Authors
Bronislaw Szerszynski, Matthew Kearnes, Phil Macnaghten, Richard Owen, Jack Stilgoe
Publication date
2013/12
Journal
Environment and Planning A
Volume
45
Issue
12
Pages
2809-2816
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
In this paper we argue that recent policy treatments of solar radiation management (SRM) have insufficiently addressed its potential implications for contemporary political systems. Exploring the emerging ‘social constitution’ of SRM, we outline four reasons why this is likely to pose immense challenges to liberal democratic politics: That the unequal distribution of and uncertainties about SRM impacts will cause conflicts within existing institutions; that SRM will act at the planetary level and necessitate autocratic governance; that the motivations for SRM will always be plural and unstable; and that SRM will become conditioned by economic forces.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
B Szerszynski, M Kearnes, P Macnaghten, R Owen… - Environment and Planning A, 2013