SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 32
The Anthropocenic CityNature, Security & Cyborg Urbanisation Stephen Graham Professor of Cities and Society Global Urban Research Unit School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape Newcastle University
   “Our world, our old world that we have inhabited for the last 12,000 years, has ended. This February […], the Stratigraphy Commission of the Geological Society of London was adding the newest and highest story to the geological story. To the question ‘Are we now living in the Anthropocene?’ the 21 members of the Commission unanimously answer ‘yes.’ They adduce robust evidence that the Holocene epoch -- the interglacial span of unusually stable climate that has allowed the rapid evolution of agriculture and urban civilization -- has ended and that the Earth has entered ‘a stratigraphic interval without close parallel in the last several million years.’ In addition to the buildup of greenhouse gases, the stratigraphers cite human landscape transformation which ‘now exceeds [annual] natural sediment production by an order of magnitude,’ the ominous acidification of the oceans, and the relentless destruction of biota. This new age, they explain, is defined both by the heating trend […] and by the radical instability expected of future environments. In somber prose, they warn that ‘the combination of extinctions, global species migrations and the widespread replacement of natural vegetation with agricultural monocultures is producing a distinctive contemporary biostratigraphic signal. These effects are permanent, as future evolution will take place from surviving (and frequently anthropogenically relocated) stocks.” […] Evolution itself, in other words, has been forced into a new trajectory.” Mike Davis (2008)
Welcome to the ‘Anthropocene’: Capitalist urban-Industrialism as the Planet’s most important geophysical force Human and urban manufacture of ‘Nature’ – climates, biospheres, carbon cycles, hydrological and geomorphological systems, even organisms and ecosystems -- has reached such an extent since the Industrial revolution that we no longer inhabit the post-glacial Holocene Instead we live in the Anthropocene (term coined in 2000 by the Nobel Prize-winning geologist, Paul Crutzen)
Paul J Crutzen Holocene-Anthropocenic boundaries can now be discerned in ocean sediments, ice sheet cores, pollen cores etc.
The “Factory Planet” Nick Dyer-Witheford Incredibly rapid growth and extension of cities and capitalist  urban-industrial systems absolutely central to thisshift 2.6 billion people, 0.75 land area Main hubs of global water, energy, food, waste, carbon flows and demands; generators of resource conflicts; foci of genetic, hydrological, climatic, nano-, chemical and geological engineering (intentional and unintentional)  on earth-shaping scales Already, cities consume 75% of world energy and produce 80% greenhouse gas emissions More than 50% global soils farmed, grazed or logged; 1/3 of available water used for planting & grazing; 25% rivers run dry before reaching sea Cities hubs of huge, geographically-stretched systems of infrastructure to metabolise enormous flows of food, water, energy, wastes, commodities, raw materials & resources from distant sites through the city and the bodies of its human (and non-human) inhabitants within globalised and ‘neoliberal’ worlds of trade, flow and exchange
Anthropocene Concept Resonates With Posthumanist Ontologies Put Forward by Actor-Network and  Cyborg Urbanisation Theories Imagined fixed human/machine, human/animal, physical/non-physical, social/technological & social/natural binaries and boundaries blur away A subjectification of objects, and the objectification of subjects (Donna Haraway, Bruno Latour etc.) “The characteristic of the factory planet is the capitalist subsumption not just of production, not just of comsumption, not just of social reproduction (as in Fordism), but of life’s informational, genetic and ecological dimensions” Nick Dyer-Witheford Urban Technonaturein a world of ‘post-humans’: “Cyborgs are not creatures of pristine Nature; they are the planned and unplanned offspring of manufactured environments, fusing into new organic compounds of naturalized matter and artificialized anti-matter” Tim Luke (1997)
“The entire planet now is increasingly a ‘built environment’ or ‘planned habitat’ as pollution modifies atmospheric chemistry, urbanization restructures weather events, biochemistry redesigns the genetics of existing biomass, and architecture accretes new biotic habitats inside of sprawling megacities.”   (Luke T W, 1997, "At the end of Nature: cyborgs, 'humachines', and environments in postmodernity" Environment and Planning A 29(8) 1367 – 1380 )
Matthew Gandy: Cyborg Urbanisation Cyborgian thinking suggests a way of thinking about cities as a whole Geographically and temporally-stretched hybrids of human, organic, technological, continually connecting urban sites and processes to ‘rural’ ones Helps create a new vocabulary for understanding what we mean by the ‘public realm’ against the vulnerability and inter-dependency of urban societies and the complex technological networks and organic and biospheric metabolisms, stretched across different geographical & temporal scales,  that make them possible.
Eric Swyngedouw and Maria Kaika:  Metabolisation of water central to metabolism of cyborg cities ‘Socionatures’ based on distant sourcing, hydro-engineering of whole nations, and the circulation of water through the metabolic spaces of the body and the city
Cyborg Urbanisation Revealed During Disruption of Infrastructures “Cyborgs, like us, are endlessly fascinated by machinic breakdowns, which would cause disruptions in, or denials of access to, their megatechnical sources of being.” (above NYC blackout, 2003) (Luke T W, 1997, "At the end of Nature: cyborgs, 'humachines', and environments in postmodernity" Environment and Planning A 29(8) 1367 – 1380 )
Tim Luke: ‘Denature’ “After two centuries of industrial revolution and three decades of informational revolution, Nature no longer can be assumed to be God-created (theogenic) or self-creating (autogenic). What is taken to be "nature" now is largely human-created (anthropogenic), not only in theory but also in practice. One need not wait for the science fiction of advanced space travel technologies to contact other "extra-terrestrial life forms," the science facts of altered atmospheric chemistry, rampant genetic engineering, and unchecked species extinctions suggest that urban industrial humanity is a race extra-terrestrial intelligent beings already intent upon imperializing the Earth in cyborg colonies with humachinic technologies. ” (Luke T W, 1997, "At the end of Nature: cyborgs, 'humachines', and environments in postmodernity" Environment and Planning A 29(8) 1367 – 1380 )
Infrastructure disruptions reveal often taken for granted and normalised ‘infrastructures’ and cyborg assemblies especially blackoutsIn cyborg cities, increasingly threaten life, not mere inconvenience
Also unerringly reveal  the often concealed politics of cyborganised cities e.g. Katrina in 2005 not a ‘natural disaster,’ ‘technical failure’ or ‘Act of  God.’ Rather, the inevitable result of: Climate change accentuating hurricanes Hitting a city denuded of natural protection and Very poorly covered by  a levee network that was systematically racially biased over centuries of constructed socio-nature in more recent context of  A Neoconservative and racist Federal Government that had systematically skewed Emergency Planning towards terrorism for political ends
Dominant Responses: Earth Systems Engineering,Geoengineering, Securitisation “The world as design space” ; “The human as design space” Brad Allenby “Earth Systems Engineering and Management is the capability to design, engineer, and manage, through dialog and continual feedback, integrated built/human/natural systems that achieve the multivariate and sometimes mutually exclusive goals and desires of humanity, including at the least personal, social, economic, technological, and environmental dimensions, within the constraints imposed by the states and dynamics of existing complex adaptive systems.” Brad Allenby
We must be wary of ‘quick technical fix’ ideas of ‘Terraforming’, ‘Geoengineering’ and ‘Earth Systems Engineering’ in the Anthropocene. These tend to depoliticiseand commodifythe problems, legitimise an unchanged political economy, and  would inevitably bring major unintended effects
