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Silence and Catastrophe: New Reasons Why Politics Matters in the Early Years of the Twenty‐first Century
Authors:JOHN KEANE
Affiliation:Professor of Politics at the University of Sydney, where he is Director of the Institute for Democracy and Human Rights.
Abstract:Megaprojects are systems of highly concentrated power whose footprints, or radius of effects, are without precedent in human history. Once upon a time, even under imperial conditions, most people on our planet lived and loved, worked and played within geographically limited communities. They never had to reckon with all of humanity as a factor in their daily lives. Whenever they acted recklessly within their environment, for instance, they had the option of moving on, safe in the knowledge that there was plenty of Earth and not many others. Whenever bad things happened, they happened within limits. Their effects were local. The politics of megaprojects radically alters this equation; it poses new questions about the governance of risk and the nature and limits of democratic politics. The politics of megaprojects—put simply—raises fundamental questions about the ‘life and death of democracy’.
Keywords:catastrophe  crisis  megaprojects  anti‐politics  complexity  risk
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