Symbolic Violence and the Politics of Environmental Pollution Science: The Case of Coal Ash Pollution in Bosnia and Herzegovina |
| |
Authors: | Vanesa Castán Broto |
| |
Institution: | Development Planning Unit, UCL Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment, London, UK v.castanbroto@ucl.ac.uk |
| |
Abstract: | Abstract: Environmental justice movements often contest environmental knowledge by engaging in scientific debates, which implies accepting the predominance of scientific discourses over alternative forms of knowledge. Using Bourdieu's concept of symbolic violence, this paper warns that the engagement with hegemonic forms of knowledge production may reproduce, rather than challenge, existing social and environmental inequalities. The argument is developed with reference to a case study of coal ash pollution in Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The case study shows that the construction of knowledge in a scientific project led to the exclusion of local definitions of the situation and the dismissal of their observations of environmental pollution. The case suggests that the capacity of different actors to put forward their interpretation of an environmental issue depends on the forms of symbolic violence that emerge within hegemonic discourses of the environment. |
| |
Keywords: | symbolic violence environmental justice cultural hegemony environmental pollution social constructionism Bosnia and Herzegovina |
|
|