Securitisation and Weaponisation of the Anthropocene Ole Wæver's Copenhagen School Securitization Theory (1995)  Security as a “speech act” where a securitizing actor designates a threat to a specified reference object and declares an existential threat implying a right to use extraordinary means to fend it off.  Such a process of “securitization” is successful when the construction of an “existential threat” by a policy maker is socially accepted and where “survival” against existential threats is crucial. Strong Anthropocenic turn in securitisation discourse
The AnthropocenicGlobal City System: A New Imperialism? Neoliberalised ‘global’ cities often have a parasitic relationship with near and distant hinterlands “Bio-rifts of neoliberalism” Dyer-Witheford Resource (food, water, energy) grabs organised and finance through the financial centres and technopoles of the North’s global finance capitals New highly regressive paradigms of ‘urban ecological security’ (Simon Marvin and Mike Hodgson) E.g. Daewoo (South Korean corporation)  has just leased half of all the arable land in Madagascar to feed South Korean cities in the future
Biopiracy and biofuels push (indigenous groups in Indonesia, protesting, above) Global South ‘land grab’  by global North  agribusiness
Conclusions (i) : The Anthropocenic City? Throws “us onto a meta-historical playing field without a clue as to how to play the game” Gibson-Graham and Roelvink (2010) Drastically destablise concepts of ‘city’, ‘technology’, ‘nature’ and ‘scale’, along with ‘urban-rural’, ‘natural-social’, ‘natural-technological’ and ‘global-local’ binaries that persist in orthodox and policy discourses Particularly profound implications for conceptualisations of the ‘urban’. Is the entire Anthropocenic biosphere, in effect, ‘urban’?   Tim Luke (2009) talks of the multiple interconnections and new spatial practices of “urbanatura” (Tim Luke, 2009);   “The accidental normaliity of greenhouse-gassing global capitalism envelops humans, non-humans, and hybrids in technonaturalized systems and structures” (Tim Luke, 2009) Crucially, these processes map continuously onto, and through, more usual policy paradigms and discourses: “whether they examine technoscience operations, natural disasters, or socio-spatial collapses”, new research must “scan the property boundaries of urban space as they are stabilized in ordinary policy terms such as urbanization, land use, environment, river basins, industrialization, economic growth, sprawl, or natural resources. Once scrutinized more closely, the unstable, unconventional, and undetected properties of multiple industrial hybridities do emerge out of foggy phenomena, including the ’greenhouse effect’” (Tim Luke, 2009)
(ii) Limits of ‘sustainability’ and ‘environmentalist’ discourses Reveals limits of both ‘sustainability’ and environmentalist debates: Sustainability discourses often involve elements of ‘greenwash’, over-aesthetic conceptions, or outright bourgeois environmentalism. “Sustainability is too often a self-absorbed mechanism for avoiding the complexity of the Anthropogenic world” Brad Allenby Environmentalist tropes of pristine nature, meanwhile, “suggest the importance of minimizing alterations of many habitats; but so many habitats are now obviously "artificial" that the invocation of a preservationist ethos is frequently inappropriate if ecology, rather than aesthetics, is considered as the basis for policy prescription” Simon Dalby Nevertheless, “the single most important cause of global warming – the urbanization of humanity – is also potentially the principal solution to the problem of human survival in the 21st century~ Mike Davis
(iii) Anthropocenic Ethics New “technonatural formations” required based on a “foundational reimagination of the innovations unfolding in many intersecting terms in what are called “Nature” and “society”’ (Tim Luke) Need a new ethics of research and action for the Anthropocene to politicise the Anthropocenic city: Must blur debates about global neoliberalised political economy, global urbanisation, global environmental change and environmetal justice “About human beings being transformed by the world  in which we find ourselves” Gibson-Graham and Roelvink (2010); Davis’ “insurgent communities, pirate technologies, bootlegged media, rebel science, and forgotten utopias” Planetary, anthropocenic, urban and human concepts of ‘security’ required rather than national-militaristic ones: Dangers that dominant responses -- earth systems and geoengineering and securitisation --  offer myths of technological panaceas based on further securitisation, commodification, colonisation centred on global north corporate capital and ‘global’ metropolitan regions (Hogson and Marvin) Emerging militarisation of Anthropocene? Oil, biofuels, biopiracy, water, land-grabs and food security
Thus, in the Anthropocene we will be confronted with a form of world political economy in which global warming and other totalizing commodifications are risked in the pursuit of progress. Whereas the initial stages of commodification tested the statics of nature (namely the absorption capacities of land, water, and air), the Anthropocene challenges the dynamics of nature, in particular, the seasons, the tides, the breathing of the planet, and the reproductive cycles of living things. While the emblems of advancing industrialism remain waste, pollution, and risk, there has been a fundamental breach of the nature-society relation in the Anthropocene. Modern life transpires not simply outside the constraints of nature, but relegates nature to commodity status, to be purchased and sold in the world along with other products and services. John Byrne, Leigh Glover and Cecilia Martinez 2002
Brad allenby
1. Cities, Nature, Technology : Traditional Concepts Modernist ideas based on imagining city as being separate, and opposed to an externalised Nature, to be ‘conquired’ through technoscientific modernity Nature separated from the social, urban, human world Technological ‘progress’ a means to heroically master nature, geography and time: e.g. US “Manifest destiny” ‘Built’ environments threaten to overcome and pollute ‘natural’ ones Deny social production of nature and reliance of urbanisation on ecological transformations Humans ands cities not external to ecosystems
But post-mortems for such events become messy! “A distributive notion of agency does interfere with the project of blaming. But it does not thereby abandon the project of identifying [ ] the sources of harmful effects. To the contrary, such a notion broadens the range of places to look for sources. ” Must look at the “selfish intentions and energy policy that provides lucrative opportunities for energy trading while generating a  tragedy of the commons”; at “the stubborn directionality of a high-consumption social infrastructure”; and at “the unstable power of electron flows,  wildfires, ex-urban housing pressures, and the assemblages they form” Jane Bennett Jane Bennett, (2005) “The Agency of Assemblages and  the North American Blackout,” Public Culture 17(3): 445–65. Pp. 463.
Erle Ellis
During the past three centuries, the human population has increased tenfold to more than 6 billion and is expected to reach 10 billion in this century. The methane-produc- ing cattle population has risen to 1.4 billion. About 30–50% of the planet’s land surface is exploited by humans. Tropical rainforests disappear at a fast pace, releasing carbon dioxide and strongly increasing species extinction. Dam building and river diver- sion have become commonplace. More than half of all accessible fresh water is used by mankind. Fisheries remove more than 25% of the primary production in upwelling ocean regions and 35% in the temperate continental shelf. Energy use has grown 16-fold during the twentieth century, causing 160 million tonnes of atmospheric sulphur dioxide emissions per year, more than twice the sum of its natural emissions. More nitrogen fertilizer is applied in agriculture than is fixed naturally in all terrestrial ecosystems; nitric oxide prod- uction by the burning of fossil fuel and biomass also overrides natural emissions. Fossil-fuel burning and agriculture have caused substantial increases in the concen- trations of ‘greenhouse’ gases — carbon dioxide by 30% and methane by more than 100% — reaching their highest levels over the past 400 millennia, with more to follow.So far, these effects have largely been caused by only 25% of the world popula- tion. The consequences are, among others, acid precipitation, photochemical ‘smog’ and climate warming. Hence, according to the latest estimates by the Intergovernmen- tal Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Earth will warm by 1.4–5.8 °C during this century. Paul J. Crutzen 2002

