Title: PR 1450 Introduction to Globalization
1PR 1450Introduction to Globalization
- Lecture 12
- Environment and
- world risk society
- Chris Rumford
2Everyday risks
- Candles may pose a risk to childrens health
because they contain lead - Mobile phone use may increase the risk of cancer
- Watching your team lose at football can increase
the risk of a heart attack - 350 farms in Wales are still affected by
radiation more than 20 years after the Chernobyl
nuclear accident
3-
- The risk society thesis is associated most
closely with the work of Ulrich Beck
4Introducing Becks work
-
- There exist hazards that are on the one hand
created by society itself, but on the other are
neither attributable nor accountable nor even
manageable within society (Strydom, 2002 59) -
- Paradigmatic risks are nuclear, chemical,
genetic, ecological
5- From terrorism to environmental hazards and the
risks inherent in everyday lifestyle choices
(food, relationships, mobile phone usage) we seem
to be bombarded with risk, and information about
risk - Contemporary society seems to be characterised
by risk and debates on how it should be managed
at both the institutional and personal levels - However, we need to ask what it means to
characterise western societies as risk
societies and investigate further the changes
that this designation supposes.
6Risk society natural or man-made?
- Havent societies always been risk societies?
-
- Beck says that in pre-modern times risks were
associated with nature plague, famine,
earthquakes (or taken as evidence of supernatural
forces) -
- A world of uncertainty, rather than risk
-
- Nowadays, risk emerges as consequence of human
activity (e.g. over-production) -
- For Beck, risk has replaced uncertainty
7- We have moved from a world of where uncertainty
was the result natural hazards -
- to a world where risks are manufactured or the
product of human attempts to dominate nature - Read the newspaper article Unnatural disasters
by Andrew Simms www.guardian.co.uk/analysis/story/
0,3604,1063081,00.html - What does this tell us about the nature of
manufactured risks?
8Risk Society Towards a New Modernity (1992)
- In his book Beck argues that we have witnessed a
shift from the production and distribution of
goods - to a concern with the prevention and
minimization of bads (i.e. risk)
9The nature of risk
- Since mid-C20th industrial society has been
confronted with threats to human life on an
unprecedented scale - environmental catastrophe
- nuclear power
- biological weapons
10- Beck argues that whereas natural risks
(uncertainties) were calculable and manageable - In risk society calculation, management, and
insurance all fail. Risks are no longer
localized, visible, and easily containable -
- Contemporary risks have the following key
qualities - they are not limited in time and space
- they can be catastrophic
- mechanisms of social insurance are inadequate
(welfare provision)
11The Chernobyl disaster
- The Chernobyl nuclear disaster in the Ukraine in
1986 is a case in point - the risks were not localized
- no one country could manage them
- the risks posed are to future generations
12For background on this story look at the
excellent BBC achieve on the Chernobyl disaster
http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/guides/45690
0/456957/html/nn1page1.stm
13The extent of Chernobyl fallout
14- Chernobyl was a catastrophic event, the effects
of which were not limited in time and space, and
against which mechanisms of protection and
compensation were totally inadequate - Read the article Chernobyl still haunts hill
farms which can be found at http//news.bbc.co.uk
/1/hi/wales/3049759.stm - Why do you think 180,000 sheep in Wales remained
affected by radioactive fall-out 17 years after
the disaster? - What does this tell us about the nature of risk?
15Now read the more recent article, No plans to
end radiation testing by Nia Thomashttp//news.b
bc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/north_west/4946352.stm
- One farmer says that in 1986 they were told
- 'This thing will be with you for three weeks -
three months at the most.'
16- In industrial society risks were evident to the
senses. - Today, many risks escape immediate perception
- radiation
- toxic chemicals
- pollution
- GM food
17- In addition, risks are increasingly contested.
GM food is a good example -
- industry, governments and farmers argued that
no risk attaches to genetically modified foods,
while the banking sector withdrew from investing
in biotechnology and supermarkets banned GM food
from their shelves in view of the European
publics perception of genetic engineering as a
high risk technology (Strydom, 2002 60)
18-
- Scientists have lost authority over risk
assessment and risk calculations can be
challenged by pressure groups and activists - Read the article, Worried consumers 'shun GM
foods'http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3618386.stm - Beck says that there is a struggle over the
meaning of risk between those who produce them
(experts) and those who consume them (public) -
19- Risk associated with mobile phone use is also
contested -
- Pollution fears over sperm count
http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/3378315.stm - Rural mobile phone use riskier
http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4552645.stm - Mobile phones tumour risk to young children,
http//www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8122-14365
43,00.html -
- What do these articles tell us about the
contested nature of risk assessment? Who can we
trust when looking for guidance?
20Concluding section
-
- Poverty is hierarchical, smog is democratic
(Beck) - In industrial society the impact of poverty was
experienced differentially - Risk cannot be mapped onto class
- Even the rich and powerful are not safe from risk
21- For Beck, risk society is closely related to
globalization -
- Many risks have an obvious global dimension
- pollution
- global warming
- nuclear power
- New communities of risk can be created across
national borders communities of danger -
- Global problems demand global solutions
-
- Risk society is also world risk society
22-
- One (potentially positive) outcome of this is
that we need to recognise the necessity of
cooperative international institutions (e.g. the
UNs Kyoto Protocol) http//unfccc.int/essential_b
ackground/kyoto_protocol/items/2830.php - Industrial society, through reflecting on its
own behaviour and mistakes, may come to see
itself as risk society
23Finally
- Whereas class society was dominated by idea of
(in)equality and welfare, risk society is
dominated by the idea of safety - Beck says, The dream of class society is that
everyone wants and ought to have a share of the
pie. The utopia of the risk society is that
everyone should be spared from poisoning (Beck,
1992 49)
24- The driving force in the class society can be
summarized in the phrase I am hungry! The
movement set in motion by the risk society, on
the other hand, is expressed by the statement I
am afraid! (Beck, 1992 49) - Communities of need have given way to
communities of anxiety - Insecurity has replaced scarcity
25Read an article by Ulrich Beck The politics of
risk society at www.envsci.nau.edu/sisk/courses/e
nv555/Readings/Beck.PDF
26References
- Beck, U. 1992 Risk Society towards a new
modernity. London Sage. - Beck, U. 1999 World Risk Society. Cambridge
Polity Press. - Dean, M. 1999 Governmentality power and rule in
modern society. London Sage. - Denney, D. 2005 Risk and Society. London Sage.
- Lupton, D. 1999 Risk. London Routledge
- Mythen, G. 2004 Ulrich Beck a Critical
Introduction to the Risk Society. London Pluto
Press. - Strydom, P. 2002 Risk, environment and society.
Buckingham Open University Press.