Translating Climate Change: Adaptation, Resilience, and Climate Politics in Nunavut, Canada

被引:28
作者
Cameron, Emilie [1 ]
Mearns, Rebecca [2 ]
McGrath, Janet Tamalik
机构
[1] Carleton Univ, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada
[2] Nunavut Sivuniksavut, Ottawa, ON K1N 5Z4, Canada
关键词
adaptation; translation; Inuit; resilience; climate change; SEA-ICE; INUIT; VULNERABILITY; KNOWLEDGE; POWER;
D O I
10.1080/00045608.2014.973006
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
This article examines the translation of key terms about climate change from English into Inuktitut, considering not only their literal translation but also the broader context within which words make sense. We argue that notions of resilience, adaptation, and climate change itself mean something fundamentally different in Inuktitut than English and that this has implications for climate policy and politics. To the extent that climate change is translated into Inuktitut as a wholly environmental phenomenon over which humans have no control, both adaptation and resilience come to be seen as appropriate and distinctly Inuit modes of relating to shifting climatic conditions, calling on practices of patience, observation, creativity, forbearance, and discretion. If translated as a matter of unethical harm of sila, however, Inuit frameworks of justice, relationality, and healing would be activated. In the context of a broader global shift away from mitigation and toward enhancing the adaptive capacities and resilience of particular populations, current modes of translating climate change, we argue, are deeply political.
引用
收藏
页码:274 / 283
页数:10
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]  
Amagoalik J., 2007, CHANGING THE FACE OF
[2]  
Amagoalik J., 2008, TRUTH RECONCILIATION, P93
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2005, THESIS
[4]  
[Anonymous], HUMAN RIGHTS DIALOGU
[5]  
[Anonymous], 2013, Climate change: the basics
[6]  
[Anonymous], RESEARCH IS CEREMONY
[7]   Introduction to politics of climate change: discourses of policy and practice in developing countries [J].
Arnall, Alex ;
Kothari, Uma ;
Kelman, Ilan .
GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL, 2014, 180 (02) :98-101
[8]  
Aupilaarjuk M., 1999, PERSPECTIVES ON TRAD, V2
[9]   Carbon Nullius and Racial Rule: Race, Nature and the Cultural Politics of Forest Carbon in Canada [J].
Baldwin, Andrew .
ANTIPODE, 2009, 41 (02) :231-255
[10]   Deja vu or something new? The adaptation concept in the climate change literature [J].
Bassett, Thomas J. ;
Fogelman, Charles .
GEOFORUM, 2013, 48 :42-53