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

Urban and Industrial Habitats: How Important They Are for Ecosystem Services
Urban and Industrial Habitats: How Important They Are for Ecosystem ServicesUrban and Industrial Habitats: How Important They Are for Ecosystem Services
Urban and Industrial Habitats: How Important They Are for Ecosystem ServicesEdytaSierka
 
Development, Environment and Sustainabilty–the triumvirate on Geographical Frame
Development, Environment and Sustainabilty–the triumvirate on Geographical FrameDevelopment, Environment and Sustainabilty–the triumvirate on Geographical Frame
Development, Environment and Sustainabilty–the triumvirate on Geographical FrameProf Ashis Sarkar
 
Michael P Totten GreenATP: APPortunities to catalyze local to global positive...
Michael P Totten GreenATP: APPortunities to catalyze local to global positive...Michael P Totten GreenATP: APPortunities to catalyze local to global positive...
Michael P Totten GreenATP: APPortunities to catalyze local to global positive...Michael P Totten
 
Development of Ecosystem Services
Development of Ecosystem ServicesDevelopment of Ecosystem Services
Development of Ecosystem ServicesChristoph Schulze
 
Architecture and global ethnographies
Architecture and global ethnographiesArchitecture and global ethnographies
Architecture and global ethnographiesJohn Eilermann
 
Life-support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air (Presentation)
Life-support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air (Presentation)Life-support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air (Presentation)
Life-support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air (Presentation)Stephen Graham
 
Requisite for New Pattern towards Sustainable Growth in Africa
Requisite for New Pattern towards Sustainable Growth in AfricaRequisite for New Pattern towards Sustainable Growth in Africa
Requisite for New Pattern towards Sustainable Growth in AfricaIJSRED
 
Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)
Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)
Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)Stephen Graham
 
coevolution_brochure
coevolution_brochurecoevolution_brochure
coevolution_brochureKenneth Kay
 
Responsible research and innovation in a rapidly changing and increasingly te...
Responsible research and innovation in a rapidly changing and increasingly te...Responsible research and innovation in a rapidly changing and increasingly te...
Responsible research and innovation in a rapidly changing and increasingly te...RRI Tools
 
Enclosing Land, Entangling Labour: Development through Primitive Accumulation...
Enclosing Land, Entangling Labour: Development through Primitive Accumulation...Enclosing Land, Entangling Labour: Development through Primitive Accumulation...
Enclosing Land, Entangling Labour: Development through Primitive Accumulation...Kuriakose Mathew
 
Designing a Better Future by Denise Hargreaves
Designing a Better Future by Denise HargreavesDesigning a Better Future by Denise Hargreaves
Designing a Better Future by Denise HargreavesDenise Hargreaves
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

Urban and Industrial Habitats: How Important They Are for Ecosystem Services
Urban and Industrial Habitats: How Important They Are for Ecosystem ServicesUrban and Industrial Habitats: How Important They Are for Ecosystem Services
Urban and Industrial Habitats: How Important They Are for Ecosystem Services
 
Unidad iv ambos
Unidad iv ambosUnidad iv ambos
Unidad iv ambos
 
Development, Environment and Sustainabilty–the triumvirate on Geographical Frame
Development, Environment and Sustainabilty–the triumvirate on Geographical FrameDevelopment, Environment and Sustainabilty–the triumvirate on Geographical Frame
Development, Environment and Sustainabilty–the triumvirate on Geographical Frame
 
Michael P Totten GreenATP: APPortunities to catalyze local to global positive...
Michael P Totten GreenATP: APPortunities to catalyze local to global positive...Michael P Totten GreenATP: APPortunities to catalyze local to global positive...
Michael P Totten GreenATP: APPortunities to catalyze local to global positive...
 
The Science of the City - Introduction
The Science of the City - IntroductionThe Science of the City - Introduction
The Science of the City - Introduction
 
Smart Cities
Smart CitiesSmart Cities
Smart Cities
 
Urban Political Ecology
Urban Political EcologyUrban Political Ecology
Urban Political Ecology
 
Development of Ecosystem Services
Development of Ecosystem ServicesDevelopment of Ecosystem Services
Development of Ecosystem Services
 
Architecture and global ethnographies
Architecture and global ethnographiesArchitecture and global ethnographies
Architecture and global ethnographies
 
Life-support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air (Presentation)
Life-support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air (Presentation)Life-support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air (Presentation)
Life-support: The Political Ecology of Urban Air (Presentation)
 
Requisite for New Pattern towards Sustainable Growth in Africa
Requisite for New Pattern towards Sustainable Growth in AfricaRequisite for New Pattern towards Sustainable Growth in Africa
Requisite for New Pattern towards Sustainable Growth in Africa
 
Learning from Global Disaster Laboratories: A Framework For Global Dialogue
Learning from Global Disaster Laboratories: A Framework For Global Dialogue Learning from Global Disaster Laboratories: A Framework For Global Dialogue
Learning from Global Disaster Laboratories: A Framework For Global Dialogue
 
Artefact Survey
Artefact SurveyArtefact Survey
Artefact Survey
 
Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)
Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)
Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)
 
coevolution_brochure
coevolution_brochurecoevolution_brochure
coevolution_brochure
 
[w3]ESD
[w3]ESD[w3]ESD
[w3]ESD
 
Responsible research and innovation in a rapidly changing and increasingly te...
Responsible research and innovation in a rapidly changing and increasingly te...Responsible research and innovation in a rapidly changing and increasingly te...
Responsible research and innovation in a rapidly changing and increasingly te...
 
