address the impacts of ecological limits. Regardless of which form it takes, all versions of this response reject any need to embark upon planned changes to government institutions, economic organizations, or public values or behavior. For our purposes here, they also deny the need to disrupt or transform social and political ideals like the ones to be examined in later chapters, since ideals can neither be complicit in, nor serve as solutions to, nonexistent environmental crises that require no change from the status quo.

      John Dryzek identifies the environmental discourse of “survival” as often countenancing centralized and authoritarian systems of control in response to ecological limits, as with the kind of eco-authoritarian visions discussed in chapter 4. According to Dryzek, the “basic story line” of such responses “is that human demands on the life support capacity of ecosystems threaten to explode out of control, and drastic action needs to be taken in order to curb these demands.”21 In most cases, this “drastic action” and the state of emergency to which it responds СКАЧАТЬ