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AN UNCERTAIN CLIMATE IN RISKY TIMES: HOW OCCUPATION BECAME LIKE THE RAIN IN POST-OSLO PALESTINE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2018
Abstract
Recent Palestinian Authority (PA) initiatives to help Palestine adapt to climate change help shine light on the role that climate uncertainties play in how political futures can be represented. UN-led adaptation has occasioned opportunities for new networks of actors to make claims about Palestinian futures and to perform PA readiness for statehood. These actors weigh scientific uncertainties about climate against uncertainties over if and when settler colonialism in Palestine will end. How they do so matters because it is the foundation of requests for capital that could be translated into some of the most important institutions and infrastructures of Palestinian governance over the next several years, including those that provide Palestinians with access to water. It also matters because it constitutes the image with which PA officials represent what needs to be “fixed” in Palestine in important international forums such as the UN. Climate change adaptation is a new approach to the management of uncertain environmental futures. This analysis offers insight into how this approach shapes and is shaped by practices of statecraft in places marked by the volatilities of war, economic crisis, and occupation.
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- International Journal of Middle East Studies , Volume 50 , Special Issue 3: Environment and Society in the Middle East and North Africa , August 2018 , pp. 383 - 404
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018
References
NOTES
Author's note: I am indebted to Fuad Abu Saif, Suha Jarrar, Nedal Katbeh-Bader, Michael Mason, Clemens Messerschmid, Ziad Mimi, Taghreed Najjar, ‘Itiraf Remawi, Mark Zeitoun, and my interlocutors in Palestine who will remain anonymous for making this research possible by sharing their time and insights with me. Jessica Barnes, Tessa Farmer, Simone Popperl, Kali Rubaii, and Caterina Scaramelli read an earlier draft of this paper. I thank them, Akram Khater, Jeffrey Culang, and three anonymous reviewers for their valuable feedback. Support from Bard College, the Social Science Research Council, the National Science Foundation, the Wenner-Gren Foundation, and Columbia University allowed me to travel to Palestine for this research.
1 Per anthropology's ethical protocols, I have used real names where interviewees spoke with me on the record in their official capacity. I have anonymized or omitted names of those who spoke off the record or preferred to remain anonymous. I do not comment on which names are anonymized and which are not to protect the information of those who remain anonymous.
2 On scenarios as aids to decision making under uncertainty, see Matthews, Andrew S., “Imagining Forest Futures and Climate Change: The Mexican State as Insurance Broker and Storyteller,” in Climate Cultures: Anthropological Perspectives on Climate Change, ed. Barnes, Jessica and Dove, Michael R. (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2015)Google Scholar.
3 See Lakoff, Andrew, “Preparing for the Next Emergency,” Public Culture 19 (2007): 247–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Eminent Palestinian historian Khalidi, Walid was prescient in titling his 1978 article “Thinking the Unthinkable: A Sovereign Palestinian State,” Foreign Affairs 56 (1978): 695–713CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
4 A sample vision of a Palestinian future that responds to this concern is depicted in Abunimah, Ali’s One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli–Palestinian Impasse (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2006)Google Scholar.
5 See, for example, Hanieh, Adam, “The Internationalisation of Gulf Capital and Palestinian Class Formation,” Capital and Class 35 (2011): 81–106CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Khan, Mushtaq Husain, State Formation in Palestine: Viability and Governance during a Social Transformation (New York: Routledge, 2004)Google Scholar; Hilal, Jamil, Takwin al-Nukhba al-Falistiniyya (Ramallah: MUWATIN, The Palestinian Institute for the Study of Democracy, 2002)Google Scholar; Hanafi, Sari and Tabar, Linda, “The New Palestinian Globalized Elite,” Jerusalem Quarterly 24 (2005): 13–32Google Scholar; and Samour, Sobhi and Khalidi, Raja, “Neoliberalism as Liberation: The Statehood Program and the Remaking of the Palestinian National Movement,” Journal of Palestine Studies 40 (2011): 6–25Google Scholar.
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18 On collective imaginations of the state as critical in stabilizing calculations about environmental futures, see Matthews, “Imagining,” 201.
