My Space: Governing Individuals' Carbon Emissions

This paper examines the recent growth in projects designed to enable individuals to ‘do their bit’ in the struggle to limit climate change. It discusses them in relation to a long-standing critique of trends towards individualisation amongst environmentalists. It suggests that this critique misses the complex way that subjects are produced by these practices and proposes to analyse subjectification in relation to climate change through the lens of governmentality. The paper then proceeds to examine five specific sorts of practice: carbon footprinting; carbon offsetting; carbon dieting; Carbon Reduction Action Groups; and Personal Carbon Allowances. By drawing on the concept of governmentality we show how contemporary forms of carbon government work through calculative practices that simultaneously totalise (aggregating social practices, overall greenhouse gas emissions) and individualise (producing reflexive subjects actively managing their greenhouse gas practices).

[1]  F. Yamin Climate Change and Carbon Markets: A Handbook of Emissions Reduction Mechanisms , 2012 .

[2]  Eva Lövbrand,et al.  Carbon Market Governance beyond the Public-Private Divide , 2010 .

[3]  N. Rose Powers of Freedom: Reframing Political Thought , 1999 .

[4]  Christine Soares The Low-Carbon Diet , 2009 .

[5]  T. Smith The Myth of Green Marketing: Tending Our Goats at the Edge of Apocalypse , 1998 .

[6]  Harriet Bulkeley,et al.  Modes of Governing Municipal Waste , 2007 .

[7]  Christopher Goodall,et al.  How to Live a Low-Carbon Life: The Individual's Guide to Stopping Climate Change , 2012 .

[8]  Mitchell Dean,et al.  Putting the technological into government , 1996 .

[9]  M. Foucault The Subject and Power , 1982, Critical Inquiry.

[10]  Mayer Hillman,et al.  How We Can Save the Planet , 2004 .

[11]  M. Dean,et al.  Governmentality: Power and Rule in Modern Society , 1999 .

[12]  Roger Smith,et al.  The Norton history of the human sciences , 1997 .

[13]  A. Lake,et al.  Obesogenic environments: exploring the built and food environments , 2006, The journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health.

[14]  M. Foucault Technologies of the Self , 1988 .

[15]  N. Rose,et al.  Political power beyond the State: problematics of government. 1992. , 1992, The British journal of sociology.

[16]  B. Cruikshank,et al.  The Will to Empower: Democratic Citizens and Other Subjects , 1999 .

[17]  T. Lemke 'The birth of bio-politics': Michel Foucault's lecture at the Collège de France on neo-liberal governmentality , 2001 .

[18]  Simon Dresner and Paul Ekins The Distributional Impacts of Economic Instruments to Limit Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Transport , 2004 .

[19]  H. Pollitt,et al.  A Study in Personal Carbon Allocation: Cap and Share , 2008 .

[20]  L. Lohmann,et al.  Marketing and making carbon dumps: Commodification, calculation and counterfactuals in climate change mitigation , 2005 .

[21]  M. Maniates,et al.  Individualization: Plant a Tree, Buy a Bike, Save the World? , 2001, Global Environmental Politics.

[22]  Heidi Bachram Climate fraud and carbon colonialism: the new trade in greenhouse gases , 2004 .

[23]  Peter Brand Green Subjection: The Politics of Neoliberal Urban Environmental Management , 2007 .

[24]  P. Merriman Materiality, Subjectification, and Government: The Geographies of Britain's Motorway Code , 2005 .

[25]  G. Seyfang Personal carbon trading: Lessons from complementary currencies , 2007 .

[26]  Angela Oels,et al.  Rendering climate change governable: From biopower to advanced liberal government? , 2005 .

[27]  D. MacKenzie Making things the same: Gases, emission rights and the politics of carbon markets , 2009 .

[28]  D. Liverman,et al.  Accumulation by Decarbonization and the Governance of Carbon Offsets , 2008 .

[29]  D. Mackinnon Managerialism, governmentality and the state: a neo-Foucauldian approach to local economic governance , 2000 .

[30]  Michael Merlingen Foucault and World Politics: Promises and Challenges of Extending Governmentality Theory to the European and Beyond , 2006 .

[31]  I. Bailey,et al.  Turning Down the Heat: The Politics of Climate Policy in Affluent Democracies , 2008 .

[32]  M. Foucault,et al.  Technologies of the Self: A Seminar with Michel Foucault , 1988 .

[33]  Robert N. Stavins,et al.  For workshop on Architectures for Agreement: Addressing Global Climate Change in the Post Kyoto World , 2006 .

[34]  A. Michaelowa,et al.  Greenhouse gas benefits of fighting obesity , 2008 .

[35]  Graham Burchell,et al.  The Foucault effect : studies in governmentality : with two lectures by and an interview with Michel Foucault , 1993 .

[36]  M. Paterson Legitimation and Accumulation in Climate Change Governance , 2010 .

[37]  S. Rutherford Green governmentality: insights and opportunities in the study of nature's rule , 2007 .

[38]  D. Liverman,et al.  Carbon Offsetting: Sustaining Consumption? , 2009 .

[39]  R. Rose-Redwood,et al.  Governmentality, Geography, and the Geo-Coded World , 2006 .

[40]  Tina Fawcett Investigating carbon rationing as a policy for reducing carbon emissions from UK household energy use , 2005 .

[41]  H. Dreyfus,et al.  Michel Foucault: Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics. , 1985 .

[42]  A. Fontana,et al.  Security, Territory, Population , 2009 .

[43]  J. Harrington The Climate Diet: How You Can Cut Carbon, Cut Costs, and Save the Planet , 2008 .

[44]  P. Miller Governing the present , 2008 .