Enclosing Land, Entangling Labour: Development through Primitive Accumulation...
Enclosing Land, Entangling Labour: Development through Primitive Accumulation...Enclosing Land, Entangling Labour: Development through Primitive Accumulation...
Enclosing Land, Entangling Labour: Development through Primitive Accumulation...
 
Cities After Oil
Cities After OilCities After Oil
Cities After Oil
 
Designing a Better Future by Denise Hargreaves
Designing a Better Future by Denise HargreavesDesigning a Better Future by Denise Hargreaves
Designing a Better Future by Denise Hargreaves
 

Ähnlich wie Stephen graham anthropocenic city: nature, security and cyborg urbanisation

Eloi Laurent - SP Speakers Series: Social Ecology
Eloi Laurent - SP Speakers Series: Social EcologyEloi Laurent - SP Speakers Series: Social Ecology
Eloi Laurent - SP Speakers Series: Social EcologySustainable Prosperity
 
Resilient & Desirable Tomorrows
Resilient & Desirable TomorrowsResilient & Desirable Tomorrows
Resilient & Desirable TomorrowsSarah Cornell
 
Mobile utopias final nov 2017
Mobile utopias final nov 2017Mobile utopias final nov 2017
Mobile utopias final nov 2017Rodanthi Tzanelli
 
Cours public Michel Lussault 24.01.2019
Cours public Michel Lussault 24.01.2019Cours public Michel Lussault 24.01.2019
Cours public Michel Lussault 24.01.2019EcoleUrbaineLyon
 
An introduction to neo-nomadic urbanism as potentiality for the future, by Er...
An introduction to neo-nomadic urbanism as potentiality for the future, by Er...An introduction to neo-nomadic urbanism as potentiality for the future, by Er...
An introduction to neo-nomadic urbanism as potentiality for the future, by Er...International Society of Biourbanism
 
Naming the Epoch: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Ecocene
Naming the Epoch: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, EcoceneNaming the Epoch: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Ecocene
Naming the Epoch: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, EcoceneEcoLabs
 
Interconnections: SPICESS
Interconnections:  SPICESSInterconnections:  SPICESS
Interconnections: SPICESSYaryalitsa
 
Population, urbanization and environment
Population, urbanization and environmentPopulation, urbanization and environment
Population, urbanization and environmentDaniel Gabadón-Estevan
 
The collapse of illuminist idea of progress
The collapse of illuminist idea of progressThe collapse of illuminist idea of progress
The collapse of illuminist idea of progressFernando Alcoforado
 
Water philosophycityofflowsbookreport
Water philosophycityofflowsbookreportWater philosophycityofflowsbookreport
Water philosophycityofflowsbookreportHeather Williams
 
GEA S 2018 Steger chap 2 show.pptGlobalization in history i.docx
GEA S 2018 Steger chap 2 show.pptGlobalization in history i.docxGEA S 2018 Steger chap 2 show.pptGlobalization in history i.docx
GEA S 2018 Steger chap 2 show.pptGlobalization in history i.docxhanneloremccaffery
 
Bill Rees: The Vulnerability and Resilience of Cities
Bill Rees: The Vulnerability and Resilience of CitiesBill Rees: The Vulnerability and Resilience of Cities
Bill Rees: The Vulnerability and Resilience of CitiesJoss Winn
 
PRAJVAL GUPTA.pptx
PRAJVAL GUPTA.pptxPRAJVAL GUPTA.pptx
PRAJVAL GUPTA.pptxjsmcybercafe
 
Prof, Stephen graham Newcastle University disrupted cities: when infrastruct...
Prof, Stephen graham Newcastle University  disrupted cities: when infrastruct...Prof, Stephen graham Newcastle University  disrupted cities: when infrastruct...
Prof, Stephen graham Newcastle University disrupted cities: when infrastruct...Stephen Graham
 
Environmental Sociology An Introduction
Environmental Sociology An IntroductionEnvironmental Sociology An Introduction
Environmental Sociology An Introductionijtsrd
 

Ähnlich wie Stephen graham anthropocenic city: nature, security and cyborg urbanisation (20)

Eloi Laurent - SP Speakers Series: Social Ecology
Eloi Laurent - SP Speakers Series: Social EcologyEloi Laurent - SP Speakers Series: Social Ecology
Eloi Laurent - SP Speakers Series: Social Ecology
 
The Anthropocene
The AnthropoceneThe Anthropocene
The Anthropocene
 
ecological-urbanism
ecological-urbanismecological-urbanism
ecological-urbanism
 
Resilient & Desirable Tomorrows
Resilient & Desirable TomorrowsResilient & Desirable Tomorrows
Resilient & Desirable Tomorrows
 
course 30/6 Maria Kaika
course 30/6 Maria Kaika course 30/6 Maria Kaika
course 30/6 Maria Kaika
 
Mobile utopias final nov 2017
Mobile utopias final nov 2017Mobile utopias final nov 2017
Mobile utopias final nov 2017
 
Cours public Michel Lussault 24.01.2019
Cours public Michel Lussault 24.01.2019Cours public Michel Lussault 24.01.2019
Cours public Michel Lussault 24.01.2019
 
An introduction to neo-nomadic urbanism as potentiality for the future, by Er...
An introduction to neo-nomadic urbanism as potentiality for the future, by Er...An introduction to neo-nomadic urbanism as potentiality for the future, by Er...
An introduction to neo-nomadic urbanism as potentiality for the future, by Er...
 