19 Thinking two types of readiness together—readiness for statehood and for climate funding— parallels what Pamela McElwee observed in her work on REDD+ readiness in Vietnam: “From Conservation and Development to Climate Change: Anthropological Engagements with REDD+ in Vietnam,” in Climate Cultures, 82–104. See also Bonilla, Yarimar, Non-Sovereign Futures: French Caribbean Politics in the Wake of Disenchantment (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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27 Important exceptions include Amra, Ziad, “The Development of Palestinian Environmental Law and Legal Advocacy,” Palestine-Israel Journal of Politics, Economics and Culture 5 (1998)Google Scholar, accessed 24 September 2017, http://www.pij.org/details.php?id=426; and McKee, Emily, Dwelling in Conflict: Negev Landscapes and the Boundaries of Belonging (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2016)Google Scholar.
28 UNFCCC National Reports, accessed 11 November 2016, http://unfccc.int/national_reports/items/1408.php.
29 Jessica O'Reilly, “Glacial Dramas: Typos, Projections, and Peer Review in the Fourth Assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,” in Climate Cultures, 108. See also Ferguson, James, The Anti-Politics Machine: “Development,” Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990)Google Scholar; and Riles, Annelise, “Infinity within the Brackets,” American Ethnologist 25 (1990): 378–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
30 I conducted most of the interviews in the city of Ramallah in the West Bank, and a small number by phone or e-mail, between 2015 and 2016.
31 On the relationship between “channeling finance” and ways of writing in institutional relationships, see Matthews, “Imagining,” 204, 215.
32 See, for example, Samer Alatout, “Hydro-Imaginaries and the Construction of the Political Geography of the Jordan River,” in Environmental Imaginaries of the Middle East and North Africa, 218–45; and Shehadeh, Raja, Palestinian Walks: Forays into a Vanishing Landscape (New York: Scribner, 2008)Google Scholar.
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34 The organization's name has since changed to EcoPeace Middle East.
35 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Climate Change Adaptation Strategy and Programme of Action for the Palestinian Authority (report by the UNDP, Jerusalem, 2010), 3.
36 Ibid., 49–82.
37 See, for example, Mason, Mimi, and Zeitoun, “Compounding Vulnerability.”
38 Thanks to an anonymous reviewer for pointing to the significance of this point.
39 UNDP, Strategy, xi.
40 Ibid., 2.
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42 Rainfall variability projections remain highly uncertain in other regional conflicts, such as in Egypt. See Barnes, “Scale and Agency,” 128–29.
43 UNDP, Strategy, 16.
44 On how the large scale, when transposed to the smaller scale, becomes much more difficult to apply with clarity, see Barnes, “Scale and Agency,” 129.
45 UNDP, Strategy, x.
46 Jasanoff, “Songlines,” 144.
47 Lakoff, “Preparing,” 53.
48 See Kelly, Tobias, “Documented Lives: Fear and the Uncertainties of Law during the Second Palestinian Intifada,” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 12 (2006): 89–107CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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50 UNDP, Strategy, 27.
51 Jasanoff, Sheila, “Future Imperfect: Science, Technology, and the Imaginations of Modernity,” in Dreamscapes of Modernity: Sociotechnical Imaginaries and the Fabrication of Power, ed. Jasanoff, Sheila and Kim, Sang-Hyun (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
52 Correspondence with Kareem Rabie, November 2016.
53 Ibid., 42.
54 Ibid., 16. This is the temporal equivalent of Barnes's argument about geographical scale. See Barnes, “Scale and Agency,” 131. See also O'Reilly, “Glacial Dramas,” 123.
55 Beck, Ulrich, Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity (London: Sage Publications, 1992), 2Google Scholar.
56 UNDP, Strategy, 4.
57 For data on Israeli activities in the West Bank that month, see Applied Research Institute–Jerusalem, “The Israeli Colonization Activities in the Palestinian Territories during the 3rd Quarter of 2015–2016” (report by the Applied Research Institute–Jerusalem and the Land Research Centre–Jerusalem, February 2016).
58 O'Reilly, “Glacial Dramas,” 123.
59 On diagrammatic reasoning, see Hastrup, Kristen, “Anticipation on Thin Ice: Diagrammatic Reasoning in the High Arctic,” in The Social Life of Climate Change Models: Anticipating Nature, ed. Hastrup, Kristin and Skrydstrup, Martin (London: Routledge, 2013), 77–99Google Scholar.
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61 Beck, Risk Society.
62 See Ben Orlove, Heather Lazrus, Grete K. Hovelsrud, and Alessandra Giannini, “How Long-Standing Debates Have Shaped Recent Climate Change Discourses,” in Climate Cultures, 48–81; and Frances C. Moore, Justin S. Mankin, and Austin Becker, “Challenges in Integrating the Climate and Social sciences for Studies of Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation,” in Climate Cultures, 169–98.
