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Interscalar maintenance: configuring an Indigenous ‘premium carbon product’ in northern Australia (and beyond)

Timothy Neale

2022Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Mitigating climate change requires us to constrain combustion in a double sense: decreasing both the use of fossil fuels and the flammability of the biosphere. Fire management by Indigenous peoples in Australia's northern savannas has been presented as a solution to offset the former and assist with the latter, leading to the foundation of a regional economy of projects generating ‘premium’ carbon credits on Indigenous lands. This article attends to the translational zone – predominantly made up of non‐Indigenous white professionals – that functions to configure the ‘right story’ of these credits across diverse epistemes and contexts. Following such commodities’ interscalar connections, I suggest, helps illustrate the contingencies and contradictions produced by tradeable carbon, as individuals and organizations seek to maintain a niche within a changing climate and shifting global atmospheric relations.

Topics & Concepts

IndigenousCarbon offsetFossil fuelNatural resource economicsClimate changeBusinessEconomicsEcologyBiologyMining and Resource ManagementIndigenous Health, Education, and RightsClimate Change, Adaptation, Migration
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