1 / 12

Plenary Session Privileged Irresponsibility and Global Warming Bob Pease

Plenary Session Privileged Irresponsibility and Global Warming Bob Pease. Resilience is about the stability of a system to recover its shape after an interference. Places onus on individuals and communities to become more resilient to a range of threats.

cantero
Download Presentation

Plenary Session Privileged Irresponsibility and Global Warming Bob Pease

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Plenary SessionPrivileged Irresponsibility and Global Warming Bob Pease

  2. Resilience is about the stability of a system to recover its shape after an interference. • Places onus on individuals and communities to become more resilient to a range of threats. • Accommodatesto established and unequal social structures and neglectstransformation of those structures. • Ideological fit with neoliberalism. Can resilience be redeemed? From Resilience to Accountability of the Privileged

  3. ‘The word privilege is used to refer to systematically conferred advantages individuals enjoy by virtue of their membership in dominant groups with access to resources and institutional power that are beyond the common advantages of marginalised citizens’ (Bailey 1998: 109). Bailey, A. (1998) ‘Privilege: Expanding on Marilyn Frye’s Oppression’, Journal of Social Philosophy, 29:3. Privilege

  4. Western Global Dominance and Eurocentrism • Political Economy and Class Elitism • Gender Order and the Patriarchal Dividend • Racial Formations and White Supremacy • Institutionalised Heterosexuality and Hetero-privilege • Ableist Relations and the Embodiment of Privilege Pease, B. (2010) Undoing Privilege: Unearned Advantage in a Divided World. London: Zed Books. Intersecting Sites of Privilege

  5. Invisibility of privilege Most privilege is not recognised as such by those who have it. Normativity • Privileged groups become the model for normal human relations. Naturalness • Gender, race, sexuality and class are regarded as flowing from nature. Sense of entitlement • Members of privileged groups believe that they have a right to be respected, acknowledged, protected and rewarded. The Dynamics of Privilege

  6. Privileged groups’ failure to acknowledge the exercise of power. • Those who receive benefits from others fail to acknowledge dependence on others to live well in the world. • Privileged groups absent themselves from discussion about their responsibilities (Tronto 2013) Privileged Irresponsibility

  7. Global warming is one of the most significant manifestations of privilege to face humankind. • The Global North (20% of the population) consumes 80% of the world’s resources. • Developed countries owe a climate debt to developing countries due to the former’s emissions of greenhouse gases. • Paris Climate Agreement pledges from the Global North are nowhere near where they should be to address a fair burden. Privilege and Climate Debt

  8. Structural violence is legitimised violence exercised by corporations and the state to reproduce social institutions. • Violence against environment is a form of structural violence because the social forces contributing to disasters are obscured. • Environmental violence by governments and corporations is a crime. • Environmental violence is classed, gendered and raced. Global Warming as Structural Violence

  9. Conservative white males in the global North are the epitome of privilege. • White men in government and corporations are the main drivers of environmental violence. • Differences in: • men’s and women’s carbon footprint. • men’s and women’s understanding of climate change. • men’s and women’s concernsabout climate change. The Conservative White Male Effect

  10. Links between climate change denial and hegemonic masculinity. • Concern by class-privileged white men of protecting a particular form of patriarchal, capitalist and racially divided society. • Those who contribute most to global warming are least likely to take action to address it. • White class-privileged men experience forms of environmental privilege which give them a sense of safety. Hegemonic Masculinity and Climate Change

  11. White class-privileged men dominate organisations responsible for addressing climate change. • Climate change is framed as a technical problem. • Masculinist mindset embedded in environmental management. • Masculinist assumptions embedded in geo-engineering search for the technological fix. • Masculinisation of environmental politics. Hegemonic Masculinity and Responses to Climate Change

  12. Link ‘natural’ disasters to social, economic and cultural relations. • Shift the focus from vulnerabilities to disasters and climate change to the role of privileged groups in reproducing climate change-related disasters. • Change men’s dominator relationship to the natural world. • Develop a critical ethic of care among men. What is to be Done?

More Related