All Is Well

Author:

Bandopadhyay Saptarishi1

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Professor, Osgoode Hall Law School, York University

Abstract

Abstract All Is Well attempts to answer one of the most urgent questions of our time: What is the relationship between modern states and the disasters they claim to manage? Disasters are commonly understood as exceptional occurrences that ruin societies and inspire ad hoc rituals of legal, administrative, and scientific control called “disaster management.” States and the international institutions perform disaster management to protect society. The book challenges this traditional narrative. It interprets “disaster management” as a historical struggle to conservate the existence and experience of catastrophes and produce idealized authorities capable of protecting society from uncertainty. It examines the emergence of this struggle in the eighteenth century and reveals how rulers and experts struggling to master God, nature, and each other inaugurated modern meanings of risk, normalcy, power, and responsibility. By recovering this history of disaster management, the book reveals underlying knowledge structures and political economies that smuggle the unspoken costs of modernity inside the rationalized representation of past catastrophes and future risks. Catastrophes, put bluntly, are not occurrences. They are inventions. Even in their most destructive forms, catastrophes are the stigmata through which the modern state renews itself. The book develops this argument by examining the Marseille plague (1720), the Lisbon earthquake (1755), and the Bengal famine (1770) and showing how eighteenth-century beliefs reverberate in structure and policies of “global” disaster management today. It concludes that climate change and the national and international authorities designed to fight it are products of three centuries of disaster management, and civilizational survival depends on reckoning with this past.

Publisher

Oxford University PressNew York

Cited by 8 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Introduction;Sustainable Development, International Law, and a Turn to African Legal Cosmologies;2024-05-23

2. International humanitarian narratives of disasters, crises, and Indigeneity;Disasters;2023-04-26

3. Crisis, Colonialism and Constitutional Habits: Indigenous jurisdiction in times of emergency;Canadian Journal of Law and Society / Revue Canadienne Droit et Société;2023-03-27

4. Reforming the State: The Institutionalisation of Disaster Management;The Government of Disasters;2023

5. Disaster Connections: Knowledge, Democracy, and Policy Change;The Government of Disasters;2023

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