18
International Conservation and Development ENV 298.58 Feb. 17 – Discourses and Narratives

International Conservation and Development

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

International Conservation and Development. ENV 298.58 Feb. 17 – Discourses and Narratives. Environmental Discourses. What is discourse? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: International Conservation and Development

International Conservation and

Development

ENV 298.58

Feb. 17 – Discourses and Narratives

Page 2: International Conservation and Development

Environmental Discourses

• What is discourse?

“A discourse is a shared way of apprehending the world. Embedded in language, it enables those who subscribe to it to interpret bits of information and put them into coherent stories or accounts” (Dryzek, p.8).

Page 3: International Conservation and Development

Environmental Discourses• Why is it useful to think about

discourse?– Frames problems and solutions, identifies

actors and their roles, informs policy

• Where do we see evidence of environmental discourses?– Governments– Industry– NGOs– Media– Academia

Page 4: International Conservation and Development

Dryzek’s “Checklist of Elements for the Analysis of Discourse”

1. Basic entities recognized or constructed

2. Assumptions about natural relationships

3. Agents and their motives

4. Key metaphors and other rhetorical devices

Page 5: International Conservation and Development

Dryzek’s “Checklist of Items for Assessing the Effects of Discourses”

• Politics associated with the discourse

• Effect on policies of governments

• Effect on institutions

• Arguments of critics

• Flaws revealed by evidence and argument

Page 6: International Conservation and Development

Discourse I: Survivalism

• Problem – “freedom in the commons brings ruin to all” (Hardin 1968)

• Solutions:– Central authority (strong state) to protect private

property, enforce population controls

• ‘Original Sources’– Thomas Malthus (1766-1834)– Garret Hardin and the “Tragedy of the Commons”

(1968)

• Famous Example: “The Limits to Growth” (1972)

Page 7: International Conservation and Development

Discourse Checklist: Survivalism1) Basic entities recognized or

constructed► Finite natural resources ► “Population” in the aggregate

(a number, not individual people)► Elites – in government; experts

Page 8: International Conservation and Development

Discourse Checklist: Survivalism2) Assumptions about natural

relationships► Hierarchy – elites manage and control

the masses (population)

3) Agents and their motives► Elites have agency – they choose how

to manage► Populations do not have agency – they

are acted upon

Page 10: International Conservation and Development

Effects of Survivalism

• Politics associated with the discourse– Pressure groups – ZPG; Worldwatch Institute

• Effect on policies of governments– China’s one child policy– India – forced sterilization

• Effect on institutions– Indirect - need for coordinated global action,

e.g. multi-lateral environmental agreements

Page 11: International Conservation and Development

Effects of Survivalism

• Arguments of critics– Religious (e.g. Catholics) – Racist (e.g. Sierra Club scandal)– Feminist– Injust– ‘the Promethean response’

• Flaws revealed by evidence and argument– World has not yet exploded– Consumption vs. population

Page 12: International Conservation and Development

Recap: Doing Discourse Analysis1) Identify Elements of Analysis:

Basic entities recognized or constructed

Assumptions about natural relationships

Agents and their motives Key metaphors and other rhetorical

devices

Page 13: International Conservation and Development

Recap: Doing Discourse Analysis2) Identify Effects:

Politics associated with the discourse Effect on policies of governments Effect on institutions Arguments of critics Flaws revealed by evidence and

argument

Page 14: International Conservation and Development

Discourses – Take Home Message• The ‘culprit(s)’ and solutions vary

according to how we define problems

• Discourse Practice(people don’t always do what they say)

Page 15: International Conservation and Development

Discourse or Narrative?

• Some use them interchangeably• Different philosophical positions• Narratives more specific stories,

instead of broader set of ideas

Page 16: International Conservation and Development

The ‘gist’ of Roe: what is a narrative?

• Story with beginning, middle, and end

• Defines the problem and its source, required action, and outcome

• Allows for decision making in the face of uncertainty

Page 17: International Conservation and Development

The ‘gist’ of Roe: problems with narratives

• Sometimes they are wrong

• Become institutionalized

• Resilient in the face of challenge, even evidence of fault

• Requires a compelling counter-narrative to dislodge a narrative

Page 18: International Conservation and Development

“Second Nature” (film)

• What is the dominant narrative analyzed in the film? Make note of:– Problem/solution – Actors (agents) and their motives– Assumptions about relationships– Metaphors – Links to policy/practice– Arguments of critics– Flaws revealed by evidence and

argument