https://www.matteringpress.org/books/engineering-the-climate

Engineering the ClimateScience, Politics, and Visions of ControlJulia
Schubert

Overview

Notions of the impending climate crisis have pushed a set of highly
contested techno-scientific measures onto policy agendas around the world.
Suggestions to deliberately alter, to engineer, the Earth’s climate have
gained political currency in recent years not as a positive vision of
techno-scientific innovation, but as a daunting measure of last resort. The
controversial status of various so-called climate engineering proposals
raises a simple, yet pressing question: How has it has come to this? And,
more specifically, how did such contested measures earn their place on
policy agendas, despite enormous scientific complexities and fierce
political contestation?

This book approaches these questions by re-contextualizing the history of
climate engineering within the larger history of political efforts to
cultivate climate science for the state. It tells the story of climate
engineering as a story of historically shifting alliances between climate
science and politics. Drawing on policy records, archival material, and
expert interviews, the text follows the turbulent trajectory of what we now
refer to as climate engineering through U.S. policy. Instead of
essentialising climate engineering, the text demonstrates how historically
specific versions of climate engineering have linked scientific to
political agendas from the turn of the twentieth century to the teens of
the new millennium. This perspective reveals how efforts to deliberately
modify and control the climate have always been couched in the political
struggles of their time.

Global societal problems, such as climate change, financial crises, or
pandemics have brought the political relevance of scientific expertise to
the foreground. This book speaks to scholarship in sociology and science
studies, seeking to illuminate the essential entanglements between efforts
to understand and efforts to govern such problems. By giving climate
engineering a life of its own and following its dynamic trajectory as a
contested object of expert work, this book sheds light on the reflexive and
historically contingent interplay of science and politics as two distinct,
yet increasingly interdependent, realms of society. The text disentangles
the complex web of scientific inquiry and policy making — of experts and
politicians, observational devices and expert infrastructures — that have
given climate engineering its particular shape over the years, challenging
us to fundamentally rethink our understanding of the relationship between
science and politics.
About the author

Julia Schubert <https://www.uni-speyer.de/personen/js> is a sociologist,
exploring interrelations between science and politics. She examines how
scientific expertise shapes political realities and how political
realities, in turn, determine scientific research topics, cultures, and
methods. Julia holds a PhD from the University of Bonn. She is currently a
postdoctoral researcher at Speyer University, as well as a junior fellow at
Bielefeld University’s Institute for Advanced Study (ZiF) and a member of
Brown University’s Climate Social Science Network (CSSN).

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