Hope Against Hope. Out of the Woods

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of waterfront properties and the exploding costs of living in evermore floodprone areas. Red Hook, a neighborhood built on a peninsula in the floodplains of Brooklyn, has seen accelerating gentrification in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, despite reports that normal high tides will be flooding its streets by 2080. [See Anna-Sofia Berner, “Red Hook: The Hip New York Enclave Caught Between Gentrification and Climate Change,” The Guardian, September 25, 2018, sec. Environment, https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/sep/25/red-hook-climate-change-floodplain-hurricane-sandy-gentrification.]

      16. Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth, trans. Richard Philcox (New York: Grove Press, 2004), 2.

      17. Automnia, “Ecstasy & Warmth,” The Occupied Times (blog), August 20, 2015, https://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=14010.

      18. Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning & Black Study (Wivenhoe, New York, Port Watson: Minor Compositions, 2013).

      19. See “The Dangers of Reactionary Ecology” in Section II of this book.

      20. See Section II (NATURES) in this book.

      21. Green and Black Cross are a mutual-aid organization providing legal support for environmental and social protest in the UK.

      22. Aldon D. Morris, The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement: Black Communities Organizing for Change (New York: Free Press, 1986).

      23. This is a slight misremembering of the article, which can be found at libcom.org/library/m11-anti-road-aufheben.

      BORDERS

       REFUGES AND DEATH-WORLDS

      First published November 2016

      When we first began writing as a collective, we made almost no mention of migration or borders. Such an omission is an indictment, both of our own thinking and practice as a collective, and of the thought and politics we were engaging with. Orthodox and radical environmentalism alike frequently neglect those amongst the most affected by the ecological crisis—the people who are displaced by it. It is clear that our early work reproduced this omission. “Refuges and Death-Worlds” marks our first real attempt to engage with migration and the politics of the border. There are some important points here, most notably a critique of the category of the “environmental refugee,” and an insistence on seeing the border as a relation. However, on rereading this piece after the BASE Magazine interview (originally published the following year), there is a striking inattentiveness to race. While it critiqued a politics in which, as Primo Levi posits, “every stranger is an enemy” we failed to attend to the fact that not ‘every stranger’ is the same. This is particularly notable in the section on the Mediterranean, which makes no mention of the antiblackness that drives the war on migrants. In reading this today, it is important to keep this omission in mind.

      In If This is a Man, a memoir describing his imprisonment in Auschwitz, Primo Levi writes that:

      Many people—many nations—can find themselves holding, more or less wittingly, that ‘every stranger is an enemy.’ For the most part this conviction lies deep down like some infection; it betrays itself only in random, disconnected acts, and does not lie at the base of a system of reason. But when this does come about, when the unspoken dogma becomes the major premise in a syllogism, then, at the end of the chain, there is the Lager [camp]. Here is the product of a conception of the world carried rigorously to its logical conclusion; so long as the conception subsists, the conclusion remains to threaten us. The story of the death camps should be understood by everyone as a sinister alarm-signal.1

      As we write, this alarm signal grows increasingly shrill. White supremacist and antimigrant populisms across the world are drawing sustenance from that “latent infection,” constructing a system of reason premised on the hatred of “strangers” within and beyond the nation. Movements and organizing principles such as Black Lives Matter, No Borders, and #AmINext—at the same time—draw attention to and resist the structural connections between acts of violence otherwise dismissed as random and disconnected.

      As scholars of populism have argued at length, “the people” to whom populists appeal, and in whose name they speak, do not preexist such appeals and such speech. Populists construct their own people, and from them, draw their supposed legitimacy and popularity. Terrifyingly, we can easily see how successful reactionary populists have been in this regard. The infection Levi speaks of is spreading and proving fertile for fashioning a xenocidal people.2 Meanwhile, “the people” who might enact a counterpopulism remain only a latency. We can imagine, but not fully point to, a constituent power formed from the ensemble of those active in migrants’ struggles—including migrants themselves.3 Such a counterforce, George Ciccariello-Maher argues, could “subject institutions permanently and ruthlessly to popular pressure from below, to the demands of this tenuous, variegated multiplicity that is the people.”4

      In 2017 there were a record 68.5 million forcibly displaced people in the world.5 That was roughly one in every 105 people, and this figure only includes refugees and those displaced internally by armed conflicts. This figure would rise if those moving due to poverty, economic exploitation, or “natural” disasters such as droughts, storms, and desertification were included. Displacement is usually multicausal and attributing any given movement of people to climate change is difficult. Although the UN finds climate is already a factor in eighty-seven percent of disasters, such delineations are impossible to untangle from their social, economic, and historical conditions.6

      The US government recently allocated its first funds for internally environmentally displaced people after a decade of relentless community and activist pressure, providing $48 million to relocate the Indigenous Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw community of Isle de Jean Charles in southeastern Louisiana. This money was ultimately rejected by the community, who saw it as a ploy to erode their sovereignty and hijack a plan they had developed for years.7

      In 2016, researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry and the Cyprus Institute in Nicosia argued that by the end of the century, “the Middle East and North Africa could become so hot that human habitability is compromised. The goal of limiting global warming to less than two degrees Celsius, agreed at the recent UN climate summit in Paris, will not be sufficient to prevent this scenario.”8 The Middle East and North Africa are currently home to around 400 million people. Another study found that with the same two degrees of warming, desertification is likely to push north through Morocco and into southern Spain. While some cities could adapt to increasingly hostile desert conditions given sufficient resources, such displacements in other low-latitude regions could mean one in twenty-five people becoming environmentally displaced by the twenty-second century. Without significant political change, “sufficient resources” will simply not be available in these regions for any but the richest inhabitants. The Adaptation Fund established under the Kyoto Protocol to facilitate projects in the Global South funded by the “Annex I” countries of the Global North has allocated only US $358 million to adaptation projects in 68 countries since 2010. Existing finance mechanisms have also been critiqued for simply extending the hegemony of the Global North.9 For comparison, in 2014 the UK announced a £2.3 billion (US $2.9 billion) spend on flood defenses alone, also over six years. The Adaptation Fund is not the only source of funding for such projects in North Africa and the Middle East, of course, but it contributes a significant portion of spending on climate change adaptation.

      If temperatures increase beyond 2°C warming the Sahara Desert effectively jumps the Mediterranean.10 At higher temperatures still, beyond the 4°C forecast for 2100, the world will be confronted with what Mark Lynas calls “zones of uninhabitability”: areas in which “large-scale, developed human society would no longer be sustainable.” Accordingly, he states, “we perhaps need to start talking


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