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Contradiction, intervention, and urban low carbon transitions
Author(s) -
Vanesa Castán Broto
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
environment and planning d society and space
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.655
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1472-3433
pISSN - 0263-7758
DOI - 10.1068/d13050p
Subject(s) - contradiction , diction , hegelianism , relation (database) , dialectic , epistemology , reading (process) , psychological intervention , sociology , psychology , political science , philosophy , computer science , law , linguistics , poetry , database , psychiatry
This paper presents an analysis of contradictions in urban low carbon transitions as engines of change. Following Kojève's reading of contradiction in Hegel's oeuvre, I argue that contradiction is a constitutive feature of low carbon interventions. This is an alternative to conventional readings of contradiction as a provisional encounter of opposites in which one will eventually cancel out the other. I unpack the concept of contra diction in three ways: first, by displaying a Hegelian-inspired understanding of contradiction in relation to change, time, and desire; second, by explaining how inherent contradictions can also be read in relation to the excesses that characterize the deployment of methods of calculation in low carbon interventions; and third, by situating these contradictions within the overall dynamics of carbon governance and purposive attempts to bring about a low carbon transition. The paper explores the practical implications of this analysis in a case of low carbon interventions in social housing in Ljubljana, Slovenia. The case study shows that, if contradictions are at the heart of low carbon interventions, contradiction analysis may provide a direction towards broader reconfigurations of social and technological practices and generate a desire to change.

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