L’ecologia política urbana. Grans promeses, aturades... i nous inicis?
Resum
L’article parteix de la premissa que és de vital importància reconèixer que el principal impulsor dels canvis ambientals ha estat el galopant procés d’urbanització mundial. De fet, la «sostenibilitat» de la vida urbana contemporània —entesa com la reproducció ampliada de la seva forma social i natural i del seu funcionament— és la responsable de l’ús del 80% dels recursos i de la generació de la major part dels residus mundials. Aquest article vol fer palès com aquestes arrels urbanes són habitualment ignorades per gran part de la teoria i la pràctica urbanes, i com els febles intents tecnocràtics per adoptar formes més «sostenibles» de vida urbana en realitat segueixen afavorint l’apocalipsi socioecològica combinada i desigual que marca les dinàmiques contemporànies de la urbanització mundial. Així, no es tracta tant d’analitzar la qüestió de la natura a la ciutat, sinó més aviat d’analitzar la urbanització de la natura (entesa com el procés a través del qual tot tipus de natures són socialment mobilitzades, econòmicament incorporades i físicament metabolitzades/transformades per tal de donar suport al procés d’urbanització). En primer lloc, explicarem com les relacions entre les ciutats i el medi ambient han estat descrites i imaginades al llarg de l’últim segle. En segon lloc, indagarem com la qüestió ambiental va entrar en la teoria i en la pràctica urbana durant el segle XX. Per acabar, esbrinarem com i per què, malgrat l’avenç del nostre coneixement sobre la relació entre el canvi ambiental i la urbanització i un consens focalitzat en la necessitat d’un desenvolupament urbà «sostenible», la incògnita del medi ambient i els problemes generalitzats que ocasiona no mostren cap senyal de disminuir. L’article conclou amb un breu esbós d’alguns dels reptes intel·lectuals i pràctics que ens esperen.Paraules clau
ecologia política urbana, polítiques ambientals, teoria urbana, conflicte socioecològicReferències
AGYEMAN, J. and EVANS, B. (2004). “‘Just Sustainability’: the Emerging Discourse of Environmental Justice in Britain?”. Geographical Journal, 170, 155-164.
ALI, S. H. and KEIL, R. (2011). Networked Disease: Emerging Infections in the Global City. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
BAKKER, K. (2003). An Uncooperative Commodity - Privatizing Water in England and Wales. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
BÉAL, V. (2008). “Social Justice and the Sustainable City. Ce que le développement urbain durable nous dit de la production urbain”. In Le Développement Urbain Durable Saisi par les Sciences Sociales. TemiS -- University of Saint-Etienne.
BOOKCHIN, M. (1992). Urbanization without Cities: the Rise and Decline of Citizenship. Montreal: Black Rose Books.
BRECHIN, G. (2001). Imperial San Francisco: Urban Power, Earthly Ruin. Berkeley: University of California Press.
BUERK, R. (2006). Breaking Ships: How Supertankers and Cargo Ships are Dismantled on the Beaches of Bangladesh. New York: Chamberlain Books.
BULKELEY, H. and BETSILL, M. (2005). Cities and Climate Change: Urban Sustainability and Global Environmental Governance. London: Routledge.
CAPROTTI, F. (2014). Eco-urbanism and the Eco-City, or Denying the Right to the City? Antipode, (forthcoming).
CARRUTHERS, D. V. (2008). “The Globalization of Environmental Justice: Lessons from the U.S.-Mexico Border”. Society and Natural Resources, 21, 556-568.
CASTELLS, M. (1972). La Question Urbaine. Paris: F. Maspero.
CASTREE, N. (2008). Neoliberalising Nature: the Logics of Deregulation and Reregulation. Environment and Planning A, 40, 131-152.
COE, N.; KELLY, P.F. and YEUNG, H. (2007). Economic Geography: A Contemporary Introduction. Oxford: Blackwell.
CRONON, W. (1991). Nature’s Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. New York: Norton.
CRUTZEN, P. J. and STOERMER, E. F. (2000). The ‘Anthropocene’. Global Change Newsletter, 17-18.
DAVIS, M. (2002). Dead Cities, and other Tales. New York: New Press / London: I. B. Tauris.
