000 02074nab a22002417a 4500
999 _c10596
_d10596
003 OSt
005 20200911143302.0
007 cr aa aaaaa
008 200911b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aHarriet Bulkeley
_930111
245 _aNavigating climate’s human geographies :
_bExploring the whereabouts of climate politics
260 _bSage
_c2019
300 _aVol 9, Issue 1, 2019:( 3-17 p.)
520 _aJust as global institutions and environmental assessment processes embark on the latest effort to integrate more social science into global environmental change research, it appears that the social sciences of climate change are unable or unwilling to address this challenge. In this article, I explore the nature of these dynamics within human geography and argue that climate change occupies a curiously ambiguous position within our discipline of both an explicit presence and an underlying absence. Framed predominantly in terms of a biophysical challenge requiring some form of social response, work on climate change retains an assumed socio-nature divide – a position which has yet to be substantively challenged by the different strands of political ecology, new materialism and environmental humanities that now pervade the discipline. To advance new geographies of climate change, the article argues that our understanding of climate change needs to shift from that of a problem that needs specific responses to a condition that is constituted through specific forms of socio-spatial relation and in turn constitutes the politics, ethics and meaning of particular socio-spatial orderings, from the citizen to the city, the community to the corporation.
650 _aclimate change
_929611
650 _asocio-nature
_930112
650 _apolitics
_930113
650 _ahuman geography
_929461
650 _aglobal environmental change
_930114
773 0 _010527
_915376
_dSage Publications Ltd., 2019
_tDialogues in human geography.
_w(OSt)20840795
_x2043-8214
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/2043820619829920
942 _2ddc
_cART