Authors
Jessica O'Reilly, Cindy Isenhour, Pamela McElwee, Ben Orlove
Publication date
2020/10/21
Source
Annual Review of Anthropology
Volume
49
Issue
1
Pages
13-29
Publisher
Annual Reviews
Description
Climate anthropology has broadened over the past decade from predominately locally focused studies on climate impacts to encompass new approaches to climate science, mitigation, sustainability transformations, risks, and resilience. We examine how theoretical positionings, including from actor–network theory, new materialisms, ontologies, and cosmopolitics, have helped expand anthropological climate research, particularly in three key interrelated areas. First, we investigate ethnographic approaches to climate science knowledge production, particularly around epistemic authority, visioning of futures, and engagements with the material world. Second, we consider climate adaptation studies that critically examine discourses and activities surrounding concepts of vulnerability, subjectivities, and resilience. Third, we analyze climate mitigation, including energy transitions, technological optimism, market-based …
Total citations
2020202120222023202431021268
Scholar articles
J O'Reilly, C Isenhour, P McElwee, B Orlove - Annual Review of Anthropology, 2020