Naming the Epoch: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Ecocene
Naming the Epoch: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, EcoceneNaming the Epoch: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Ecocene
Naming the Epoch: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Ecocene
 
Globalization and Glocalization
Globalization and GlocalizationGlobalization and Glocalization
Globalization and Glocalization
 
Interconnections: SPICESS
Interconnections:  SPICESSInterconnections:  SPICESS
Interconnections: SPICESS
 
Population, urbanization and environment
Population, urbanization and environmentPopulation, urbanization and environment
Population, urbanization and environment
 
The Anthropocene
The AnthropoceneThe Anthropocene
The Anthropocene
 
The collapse of illuminist idea of progress
The collapse of illuminist idea of progressThe collapse of illuminist idea of progress
The collapse of illuminist idea of progress
 
Water philosophycityofflowsbookreport
Water philosophycityofflowsbookreportWater philosophycityofflowsbookreport
Water philosophycityofflowsbookreport
 
GEA S 2018 Steger chap 2 show.pptGlobalization in history i.docx
GEA S 2018 Steger chap 2 show.pptGlobalization in history i.docxGEA S 2018 Steger chap 2 show.pptGlobalization in history i.docx
GEA S 2018 Steger chap 2 show.pptGlobalization in history i.docx
 
Bill Rees: The Vulnerability and Resilience of Cities
Bill Rees: The Vulnerability and Resilience of CitiesBill Rees: The Vulnerability and Resilience of Cities
Bill Rees: The Vulnerability and Resilience of Cities
 
PRAJVAL GUPTA.pptx
PRAJVAL GUPTA.pptxPRAJVAL GUPTA.pptx
PRAJVAL GUPTA.pptx
 
Prof, Stephen graham Newcastle University disrupted cities: when infrastruct...
Prof, Stephen graham Newcastle University  disrupted cities: when infrastruct...Prof, Stephen graham Newcastle University  disrupted cities: when infrastruct...
Prof, Stephen graham Newcastle University disrupted cities: when infrastruct...
 
Environmental Sociology An Introduction
Environmental Sociology An IntroductionEnvironmental Sociology An Introduction
Environmental Sociology An Introduction
 

Mehr von Stephen Graham

Elite Avenues: Flyovers, Freeways and the Politics of Urban Mobility
 Elite Avenues: Flyovers, Freeways and the Politics of Urban Mobility Elite Avenues: Flyovers, Freeways and the Politics of Urban Mobility
Elite Avenues: Flyovers, Freeways and the Politics of Urban MobilityStephen Graham
 
Bunkering down the geography of elite residential basement development in london
Bunkering down the geography of elite residential basement development in londonBunkering down the geography of elite residential basement development in london
Bunkering down the geography of elite residential basement development in londonStephen Graham
 
Vertical : The city from satellites to bunkers
Vertical : The city from satellites to bunkersVertical : The city from satellites to bunkers
Vertical : The city from satellites to bunkersStephen Graham
 
Upright: Verticality, Language and the Politics of Bodies and Cities
Upright: Verticality, Language and the Politics of Bodies and CitiesUpright: Verticality, Language and the Politics of Bodies and Cities
Upright: Verticality, Language and the Politics of Bodies and CitiesStephen Graham
 
Smart cities: A sceptic's view
Smart cities: A sceptic's viewSmart cities: A sceptic's view
Smart cities: A sceptic's viewStephen Graham
 
Transcending the surface graham: The New Techno-Utopian Dreams (and Realities...
Transcending the surface graham: The New Techno-Utopian Dreams (and Realities...Transcending the surface graham: The New Techno-Utopian Dreams (and Realities...
Transcending the surface graham: The New Techno-Utopian Dreams (and Realities...Stephen Graham
 
Subterranean urban politics: Insurgency, sanctuary, exploration and tourism
Subterranean urban politics: Insurgency, sanctuary, exploration and tourismSubterranean urban politics: Insurgency, sanctuary, exploration and tourism
Subterranean urban politics: Insurgency, sanctuary, exploration and tourismStephen Graham
 
Elite avenues: Flyovers, freeways and the politics of urban mobility
Elite avenues: Flyovers, freeways and the politics of urban mobilityElite avenues: Flyovers, freeways and the politics of urban mobility
Elite avenues: Flyovers, freeways and the politics of urban mobilityStephen Graham
 
luxified skies stephen graham
luxified skies stephen graham luxified skies stephen graham
luxified skies stephen graham Stephen Graham
 
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fictionVertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fictionStephen Graham
 
Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham
Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham
Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham Stephen Graham
 
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fictionVertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fictionStephen Graham
 
Super-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the Elevators
Super-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the ElevatorsSuper-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the Elevators
Super-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the ElevatorsStephen Graham
 
Vertical ground: making geology graham icus 2016
Vertical ground: making geology graham icus 2016Vertical ground: making geology graham icus 2016
Vertical ground: making geology graham icus 2016Stephen Graham
 
Life support: The political ecology of urban air
Life support: The political ecology of urban airLife support: The political ecology of urban air
Life support: The political ecology of urban airStephen Graham
 
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...Stephen Graham
 
Super-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the Elevator
Super-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the ElevatorSuper-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the Elevator
Super-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the ElevatorStephen Graham
 
'Smart cities’ : Seduction, simulation, scepticism
'Smart cities’ :  Seduction, simulation, scepticism'Smart cities’ :  Seduction, simulation, scepticism
'Smart cities’ : Seduction, simulation, scepticismStephen Graham
 

Mehr von Stephen Graham (20)

Elite Avenues: Flyovers, Freeways and the Politics of Urban Mobility
 Elite Avenues: Flyovers, Freeways and the Politics of Urban Mobility Elite Avenues: Flyovers, Freeways and the Politics of Urban Mobility
Elite Avenues: Flyovers, Freeways and the Politics of Urban Mobility
 
Bunkering down the geography of elite residential basement development in london
Bunkering down the geography of elite residential basement development in londonBunkering down the geography of elite residential basement development in london
Bunkering down the geography of elite residential basement development in london
 
Vertical : The city from satellites to bunkers
Vertical : The city from satellites to bunkersVertical : The city from satellites to bunkers
Vertical : The city from satellites to bunkers
 
Upright: Verticality, Language and the Politics of Bodies and Cities
Upright: Verticality, Language and the Politics of Bodies and CitiesUpright: Verticality, Language and the Politics of Bodies and Cities
Upright: Verticality, Language and the Politics of Bodies and Cities
 
Smart cities: A sceptic's view
Smart cities: A sceptic's viewSmart cities: A sceptic's view
Smart cities: A sceptic's view
 
Transcending the surface graham: The New Techno-Utopian Dreams (and Realities...
Transcending the surface graham: The New Techno-Utopian Dreams (and Realities...Transcending the surface graham: The New Techno-Utopian Dreams (and Realities...
Transcending the surface graham: The New Techno-Utopian Dreams (and Realities...
 
