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            "title": "Rendering climate change governable: From biopower to advanced liberal government?",
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            "abstractNote": "This article generates a theoretical framework for analysing the politics of climate change on the basis of Michel Foucault's concept of governmentality. Foucault does not limit the exercise of power to sovereignty, but introduces discipline, biopower, liberal and advanced liberal government as alternative configurations of state and power. The article argues that the ways in which climate change is rendered a governable entity are best understood before the background of a shift from biopower to advanced liberal government. It will be argued that climate change was first rendered governable by biopower, which justified global management of spaceship Earth in the name of the survival of life on Earth. Since the mid-1990s, climate change has been captured by advanced liberal government, which articulates climate change as an economic issue that requires market-based solutions to facilitate cost-effective technological solutions. A governmentality analysis asks which visibilities, fields of knowledge, practices and identities this ‘global climate regime’ is actually producing, rather than assuming that what it does or is supposed to do is known. In that way, the ways in which programme failure has already been built into the very formation of the Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto Protocol can be identified.",
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            },
            "creatorSummary": "Butler",
            "parsedDate": "2010-05-01",
            "numChildren": 0
        },
        "data": {
            "key": "GHZFVD5V",
            "version": 2,
            "itemType": "journalArticle",
            "title": "Morality and Climate Change: Is Leaving your TV on Standby a Risky Behaviour?",
            "creators": [
                {
                    "creatorType": "author",
                    "firstName": "Catherine",
                    "lastName": "Butler"
                }
            ],
            "abstractNote": "There is a growing literature which examines the ways in which individualised responsibilisation of 'risky behaviours' also entails moralisation. In UK discourses about climate change, certain individualised behaviours (e.g. leaving appliances on standby) are designated as responsible and/or good and correspondingly as irresponsible and/or bad. In this context, the decision to engage or not engage in these types of behaviour can be seen as becoming increasingly moralised. Drawing on focus group discussions with members of the British lay public (participant n96), this paper brings together public(s) (re)production of and negotiated responses to the moral undertones of this aspect of climate change discourse with theories of risk, morality and responsibility to develop important insights for conceptualising climate change mitigation.",
            "publicationTitle": "Environmental Values",
            "publisher": "",
            "place": "",
            "date": "2010-05-01",
            "volume": "19",
            "issue": "2",
            "section": "",
            "partNumber": "",
            "partTitle": "",
            "pages": "169-192",
            "series": "",
            "seriesTitle": "",
            "seriesText": "",
            "journalAbbreviation": "Environmental Values",
            "DOI": "10.3197/096327110X12699420220554",
            "citationKey": "",
            "url": "",
            "accessDate": "",
            "PMID": "",
            "PMCID": "",
            "ISSN": "",
            "archive": "",
            "archiveLocation": "",
            "shortTitle": "Morality and Climate Change",
            "language": "",
            "libraryCatalog": "IngentaConnect",
            "callNumber": "",
            "rights": "",
            "extra": "",
            "tags": [],
            "collections": [],
            "relations": {},
            "dateAdded": "2015-12-17T10:09:35Z",
            "dateModified": "2015-12-17T10:09:35Z"
        }
    }
]