Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5074965 Geoforum 2008 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this article I make use of a combination of actor-network-theory, governmentality studies and feminist studies of science to show how nature is done or enacted within politics and administration. In particular I show how it relates to the theories and practices of economics and accounting. I explore the process by which the 'critical limits' of nature under the impact of acidification was created as a part of the politics and negotiations about acid rain. I demonstrate that even though the outcome was not 'Nature' as such, understood as a form of moral high-ground, the effect of this process was to produce 'a nature as a whole', in a process of unification. This I argue can only be understood relationally: 'Nature' is taken into account by way of accounting. In doing this I engage with Latour's work on the politics of Nature and argue that nature is not necessarily such a deadly tool to politics as is sometimes taken for granted. Before we throw Nature out with our empirical studies of sciences, natures and politics, in the plural, we need to look first at how Nature-wholes emerge, are enacted, and take part in politics.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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