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Stop FEMA Now: Social media,activism and the sacrificed citizen
Affiliation:1. Digital Monzoukuri, Palo Alto, CA, United States;2. SS Infotech, Indore, MP, India;1. Service d’orthopédie, centre hospitalier universitaire, 76000 Rouen, France;2. Faculté de médecine et de pharmacie, université de Poitiers, 86000 Poitiers, France;3. Inserm U1082, 86000 Poitiers, France;4. Hôpital privé de l’Estuaire, 76620 Le Havre, France;1. Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Western Carolina University, Belk Hall, 410 B Belk Hall, Cullowhee, NC 28723, USA;2. Department of Urban and Regional Planning, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2424 Maile Way, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA;1. Integrated Remote Sensing Studio, Department of Forest Resources Management, Faculty of Forestry, University of British Columbia, 2424 Main Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z4, Canada;2. Canadian Forest Service (Pacific Forestry Centre), Natural Resources Canada, 506 West Burnside Road, Victoria, British Columbia, V8Z 1M5, Canada;3. Forest Analysis and Inventory Branch,Forest Stewardship Division, Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development, PO Box 9512, Station Provincial Government, Victoria, BC, V8W 9C2, Canada;1. Key Laboratory of Food Safety Research, Institute for Nutritional Sciences (INS), Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences (SIBS), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Shanghai, China;2. School of Life Science and Technology, ShanghaiTech University, Shanghai, China;3. University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS, Beijing, China;4. Key Laboratory of Food Safety Risk Assessment, Ministry of Health, Beijing, China
Abstract:In an era of late capitalism and climate crisis, an expanding, heterogeneous network of people find themselves precariously positioned at the edge of disaster. This paper explores how Stop FEMA Now, a coalition of U.S. flood disaster survivors and other coastal homeowners, used social media to challenge neoliberal policies that produced – and then privatized – environmental risk. I find that social media played a crucial and sometimes unexpected role in enabling activists to organize across difference and cohere around an identity that emphasized their multiple layers of vulnerability and responsibilization. Through images that reembedded natural disasters in their political and economic contexts, activists exposed their historic and ongoing abandonment by neoliberal policies and state failures. Ultimately, such abandonments forfeited coastal homeowners to a future marked by fiscal and climate crisis, constituting them as sacrificed citizens. And yet, I also propose that the struggles of sacrificed citizens offer new possibilities for coalitions and pluralisms.
Keywords:Political ecology of natural disasters  Social vulnerability  Nature 2.0  Social movement organizing  Neoliberal responsibilization  Sacrificial citizenship
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