Threatening Dystopias: The Global Politics of Climate Change Adaptation in Bangladesh

Threatening Dystopias: The Global Politics of Climate Change Adaptation in Bangladesh

by Kasia Paprocki
Threatening Dystopias: The Global Politics of Climate Change Adaptation in Bangladesh

Threatening Dystopias: The Global Politics of Climate Change Adaptation in Bangladesh

by Kasia Paprocki

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Overview

Bangladesh is currently ranked as one of the most climate vulnerable countries in the world. In Threatening Dystopias, Kasia Paprocki investigates the politics of climate change adaptation throughout the South Asian nation. Drawing on ethnographic and archival fieldwork, she engages with developers, policy makers, scientists, farmers, and rural migrants to show how Bangladeshi and global elites ignore the history of landscape transformation and its attendant political conflicts.

Paprocki looks at how groups craft economic narratives and strategies that redistribute power and resources away from peasant communities. Although these groups claim that increased production of export commodities will reframe the threat of climate change into an opportunity for economic development and growth, the reality is not so simple. For the country's rural poor, these promises ring hollow.

As development dispossesses the poor from agrarian livelihoods, outmigration from peasant communities leads to precarious existences in urban centers. And a vision of development in which urbanization and export-led growth are both desirable and inevitable is not one the land and its people can sustain. Threatening Dystopias shows how a powerful rural movement, although hampered by an all-consuming climate emergency, is seeking climate justice in Bangladesh.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501759154
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2021
Series: Cornell Series on Land: New Perspectives on Territory, Development, and Environment
Pages: 270
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Kasia Paprocki is Associate Professor in Environment at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Follow her on X @KasiaPaprocki.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. "Sluttish, Careless, Rotting Abundance": Prehistories of a Climate Dystopia
2. Threatening Dystopias: Development and Adaptation Regimes
3. Opportunity/Crisis: Knowledge Production and the Politics of Uncertainty
4. The Social Life of Climate Science: Circulations of Knowledge and Uncertainty in Development Practice
5. Autopsy of a Village: Agrarian Change after the Shrimp Boom
6. We Have Come This Far—We Cannot Retreat": Adaptation, Resistance, and Competing Visions of Transformed Futures
Conclusion: Climate Justice and the Politics of Possibility

What People are Saying About This

Naila Kabeer

Based on rich ethnographic research in the coastal region of Bangladesh that is most threatened by climate change, Kasia Paprocki's book describes two alternative adaptation responses that are playing out there: one that is further entrenching agrarian inequality and one that is fighting for climate justice. There are lessons here for the wider climate change community.

Betsy Hartmann

Threatening Dystopias advances policy and political discussions around development, dispossession, migration, and climate change. This book shakes the foundations of conventional wisdom around climate change, sea-level rise, and migration.

Saturnino M. Borras Jr.

Threatening Dystopias is timely, compelling and brilliant. It speaks to and brings down divides between political ecology and agrarian political economy, urban and rural, agro-food and industrial spheres. Academics, policy experts, and social movement activists will find it indispensable

David Ludden

Urgent and important, this book is a break-through in social science. Kasia Paprocki not only deepens the critical evaluation of climate crisis discourse, but also provides a new model for collaboration between humane politics and social activism.

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