Abstract
Abstract. Emotions affect how humans relate to others and define their place in the
world. They thus shape responses to socio-ecological problems like climate
change. In spite of the overwhelming knowledge and concern about climate
change, a lack of appropriate moral and political consequences prevails in
most contemporary societies. Instead of trying to explain climate inaction
as a result of (un)awareness, this paper introduces a new perspective by
conceptualising climate inaction as an active social process animated by
emotions. Drawing on an interdisciplinary and radically relational perspective, I grasp climate inaction as a product of more-than-human
intra-action and explore the affective role of emotions within this production. To illustrate how emotions energise climate inaction, I sketch
how fear, grief, and hope animate current climate responses.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Anthropology,Geography, Planning and Development,Global and Planetary Change
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