63 Lakoff, “Preparing,” 31.
64 On recent discussions of the latter, see Salamanca, Qato, Rabie, and Samour, “Past is Present.”
65 Espeland and Stevens, “Commensuration,” 316, 319.
66 Jasanoff, “Songlines,” 135.
67 UNDP, Strategy, 15. Emphasis mine. The worst-case scenario is not an event but a future continuous condition. For contrast, see Lakoff, “Preparation.”
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71 Jarrar, “No Justice.”
72 See, for example, Hussein, Hussam and Grandi, Mattia, “Dynamic Political Contexts and Power Asymmetries: The Cases of the Blue Nile and the Yarmouk Rivers,” International Journal of Environmental Agreements: Law, Politics, and Economics 17 (2017): 795–814CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For a discussion of the power asymmetries involved in water management between Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories, see Zeitoun, Mark, Power and Water in the Middle East: The Hidden Politics of the Palestinian–Israeli Water Conflict (New York: I.B.Tauris, 2008)Google Scholar. For a sample text on the concept of “problemsheds,” see Kneese, Allen V., “The ‘Problem Shed’ as a Unit for Environmental Control,” Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal 16 (1968): 124–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
73 On the need for flexibility in other climate analysis contexts, see O'Reilly, “Glacial Dramas,” 122.
74 Lakoff, “Preparation,” 260.
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77 Beck, Risk Society, 8.
78 Lakoff, “From Disaster to Catastrophe: The Limits of Preparedness,” SSRC, 11 June 2006, accessed 3 April 2018, http://understandingkatrina.ssrc.org/Lakoff/. Unlike the preparedness ethos in the US, Palestinian publics do not tend to express a widespread demand for preparedness. This is a PA-specific ethos.
79 Wedeen, Lisa, Ambiguities of Domination: Politics, Rhetoric, and Symbols in Contemporary Syria (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999)Google Scholar.
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81 See Patrick Goodenough, “Senators Target U.S. Funding for Kerry's Prized UN Climate Change Programs,” CSNnews.com, 20 April 2016, accessed 3 April 2018, http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/patrick-goodenough/gop-senators-target-taxpayer-funding-kerrys-prized-un-climate-change.
82 Kelly, “Documented Lives”; Navaro-Yashin, “Make Believe.” See also Zureik, Elias, “Constructing Palestine through Surveillance Practices,” British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 28 (2001): 205–27CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Ticktin, Miriam, Casualties of Care: Immigration and the Politics of Humanitarianism in France (Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
83 See Tawil-Souri, Helga, “The Politics and Materiality of ID Cards in Palestine/Israel,” Social Text 29 (2011): 67–97CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Khalidi, Rashid, Palestinian Identity: The Construction of Modern National Consciousness (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997)Google Scholar; Gordon, Neve, Israel's Occupation (Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press, 2008)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kelly, “Documented Lives”; and Zureik, “Constructing.”
84 Climate documents serve, in these senses, as boundary objects. Star, Susan and Griesemer, James, “Institutional Ecology, ‘Translations’ and Boundary Objects: Amateurs and Professionals in Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 1907–39,” Social Studies of Science 19 (1989): 387–420CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
85 Matthews argues that calculation requires imagination of the state as a center of political and institutional order. Matthews, “Imagining,” 203.
86 Similar shifts occur in other contexts of environmental problem solving, as with water scarcity. See, for example, Mehta, Lyla, The Politics and Poetics of Water: The Naturalization of Water Scarcity in Western India (New Delhi: Orient Longman, 2005)Google Scholar.
87 On “charismatic data” in the writing of climate reports, see O'Reilly, “Glacial Dramas,” 122.
88 Matthews, “Imagining,” 212.
89 This contrasts with other climate adaptation plans by other governments whose status is perceived to be pending due to political volatility and occupation. See, for example, Islamic Republic of Afghanistan National Environmental Protection Agency, Afghanistan Initial National Communication to the UNFCCC (The National Environmental Protection Agency of Afghanistan, 2013).
90 Espeland and Stevens, “Commensuration.”
91 Jasanoff, “Songlines,” 138.
92 Scott, James, Seeing like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1998)Google Scholar.
93 See Navaro-Yashin, “Make Believe,” 86.
94 Wedeen, Ambiguities.
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