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Environmental subjectivities and experiences of climate extreme-driven loss and damage in northern Australia

Jackson, Guy LU orcid (2023) In Climatic Change 176(7).
Abstract
Australia has objectively suffered climate extreme-driven loss and damage—climate change impacts that cannot or will not be avoided. Recent national surveys demonstrate a growing awareness of the link between climate change and climate extremes. However, climate extremes interact with existing environmental subjectivities (i.e., how people perceive, understand, and relate to the environment), which leads to different social, cultural, and political responses. For example, people in northern Australia are familiar with climate extremes, with the heat, humidity, fires, floods, storms, and droughts intimately connected to identities and sense of place. In this climate ethnography, I demonstrate the value of undertaking environmental... (More)
Australia has objectively suffered climate extreme-driven loss and damage—climate change impacts that cannot or will not be avoided. Recent national surveys demonstrate a growing awareness of the link between climate change and climate extremes. However, climate extremes interact with existing environmental subjectivities (i.e., how people perceive, understand, and relate to the environment), which leads to different social, cultural, and political responses. For example, people in northern Australia are familiar with climate extremes, with the heat, humidity, fires, floods, storms, and droughts intimately connected to identities and sense of place. In this climate ethnography, I demonstrate the value of undertaking environmental subjectivities analyses for research on climate-society relations. I detail how environmental subjectivities influence people’s experiences, or non-experiences, of climate extreme-driven loss and damage in northern Australia. I identify a growing concern for climate change and climate extremes are influencing environmental subjectivities. Yet, many northern Australians—even people concerned about climate change—are not, for now, connecting extreme events to climate change. A widespread subjectivity of anticipatory loss supplied people with an imagined temporal buffer, which contributes to non-urgency in political responses. Together with more structural political-economic barriers and a sense of helplessness to affect progressive change, limited action beyond individual consumer decisions and small-scale advocacy are occurring. These, amongst other, findings extend research on the role of climate extremes in climate opinion, lived experiences of loss and damage in affluent contexts, and the environmental value-action gap. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Climate change, climate extremes, loss and damage, environmental subjectivities, Australia
in
Climatic Change
volume
176
issue
7
article number
93
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • scopus:85163775818
ISSN
1573-1480
DOI
10.1007/s10584-023-03567-4
project
Recasting the disproportionate impacts of climate change extremes
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d5edc5b3-e4c7-486b-8091-243080393698
date added to LUP
2023-07-01 06:30:31
date last changed
2023-12-07 07:39:08
@article{d5edc5b3-e4c7-486b-8091-243080393698,
  abstract     = {{Australia has objectively suffered climate extreme-driven loss and damage—climate change impacts that cannot or will not be avoided. Recent national surveys demonstrate a growing awareness of the link between climate change and climate extremes. However, climate extremes interact with existing environmental subjectivities (i.e., how people perceive, understand, and relate to the environment), which leads to different social, cultural, and political responses. For example, people in northern Australia are familiar with climate extremes, with the heat, humidity, fires, floods, storms, and droughts intimately connected to identities and sense of place. In this climate ethnography, I demonstrate the value of undertaking environmental subjectivities analyses for research on climate-society relations. I detail how environmental subjectivities influence people’s experiences, or non-experiences, of climate extreme-driven loss and damage in northern Australia. I identify a growing concern for climate change and climate extremes are influencing environmental subjectivities. Yet, many northern Australians—even people concerned about climate change—are not, for now, connecting extreme events to climate change. A widespread subjectivity of anticipatory loss supplied people with an imagined temporal buffer, which contributes to non-urgency in political responses. Together with more structural political-economic barriers and a sense of helplessness to affect progressive change, limited action beyond individual consumer decisions and small-scale advocacy are occurring. These, amongst other, findings extend research on the role of climate extremes in climate opinion, lived experiences of loss and damage in affluent contexts, and the environmental value-action gap.}},
  author       = {{Jackson, Guy}},
  issn         = {{1573-1480}},
  keywords     = {{Climate change; climate extremes; loss and damage; environmental subjectivities; Australia}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{7}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Climatic Change}},
  title        = {{Environmental subjectivities and experiences of climate extreme-driven loss and damage in northern Australia}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10584-023-03567-4}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s10584-023-03567-4}},
  volume       = {{176}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}