DESFOR, G. and KEIL, R. (2004). Nature and the City: Making Environmental Policy in Toronto and Los Angeles. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press.
ENGELS, F. (1971). The Condition of the Working Class in England. Oxford: Blackwell.
FOSTER, J. B. (1999). “Marx’s Theory of Metabolic Rift: Classical Foundations for Environmental Sociology”. The American Journal of Sociology, 105 (2), 346–405.
FREIDBERG, S. (2004). French Beans and Food Scares: Culture and Commerce in an Anxious Age. New York: Oxford University Press.
GANDY, M. (2003). Concrete and Clay: Reworking Nature in New York City. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
GANDY, M. (2005). “Cyborg Urbanization: Complexity and Monstrosity in the Contemporary City”. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 29, 26-49.
GRAHAM, S. and MARVIN, S. (2001). Splintering Urbanism: Networked Infrastructures, Technological Mobilities and the Urban Condition. London: Routledge.
GUTHMAN, J. (2007). The Polanyan Way: Voluntary Food Labels as Neoliberal Governance. Antipode, 39, 456-478.
HARVEY, D. (1973). Social Justice and the City. London: E. Arnold.
HARVEY, D. (1996). Justice, Nature, and the Geography of Difference. Oxford Blackwell.
HARVEY, D. (2003). The New Imperialism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
HEYNEN, N.; KAIKA, M. and SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2005). In the Nature of Cities - The Politics of Urban Metabolism. London: Routledge.
HEYNEN, N.; MCCARTHY, J.; PRUDHAM, S. and ROBBINS, P. (2007). Neoliberal Environments: False Promises and Unnatural Consequences. New York: Routledge.
HILLIER, J. (2009). “Assemblages of justice: The ‘Ghost Ships’ of Graythorp”. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33, 640-661.
HIMLEY, M. (2008). “Geographies of Environmental Governance: The Nexus of Nature and Neoliberalism”. Geography Compass, 2, 433-451.
HINCHCLIFFE, S. (1999). “Cities and Nature: Intimate Strangers”. In: J. Allen and M. Pryke (eds.). Unsettling Cities. London: Routledge, 137-180.
I.E.A. (2012). World Energy Outlook 2012. Paris: International Energy Agency.
JAMESON, F. (2003). “Future City”. New Left Review, 65-79.
KAIKA, M. (2004). “Interrogating the geographies of the familiar: domesticating nature and constructing the autonomy of the modern home”. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 28, 265-286.
KAIKA, M. (2005). City of Flows. London: Routledge.
KAIKA, M. and SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2010). “The Urbanization of Nature: Great Promises, Impasse, and New Beginnings”. In: G. Bridge and S. Watson (eds.). The New Blackwell Companion to the City. Oxford: Wiley/Blackwell.
KEIL, R. (2003). “Urban political ecology”. Urban Geography, 24, 723-738.
KEIL, R. (2005). “Progress report - Urban political ecology”. Urban Geography, 26, 640-651.
KLINENBERG, E. (2002). Heat Wave: A Social Autopsy of Disaster in Chicago (Illinois). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
KRUEGER, R. and GIBBS, D. (2007). The Sustainable Development Paradox. New York: Guilford.
LEFEBVRE, H. (1974). La Production de l’Espace. Paris: Anthropos.
LEWONTIN, R. and LEVINS, R. (2007). Biology under the Influence - Dialectical Essays on Ecology, Agriculture, and Health. New York, NY: Monthly Review Press.
LOFTUS, A. (2012). Everyday Environmentalism: Creating an Urban Political Ecology. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
MARCH, H. and Sauri, D. (2013). “The Unintended Consequences of Ecological Modernization: Debt-induced Reconfiguration of the Water Cycle in Barcelona”. Environment and Planning A, 45, 2064-2083.
MASJUAN, E.; MARCH, H.; DOMENE, E. and SAURI, D. (2008). “Conflicts and Struggles over Urban Water Cycles: The case of Barcelona 1880-2004”. Tijdschrift Voor Economische En Sociale Geografie, 99, 426-439.
MCHARG, I. L. (1969). Design with Nature. Garden City. New York: Natural History Press.
