Abstract
This short commentary explores two absences in Bulkeley’s (2019) human geographies of climate change. First, the absence of other environment problems, signifying how in the debate about climate change our response often acts to crowd out other problems. Second, in considering the temporal boundaries of climate’s human geographies, the absence of the future, which is increasingly being brought into being by scenarios, visualizations and creative works.
In ‘The whereabouts of climate politics: navigating climate’s human geographies’, the core issue, eloquently described and discussed, is that climate change is not a problem ‘out there’ (Bulkeley, 2019: 19, citing Castree, 2015) that is discrete and predetermined, but rather that it is constantly evolving, and necessarily embedded within politics, economics, modes of governance and so on. In Bulkeley’s analysis, climate change is a condition, rather than a discrete problem that needs specific responses. Further, and more positively, seeing climate change as a problem ‘out there’ has the effect of overlooking a lot of progressive change underway in the everyday on the ground activities and practices of areas of work seemingly unconnected to, or not obviously labelled as ‘low carbon’ or climate change related (Lovell and Ghaleigh, 2013; Mahony and Hulme, 2018).
The problem identified here by Bulkeley is twofold: first, it is a problem about the status of climate and environment research within the discipline of Human Geography and beyond; second, and more profoundly, it is a problem regarding the slow and uneven acceptance of our responsibility to confront, challenge and reframe existing ways of thinking and doing because of climate change – both within academia and more generally.
There is not really much to disagree with in the content of ‘The whereabouts of climate politics’, so the focus of this short commentary is on things that are not said within the article – the absences in climate’s human geographies – that perhaps usefully could be included. While Bulkeley concentrates her analysis on the absence of climate change from large areas of the discipline of Human Geography, this commentary takes up the theme of absence but uses it to stretch the boundaries of the article and reach out more broadly in two directions: first, in considering the positioning of climate change within the paper as the environmental problem of our time; and, second, in considering the temporal boundaries of climate’s human geographies, and ways we might look to the future.
The positioning of climate change in relation to other environmental problems
In ‘The whereabouts of climate politics’, climate change is framed as a distinctive problem, that warrants special attention, and the status of climate change is assumed or taken for granted. In other words, the starting point of the paper elevates climate change as more critical than other environmental or social problems, and this is an issue which perhaps deserves closer attention. As scholars have commented, there are other significant global environmental and social problems, for example, plastic waste, disease, poverty, environmental toxins or pollution of the oceans and waterways (Dunlap, 2007, Middleton, 2008), and climate change can act to crowd out these problems. Given that the article is about locating climate politics, it would be valuable to locate and contextualize climate change alongside broader sustainable development goals (Fleurbaey et al., 2014), with an explanation of why climate change is the focal point of the paper.
Relatedly, in setting out the case for focusing on climate change, the paper might briefly consider some of the particular physical science characteristics of climate change. While this suggestion sits somewhat uncomfortably with Bulkeley’s core argument – that we should endeavour to not position climate change as a physical science problem – there are nonetheless certain characteristics of climate change that structure how it is understood and the nature of our societal response to date. These include: that it is a global problem, and its long time frame to take effect, with the resulting absence of an immediate crisis; features all described as making climate change a ‘moral storm’ (Gardiner, 2006) and a ‘wicked problem’ to solve (Lazarus, 2009). While there is a risk here in repeating the mistake of making climate change ‘out there’ (Castree, 2015; see also Hulme, 2008), these are also unavoidable characteristics of climate change as a physical problem that necessarily structure how we frame and govern it, and that I think would benefit from being made explicit in Bulkeley’s intervention.
Looking to the future
The second absence observed in ‘The whereabouts of climate politics’ is its scant attention to the future. There is an opportunity to stretch the boundaries of the article temporally, reaching beyond its current focus on contemporary times and the near past, to include the future. As scholars have noted, looking ahead to imagine our future climate-changed world can act as an impetus to action and value shifts (Berkhout et al., 2002). A number of approaches have been used to facilitate such future-thinking, including visualization and scenarios (Moss et al., 2010); for example, the research by Shaw et al. (2009) in visualizing alternative year 2100 climate change scenarios in 3D at a local level, for it is at a local level where climate change is judged to be most meaningful to decision-makers and stakeholders.
Another way of thinking about the future is through the arts and humanities, such as the rather bleak future possibilities raised in novels and films such as Cormac MaCarthy’s The Road (2006) , and the MaddAddam trilogy of books by Margaret Atwood (2003, 2009, 2013). The genre of literature climate fiction, or ‘cli-fi’, is attracting increasing scholarly attention (see e.g. Johns-Putra, 2016, Mehnert, 2016), including as a means of stimulating action to address climate change (Holmes, 2014, Schneider-Mayerson, 2018).
A future-orientated perspective can perhaps help us as academics to consider what we might wish that our leading scholars had been attentive to, during this period, the early 21st century. For me personally, thinking more carefully about the possibilities of what our future climate changed world might look like does not make me wish we had spent more time analysing and fretting about disciplinary boundaries. Perhaps other feel the same – helping us collectively to further raise our heads above our disciplinary silos, and, to think anew about the profound effect of climate change and its future reach into all areas of academia – the need for experts in conflict, disaster management, migration, eco-fiction, future studies, design and the laws of war, as Bulkeley argues. That we need to work together more collaboratively is clear. But the methods and strategies to encourage us to do this are far from clear. By stretching the boundaries of climate change social science scholarship to the future, we might harness our imagination and our creativity to help us navigate the tricky paths ahead.
Footnotes
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