Subterranean urban politics: Insurgency, sanctuary, exploration and tourism
Subterranean urban politics: Insurgency, sanctuary, exploration and tourismSubterranean urban politics: Insurgency, sanctuary, exploration and tourism
Subterranean urban politics: Insurgency, sanctuary, exploration and tourism
 
Elite avenues: Flyovers, freeways and the politics of urban mobility
Elite avenues: Flyovers, freeways and the politics of urban mobilityElite avenues: Flyovers, freeways and the politics of urban mobility
Elite avenues: Flyovers, freeways and the politics of urban mobility
 
luxified skies stephen graham
luxified skies stephen graham luxified skies stephen graham
luxified skies stephen graham
 
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fictionVertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
 
Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham
Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham
Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham
 
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fictionVertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fiction
 
Megastructures Graham
Megastructures GrahamMegastructures Graham
Megastructures Graham
 
Super-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the Elevators
Super-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the ElevatorsSuper-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the Elevators
Super-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the Elevators
 
Vertical ground: making geology graham icus 2016
Vertical ground: making geology graham icus 2016Vertical ground: making geology graham icus 2016
Vertical ground: making geology graham icus 2016
 
Life support: The political ecology of urban air
Life support: The political ecology of urban airLife support: The political ecology of urban air
Life support: The political ecology of urban air
 
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...
 
Water Wars in Mumbai
Water Wars in MumbaiWater Wars in Mumbai
Water Wars in Mumbai
 
Super-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the Elevator
Super-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the ElevatorSuper-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the Elevator
Super-tall and Ultra-deep: The Cultural Politics of the Elevator
 
'Smart cities’ : Seduction, simulation, scepticism
'Smart cities’ :  Seduction, simulation, scepticism'Smart cities’ :  Seduction, simulation, scepticism
'Smart cities’ : Seduction, simulation, scepticism
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...narsireddynannuri1
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.pptsammehtumblr
 
AI as Research Assistant: Upscaling Content Analysis to Identify Patterns of ...
AI as Research Assistant: Upscaling Content Analysis to Identify Patterns of ...AI as Research Assistant: Upscaling Content Analysis to Identify Patterns of ...
AI as Research Assistant: Upscaling Content Analysis to Identify Patterns of ...Axel Bruns
 
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptxKAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptxjohnandrewcarlos
 
28042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
28042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf28042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
28042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Table
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the TableJulius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Table
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Tableget joys
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!Krish109503
 
TDP As the Party of Hope For AP Youth Under N Chandrababu Naidu’s Leadership
TDP As the Party of Hope For AP Youth Under N Chandrababu Naidu’s LeadershipTDP As the Party of Hope For AP Youth Under N Chandrababu Naidu’s Leadership
TDP As the Party of Hope For AP Youth Under N Chandrababu Naidu’s Leadershipanjanibaddipudi1
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
2024 04 03 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes FINAL.docx
2024 04 03 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes FINAL.docx2024 04 03 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes FINAL.docx
2024 04 03 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes FINAL.docxkfjstone13
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
2024 03 13 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL.docx
2024 03 13 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL.docx2024 03 13 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL.docx
2024 03 13 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL.docxkfjstone13
 
30042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
30042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf30042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
30042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
Call Girls in Mira Road Mumbai ( Neha 09892124323 ) College Escorts Service i...
Call Girls in Mira Road Mumbai ( Neha 09892124323 ) College Escorts Service i...Call Girls in Mira Road Mumbai ( Neha 09892124323 ) College Escorts Service i...
Call Girls in Mira Road Mumbai ( Neha 09892124323 ) College Escorts Service i...Pooja Nehwal
 
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptxLorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptxlorenzodemidio01
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)Delhi Call girls
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt
 
AI as Research Assistant: Upscaling Content Analysis to Identify Patterns of ...
AI as Research Assistant: Upscaling Content Analysis to Identify Patterns of ...AI as Research Assistant: Upscaling Content Analysis to Identify Patterns of ...
AI as Research Assistant: Upscaling Content Analysis to Identify Patterns of ...
 
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptxKAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
 
28042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
28042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf28042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
28042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Table
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the TableJulius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Table
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Table
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
 
TDP As the Party of Hope For AP Youth Under N Chandrababu Naidu’s Leadership
TDP As the Party of Hope For AP Youth Under N Chandrababu Naidu’s LeadershipTDP As the Party of Hope For AP Youth Under N Chandrababu Naidu’s Leadership
TDP As the Party of Hope For AP Youth Under N Chandrababu Naidu’s Leadership
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
2024 04 03 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes FINAL.docx
2024 04 03 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes FINAL.docx2024 04 03 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes FINAL.docx
2024 04 03 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes FINAL.docx
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
2024 03 13 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL.docx
2024 03 13 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL.docx2024 03 13 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL.docx
2024 03 13 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL.docx
 
30042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
30042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf30042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
30042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Call Girls in Mira Road Mumbai ( Neha 09892124323 ) College Escorts Service i...
Call Girls in Mira Road Mumbai ( Neha 09892124323 ) College Escorts Service i...Call Girls in Mira Road Mumbai ( Neha 09892124323 ) College Escorts Service i...
Call Girls in Mira Road Mumbai ( Neha 09892124323 ) College Escorts Service i...
 
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptxLorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)
 