MEADOWS, D. H.; MEADOWS, G.; RANDERS, J. and BEHRENS, W. W. I. (1972). The Limits to Growth. New York: Universe Books.
NJERU, J. (2006). “The urban political ecology of plastic bag waste problem in Nairobi, Kenya”. Geoforum, 37, 1046-1058.
PECK, J. (2010). Constructions of Neoliberal Reason. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
PELLOW, D. (2007). Resisting Global Toxics: Transnational Movements for Environmental Justice. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
ROBBIN, P. (2007). Lawn People: How Grasses, Weeds, and Chemicals Make Us Who We Are. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
SCHLOSBERG, D. (2007). Defining Environmental Justice - Theories, Movements and Nature. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
STAVRAKAKIS, Y. (1997). “Green Fantasy and the Real of Nature: Elements of a Lacanian Critique of Green Ideological Discourse”. Journal for the Psychoanalysis of Culture & Society, 2, 123-132.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (1996). “The City as a Hybrid -- On Nature, Society and Cyborg Urbanisation”. Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, 7 (1), 65-80.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2004). Social Power and the Urbanization of Water: Flows of Power. Oxford: University Press.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2005). “Governance Innovation and the Citizen: The Janus Face of Governance-beyond-the-state”. Urban Studies, 42, 1-16.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2006). “Circulations and Metabolisms: (Hybrid) Natures and (Cyborg) Cities”. Science as Culture, 15, 105-121.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2007). “Impossible/Undesirable Sustainability and the Post-Political Condition”. In: J. R. Krueger and D. Gibbs (eds.). The Sustainable Development Paradox. New York: Guilford, 13-40.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2009a). “The Antinomies of the Post-Political City. In Search of a Democratic Politics of Environmental Production”. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33, 601-620.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2009b). “Civil Society, Governmentality and the Contradictions of Governance-Beyond-the-State”. In: J. Hillier; F. Moulaert and S. Vicari (eds.). Social Innovation and Territorial Development. Aldershot: Ashgate, 63-78.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2010). “Trouble with Nature – Ecology as the New Opium for the People”. In J. Hillier and P. Healey (eds.). Conceptual Challenges for Planning Theory. Farnham: Aldershot, 299-320.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2013a). “Apocalypse Now! Fear and Doomsday Pleasures”. Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, 24, 9-18.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2013b). “The Non-Political Politics of Climate Change”. ACME – An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 12, 1-8.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. (2014). “Anthropocenic Politicization: From the Politics of the Environment to Politicizing Environments”. In: J. Hedrén and K. Bradley (eds.). Green Utopianism: Politics, Practices and Perspectives (forthcoming). London: Routledge.
SWYNGEDOUW, E. and HEYNEN, N. (2003). “Urban Political Ecology, Justice and the Politics of Scale”. Antipode, 34 (4), 898-918.
WALKER, G. (2009a). “Beyond Distribution and Proximity: Exploring the Multiple Spatialities of Environmental Justice”. Antipode, 41, 614-636.
WALKER, G. (2009b). “Globalizing Environmental Justice: The Geography and Politics of Frame Contextualization and Evolution”. Global Social Policy, 9.
WALKER, G. (2012). Environmental Justice: Concepts, Evidence and Politics. New York: Routledge.
WHITEHEAD, M. (2003). “‘In the Shadow of Hierarchy’: Meta-Governance, Policy Reform and Urban Regeneration in the West Midlands”. Area, 35, 6-14.
WILLIAMS, C. E. (2011). Combined and Uneven Apocalypse. Washington, D.C.: Zero Books.
WOLCH, J.; PINCETL, S. and PULIDO, L. (2002). “Urban Nature and the Nature of Urbanism”. In: M. Dear (ed.). From Chicago to L.A. - Making Sense of Urban Theory. London: Sage, 367-402.
ŽIŽEK, S. (2008a). In Defense of Lost Causes. London: Verso.
ŽIŽEK, S. (2008b). “Nature and its Discontents”. SubStance, 37, 37-72.
Publicades
Com citar
Descàrregues
Drets d'autor (c) 2014 Erik Swyngedouw, Maria Kaika
Aquesta obra està sota una llicència internacional Creative Commons Reconeixement-NoComercial 4.0.