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Trading disaster:containers and container thinking in the production of climate precarity

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dc.contributor.author Parsons, L
dc.contributor.author de Campos, RS
dc.contributor.author Moncaster, A
dc.contributor.author Cook, I
dc.contributor.author Siddiqui, T
dc.contributor.author Abenayake, C
dc.contributor.author Jayasinghe, AB
dc.contributor.author Mishra, P
dc.contributor.author Billah, T
dc.date.accessioned 2023-06-26T06:18:36Z
dc.date.available 2023-06-26T06:18:36Z
dc.date.issued 2022
dc.identifier.citation Parsons, L., Safra de Campos, R., Moncaster, A., Cook, I., Siddiqui, T., Abenayake, C., Jayasinghe, A. B., Mishra, P., & Billah, T. (2022). Trading disaster: Containers and container thinking in the production of climate precarity. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 47(4), 990–1008. https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12545 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1475-5661 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dl.lib.uom.lk/handle/123/21165
dc.description.abstract This paper examines how global trade shapes and intensifies disasters. Juxtaposing three basic, everyday consumer goods – a t-shirt, a brick, and a tea bag – with disasters manifesting in their respective global supply chains, it highlights how climate change, local environmental degradation, and carbon emissions are dynamically shaped by consumption. Analysis of data collected in South and Southeast Asia reveals that local environmental degradation linked to international trade interacts with global climate change and the policies intended to mitigate it, influencing how and where disasters manifest. Underpinning this analysis is the physical and conceptual presence of the container. With more and more of the natural environment packaged and redistributed for global trade, the container thinking that underpins these logistics is increasingly imbricated in environmental processes. Indeed, as this paper aims to show, the container logic that frames analysis of these processes – linked to and drawn from the logistics of global trade – serves as both obfuscator and actor in the global landscape of environmental risk. en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Wiley-Blackwell en_US
dc.subject climate change en_US
dc.subject disasters en_US
dc.subject geographies of consumption en_US
dc.subject geographies of production en_US
dc.subject precarity en_US
dc.subject trade en_US
dc.title Trading disaster:containers and container thinking in the production of climate precarity en_US
dc.type Article-Full-text en_US
dc.identifier.year 2022 en_US
dc.identifier.journal Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers en_US
dc.identifier.issue 4 en_US
dc.identifier.volume 47 en_US
dc.identifier.database Royal Geographical Society en_US
dc.identifier.pgnos 990-1008 en_US
dc.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.1111/tran.12545 en_US


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