Stephen graham anthropocenic city: nature, security and cyborg urbanisation

  • 1. The Anthropocenic CityNature, Security & Cyborg Urbanisation Stephen Graham Professor of Cities and Society Global Urban Research Unit School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape Newcastle University
  • 2.
  • 3. “Our world, our old world that we have inhabited for the last 12,000 years, has ended. This February […], the Stratigraphy Commission of the Geological Society of London was adding the newest and highest story to the geological story. To the question ‘Are we now living in the Anthropocene?’ the 21 members of the Commission unanimously answer ‘yes.’ They adduce robust evidence that the Holocene epoch -- the interglacial span of unusually stable climate that has allowed the rapid evolution of agriculture and urban civilization -- has ended and that the Earth has entered ‘a stratigraphic interval without close parallel in the last several million years.’ In addition to the buildup of greenhouse gases, the stratigraphers cite human landscape transformation which ‘now exceeds [annual] natural sediment production by an order of magnitude,’ the ominous acidification of the oceans, and the relentless destruction of biota. This new age, they explain, is defined both by the heating trend […] and by the radical instability expected of future environments. In somber prose, they warn that ‘the combination of extinctions, global species migrations and the widespread replacement of natural vegetation with agricultural monocultures is producing a distinctive contemporary biostratigraphic signal. These effects are permanent, as future evolution will take place from surviving (and frequently anthropogenically relocated) stocks.” […] Evolution itself, in other words, has been forced into a new trajectory.” Mike Davis (2008)
  • 4. Welcome to the ‘Anthropocene’: Capitalist urban-Industrialism as the Planet’s most important geophysical force Human and urban manufacture of ‘Nature’ – climates, biospheres, carbon cycles, hydrological and geomorphological systems, even organisms and ecosystems -- has reached such an extent since the Industrial revolution that we no longer inhabit the post-glacial Holocene Instead we live in the Anthropocene (term coined in 2000 by the Nobel Prize-winning geologist, Paul Crutzen)
  • 5. Paul J Crutzen Holocene-Anthropocenic boundaries can now be discerned in ocean sediments, ice sheet cores, pollen cores etc.
  • 6. The “Factory Planet” Nick Dyer-Witheford Incredibly rapid growth and extension of cities and capitalist urban-industrial systems absolutely central to thisshift 2.6 billion people, 0.75 land area Main hubs of global water, energy, food, waste, carbon flows and demands; generators of resource conflicts; foci of genetic, hydrological, climatic, nano-, chemical and geological engineering (intentional and unintentional) on earth-shaping scales Already, cities consume 75% of world energy and produce 80% greenhouse gas emissions More than 50% global soils farmed, grazed or logged; 1/3 of available water used for planting & grazing; 25% rivers run dry before reaching sea Cities hubs of huge, geographically-stretched systems of infrastructure to metabolise enormous flows of food, water, energy, wastes, commodities, raw materials & resources from distant sites through the city and the bodies of its human (and non-human) inhabitants within globalised and ‘neoliberal’ worlds of trade, flow and exchange
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10. Anthropocene Concept Resonates With Posthumanist Ontologies Put Forward by Actor-Network and Cyborg Urbanisation Theories Imagined fixed human/machine, human/animal, physical/non-physical, social/technological & social/natural binaries and boundaries blur away A subjectification of objects, and the objectification of subjects (Donna Haraway, Bruno Latour etc.) “The characteristic of the factory planet is the capitalist subsumption not just of production, not just of comsumption, not just of social reproduction (as in Fordism), but of life’s informational, genetic and ecological dimensions” Nick Dyer-Witheford Urban Technonaturein a world of ‘post-humans’: “Cyborgs are not creatures of pristine Nature; they are the planned and unplanned offspring of manufactured environments, fusing into new organic compounds of naturalized matter and artificialized anti-matter” Tim Luke (1997)
  • 11. “The entire planet now is increasingly a ‘built environment’ or ‘planned habitat’ as pollution modifies atmospheric chemistry, urbanization restructures weather events, biochemistry redesigns the genetics of existing biomass, and architecture accretes new biotic habitats inside of sprawling megacities.” (Luke T W, 1997, "At the end of Nature: cyborgs, 'humachines', and environments in postmodernity" Environment and Planning A 29(8) 1367 – 1380 )
  • 12. Matthew Gandy: Cyborg Urbanisation Cyborgian thinking suggests a way of thinking about cities as a whole Geographically and temporally-stretched hybrids of human, organic, technological, continually connecting urban sites and processes to ‘rural’ ones Helps create a new vocabulary for understanding what we mean by the ‘public realm’ against the vulnerability and inter-dependency of urban societies and the complex technological networks and organic and biospheric metabolisms, stretched across different geographical & temporal scales, that make them possible.
  • 13. Eric Swyngedouw and Maria Kaika: Metabolisation of water central to metabolism of cyborg cities ‘Socionatures’ based on distant sourcing, hydro-engineering of whole nations, and the circulation of water through the metabolic spaces of the body and the city
  • 14. Cyborg Urbanisation Revealed During Disruption of Infrastructures “Cyborgs, like us, are endlessly fascinated by machinic breakdowns, which would cause disruptions in, or denials of access to, their megatechnical sources of being.” (above NYC blackout, 2003) (Luke T W, 1997, "At the end of Nature: cyborgs, 'humachines', and environments in postmodernity" Environment and Planning A 29(8) 1367 – 1380 )
  • 15. Tim Luke: ‘Denature’ “After two centuries of industrial revolution and three decades of informational revolution, Nature no longer can be assumed to be God-created (theogenic) or self-creating (autogenic). What is taken to be "nature" now is largely human-created (anthropogenic), not only in theory but also in practice. One need not wait for the science fiction of advanced space travel technologies to contact other "extra-terrestrial life forms," the science facts of altered atmospheric chemistry, rampant genetic engineering, and unchecked species extinctions suggest that urban industrial humanity is a race extra-terrestrial intelligent beings already intent upon imperializing the Earth in cyborg colonies with humachinic technologies. ” (Luke T W, 1997, "At the end of Nature: cyborgs, 'humachines', and environments in postmodernity" Environment and Planning A 29(8) 1367 – 1380 )
  • 16. Infrastructure disruptions reveal often taken for granted and normalised ‘infrastructures’ and cyborg assemblies especially blackoutsIn cyborg cities, increasingly threaten life, not mere inconvenience
  • 17. Also unerringly reveal the often concealed politics of cyborganised cities e.g. Katrina in 2005 not a ‘natural disaster,’ ‘technical failure’ or ‘Act of God.’ Rather, the inevitable result of: Climate change accentuating hurricanes Hitting a city denuded of natural protection and Very poorly covered by a levee network that was systematically racially biased over centuries of constructed socio-nature in more recent context of A Neoconservative and racist Federal Government that had systematically skewed Emergency Planning towards terrorism for political ends
  • 18. Dominant Responses: Earth Systems Engineering,Geoengineering, Securitisation “The world as design space” ; “The human as design space” Brad Allenby “Earth Systems Engineering and Management is the capability to design, engineer, and manage, through dialog and continual feedback, integrated built/human/natural systems that achieve the multivariate and sometimes mutually exclusive goals and desires of humanity, including at the least personal, social, economic, technological, and environmental dimensions, within the constraints imposed by the states and dynamics of existing complex adaptive systems.” Brad Allenby
  • 19. We must be wary of ‘quick technical fix’ ideas of ‘Terraforming’, ‘Geoengineering’ and ‘Earth Systems Engineering’ in the Anthropocene. These tend to depoliticiseand commodifythe problems, legitimise an unchanged political economy, and would inevitably bring major unintended effects
