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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Universiteit Leiden |
| Country | Netherlands |
| Start Date | Jan 01, 2025 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2029 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101164330 |
This project investigates how altering environments to adapt to or mitigate climate change depends on and stimulates changes in social contracts.
Comparatively and ethnographically, it investigates when and how material transformations implied by adaptation gather new publics and produce new forms of climate citizenship.
By climate citizenship, I refer to a form of situated globalism emerging from the articulation of existing, local social contracts (with their varying distributions of rights and responsibilities) and climate change as a global phenomenon.The project focuses on green infrastructure projects where material changes in environmental management depend on and create new political communities (or publics), citizenship agendas, and subjects.
It hypothesizes such sites as experiments where not only new ecological and material conditions but also forms of citizenship are being prototyped and sometimes resisted.
By examining this, the project will show how addressing climate changes goes hand in hand with reshaping citizenry, political coalitions, and more, and how this is being negotiated.This leads to the projects breakthrough question:how do green climate infrastructures depend on and stimulate transformations in the social contracts that are locally embedded in environments?To answer this, the project will develop a collaborative ecographic approach that combines data garnered through ethnographic methods and the ecological and other sciences.
By deploying this method in dialogue and collaboration with officials, scientists, and citizens in Japan, the Netherlands, and the United States, the project will develop an analytical framework and vocabulary characterizing emerging international trends whose contours are neither sufficiently conceptualized nor empirically researched.
Universiteit Leiden
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