My Space: governing individuals' carbon emissions
Author
Summary, in English
This paper examines the recent growth in projects designed to enable individuals to 'do their bit' in the struggle to limit climate change. It discusses them in relation to a long-standing critique of trends towards individualisation amongst environmentalists. It suggests that this critique misses the complex way that subjects are produced by these practices and proposes to analyse subjectification in relation to climate change through the lens of governmentality. The paper then proceeds to examine five specific sorts of practice: carbon footprinting; carbon offsetting; carbon dieting; Carbon Reduction Action Groups; and Personal Carbon Allowances. By drawing on the concept of governmentality we show how contemporary forms of carbon government work through calculative practices that simultaneously totalise (aggregating social practices, overall greenhouse gas emissions) and individualise (producing reflexive subjects actively managing their greenhouse gas practices).
Department/s
Publishing year
2010
Language
English
Pages
341-362
Publication/Series
Environment & Planning. D, Society and Space
Volume
28
Issue
2
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Pion Ltd
Topic
- Political Science
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1472-3433