  • 20. Securitisation and Weaponisation of the Anthropocene Ole Wæver's Copenhagen School Securitization Theory (1995) Security as a “speech act” where a securitizing actor designates a threat to a specified reference object and declares an existential threat implying a right to use extraordinary means to fend it off. Such a process of “securitization” is successful when the construction of an “existential threat” by a policy maker is socially accepted and where “survival” against existential threats is crucial. Strong Anthropocenic turn in securitisation discourse
  • 21.
  • 22. The AnthropocenicGlobal City System: A New Imperialism? Neoliberalised ‘global’ cities often have a parasitic relationship with near and distant hinterlands “Bio-rifts of neoliberalism” Dyer-Witheford Resource (food, water, energy) grabs organised and finance through the financial centres and technopoles of the North’s global finance capitals New highly regressive paradigms of ‘urban ecological security’ (Simon Marvin and Mike Hodgson) E.g. Daewoo (South Korean corporation) has just leased half of all the arable land in Madagascar to feed South Korean cities in the future
  • 23. Biopiracy and biofuels push (indigenous groups in Indonesia, protesting, above) Global South ‘land grab’ by global North agribusiness
  • 24. Conclusions (i) : The Anthropocenic City? Throws “us onto a meta-historical playing field without a clue as to how to play the game” Gibson-Graham and Roelvink (2010) Drastically destablise concepts of ‘city’, ‘technology’, ‘nature’ and ‘scale’, along with ‘urban-rural’, ‘natural-social’, ‘natural-technological’ and ‘global-local’ binaries that persist in orthodox and policy discourses Particularly profound implications for conceptualisations of the ‘urban’. Is the entire Anthropocenic biosphere, in effect, ‘urban’? Tim Luke (2009) talks of the multiple interconnections and new spatial practices of “urbanatura” (Tim Luke, 2009); “The accidental normaliity of greenhouse-gassing global capitalism envelops humans, non-humans, and hybrids in technonaturalized systems and structures” (Tim Luke, 2009) Crucially, these processes map continuously onto, and through, more usual policy paradigms and discourses: “whether they examine technoscience operations, natural disasters, or socio-spatial collapses”, new research must “scan the property boundaries of urban space as they are stabilized in ordinary policy terms such as urbanization, land use, environment, river basins, industrialization, economic growth, sprawl, or natural resources. Once scrutinized more closely, the unstable, unconventional, and undetected properties of multiple industrial hybridities do emerge out of foggy phenomena, including the ’greenhouse effect’” (Tim Luke, 2009)
  • 25. (ii) Limits of ‘sustainability’ and ‘environmentalist’ discourses Reveals limits of both ‘sustainability’ and environmentalist debates: Sustainability discourses often involve elements of ‘greenwash’, over-aesthetic conceptions, or outright bourgeois environmentalism. “Sustainability is too often a self-absorbed mechanism for avoiding the complexity of the Anthropogenic world” Brad Allenby Environmentalist tropes of pristine nature, meanwhile, “suggest the importance of minimizing alterations of many habitats; but so many habitats are now obviously "artificial" that the invocation of a preservationist ethos is frequently inappropriate if ecology, rather than aesthetics, is considered as the basis for policy prescription” Simon Dalby Nevertheless, “the single most important cause of global warming – the urbanization of humanity – is also potentially the principal solution to the problem of human survival in the 21st century~ Mike Davis
  • 26. (iii) Anthropocenic Ethics New “technonatural formations” required based on a “foundational reimagination of the innovations unfolding in many intersecting terms in what are called “Nature” and “society”’ (Tim Luke) Need a new ethics of research and action for the Anthropocene to politicise the Anthropocenic city: Must blur debates about global neoliberalised political economy, global urbanisation, global environmental change and environmetal justice “About human beings being transformed by the world in which we find ourselves” Gibson-Graham and Roelvink (2010); Davis’ “insurgent communities, pirate technologies, bootlegged media, rebel science, and forgotten utopias” Planetary, anthropocenic, urban and human concepts of ‘security’ required rather than national-militaristic ones: Dangers that dominant responses -- earth systems and geoengineering and securitisation -- offer myths of technological panaceas based on further securitisation, commodification, colonisation centred on global north corporate capital and ‘global’ metropolitan regions (Hogson and Marvin) Emerging militarisation of Anthropocene? Oil, biofuels, biopiracy, water, land-grabs and food security
  • 27. Thus, in the Anthropocene we will be confronted with a form of world political economy in which global warming and other totalizing commodifications are risked in the pursuit of progress. Whereas the initial stages of commodification tested the statics of nature (namely the absorption capacities of land, water, and air), the Anthropocene challenges the dynamics of nature, in particular, the seasons, the tides, the breathing of the planet, and the reproductive cycles of living things. While the emblems of advancing industrialism remain waste, pollution, and risk, there has been a fundamental breach of the nature-society relation in the Anthropocene. Modern life transpires not simply outside the constraints of nature, but relegates nature to commodity status, to be purchased and sold in the world along with other products and services. John Byrne, Leigh Glover and Cecilia Martinez 2002
  • 29. 1. Cities, Nature, Technology : Traditional Concepts Modernist ideas based on imagining city as being separate, and opposed to an externalised Nature, to be ‘conquired’ through technoscientific modernity Nature separated from the social, urban, human world Technological ‘progress’ a means to heroically master nature, geography and time: e.g. US “Manifest destiny” ‘Built’ environments threaten to overcome and pollute ‘natural’ ones Deny social production of nature and reliance of urbanisation on ecological transformations Humans ands cities not external to ecosystems
  • 30. But post-mortems for such events become messy! “A distributive notion of agency does interfere with the project of blaming. But it does not thereby abandon the project of identifying [ ] the sources of harmful effects. To the contrary, such a notion broadens the range of places to look for sources. ” Must look at the “selfish intentions and energy policy that provides lucrative opportunities for energy trading while generating a tragedy of the commons”; at “the stubborn directionality of a high-consumption social infrastructure”; and at “the unstable power of electron flows, wildfires, ex-urban housing pressures, and the assemblages they form” Jane Bennett Jane Bennett, (2005) “The Agency of Assemblages and the North American Blackout,” Public Culture 17(3): 445–65. Pp. 463.
  • 32. During the past three centuries, the human population has increased tenfold to more than 6 billion and is expected to reach 10 billion in this century. The methane-produc- ing cattle population has risen to 1.4 billion. About 30–50% of the planet’s land surface is exploited by humans. Tropical rainforests disappear at a fast pace, releasing carbon dioxide and strongly increasing species extinction. Dam building and river diver- sion have become commonplace. More than half of all accessible fresh water is used by mankind. Fisheries remove more than 25% of the primary production in upwelling ocean regions and 35% in the temperate continental shelf. Energy use has grown 16-fold during the twentieth century, causing 160 million tonnes of atmospheric sulphur dioxide emissions per year, more than twice the sum of its natural emissions. More nitrogen fertilizer is applied in agriculture than is fixed naturally in all terrestrial ecosystems; nitric oxide prod- uction by the burning of fossil fuel and biomass also overrides natural emissions. Fossil-fuel burning and agriculture have caused substantial increases in the concen- trations of ‘greenhouse’ gases — carbon dioxide by 30% and methane by more than 100% — reaching their highest levels over the past 400 millennia, with more to follow.So far, these effects have largely been caused by only 25% of the world popula- tion. The consequences are, among others, acid precipitation, photochemical ‘smog’ and climate warming. Hence, according to the latest estimates by the Intergovernmen- tal Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Earth will warm by 1.4–5.8 °C during this century. Paul J. Crutzen 2002