Please distribute widely. Apologies for cross-posting.
Best,
Hannah

Hannah Teicher, M.Arch.
PhD Student
City Design + Development Group
Department of Urban Studies + Planning
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
617.852.1466



Conscripting Climate: Environmental Risk and Defensive Urbanism
 
Projections Volume 13
Editors: Aria Finkelstein and Hannah Teicher
Paper submission deadline: January 16, 2017
 

As adaptation to climate change has become a concern for municipalities, 
resilience has largely replaced sustainability as the dominant environmental 
framing in planning discourse (Fainstein 2015, Vale 2014). This shift towards 
the “securitization of nature” (Davoudi 2014) coincides with the elevation of 
climate change on military agendas. In the military’s conception, climate 
change will not only contribute to security issues from resource wars to 
refugee crises, but will act as a “threat multiplier,” magnifying all existing 
forms of risk (Vergano 2015). In the U.S., for instance, the military has been 
assertive in planning for climate change long before the federal government 
made it a policy priority. This potential alliance between planners and the 
military seems an unlikely one, but in fact there is a long history of planners 
both shaping urban form to meet security needs and appropriating military 
technologies and systems. Still, given the current iteration of urban risk, 
planners must consider the relationships between security, urban form, and 
ecological risk anew.

 

This new resilience agenda has also prompted an important shift in the role of 
“nature” within urban planning; nature has once again become a threat rather 
than the beneficent asset imagined in sustainability discourse (Davoudi 2014, 
Nash 2014). While resilience has been touted as offering a more constructive 
conception of human-environment relations, it has been criticized for 
obfuscating power dynamics. Some urban scholars argue that planning and policy 
moves harness this idea of ecological risk to foster a “dual city” (Castells 
1984, Graham and Marvin 2001, Davis 2006), exacerbating uneven development and 
“fortress” urbanism. Defensive ecological infrastructure creates “premium 
ecological enclaves” for those with the means to insulate themselves from the 
worst effects of climate change (Hodson and Marvin 2010), while it renders 
everyday urban space increasingly less habitable for the rest (Castells 1984; 
Simon and Marvin 2001).

 

We invite papers that look at this intersection of security—especially as 
conceived of by the military and police—and ecological risk in the built 
environment, including, but not limited to, the following:

 

·       How security organizations are using language and/or tools similar to 
those of urban planning organizations, comparing the impact on framing and 
implementation
·       Whether and how forms of defensive urbanism are changing in response to 
particular conceptions of climate risk
·       How security discourse interacts with climate justice agendas at 
multiple scales
·       The relative impact of a military climate agenda in the political 
context of a rightward, anti-globalization turn in U.S. and European politics
·       Security framings in relation to other contemporary climate discourses, 
and its relative strength and effects
·       How urban plans or urban landscapes are being shaped to address the 
intertwined challenges of security and climate change
·       The role of security in prioritizing mitigation versus adaptation in 
the built environment
·       The translation of design practices from direct security applications 
to other types of urban climate adaptation
·       The production of urban space in response to climate security risks, 
through design proposals or interventions
 
Papers will be juried through a blind, peer-review process by an editorial 
board. Authors will be invited to present projects at a symposium to be hosted 
at MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning April 4, 2017. This volume of 
Projections <http://dusp.mit.edu/department/projections> will be published in 
the fall of 2017.
 
Please send papers of between 5,000-7,000 words (excluding references) to Aria 
Finkelstein ([email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>) and Hannah Teicher 
([email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>) by January 16, 2017.
 
 
 
References
·       Castells, M. (1984). The Informational City: information technology, 
economic restructuring, and the urban regional process. Oxford, UK; Cambridge, 
MA: Blackwell.
·       Davis, M. (2006). City of Quartz. New York, NY: Verso Books.
·       Davoudi, S. (2014). Climate change, securitisation of nature, and 
resilient urbanism. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 32(2), 
360–375.
·       Fainstein, S. (2015). Resilience and Justice. International Journal of 
Urban and Regional Research, 39(1), 157-167.
·       Graham, S. (2011). Cities under siege: The new military urbanism. New 
York, NY: Verso Books.
·       Graham, S., & Marvin, S. (2001). Splintering urbanism: networked 
infrastructures, technological mobilities and the urban condition. London; New 
York: Routledge.
·       Hodson, M., & Marvin, S. (2010). World Cities And Climate Change: 
Producing Urban Ecological Security. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill International.
·       Nash, R. (2014). Wilderness and the American mind. New Haven, CT: Yale 
University Press.
·       Vale, L. (2014). The politics of resilient cities: whose resilience and 
whose city? Building Research & Information, 42(2), 191-201.
·       Vergano, D. (2015). Meet the woman whose two-word catchphrase made the 
military care about climate. Buzzfeed News. < 
https://www.buzzfeed.com/danvergano/the-threat-multiplier?utm_term=.upmY... 
<https://www.buzzfeed.com/danvergano/the-threat-multiplier?utm_term=.upmY7DdQr#.acXjP1a8x>>(accessed
 on November 11, 2016).
 


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