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Disasters, Climate Risk, and Exclusionary Modernity in Manila

Published March 19, 2013

by afdubreu

Thursday, 28 March 2013 | 12 to 2pm | 626 York Research Tower | Keele Campus | York University

With Kenneth Cardenas, Department of Geography, York University
 
In his talk, Kenneth Cardenas traces the role played by the idea of ‘irrationality’ in how Manila’s past and future is being imagined. It begins by reconstructing the experience of Manila with developmentalism, structural adjustment, and globalization to argue that the features of its urbanization which are often understood as consequences of irrationality were in fact produced by rational modern schemes for conquering and managing risks. It will then examine how the definition of disasters and climate change risk in terms of irrationality was used by experts, state agencies, and the Philippine media to articulate a vision for an exclusionary disaster-proofing of Manila by attributing the floods wrought by Tropical Storm Ketsana in 2009 to inadequacies in urban planning and an ‘irrational’ slum-dwelling poor.

Kenneth Cardenas is presently a PhD student in Geography at York University. He completed his MA in Sociology with Distinction at the University of Manchester, where he worked on examining how the definition and management of risks from disasters and climate change are being used to justify an exclusionary reconfiguration of Manila.

This talk is the final event in a series of talks on Urban Asia, organized by the City Institute and the York Centre for Asian Research (YCAR) at York University.

ALL ARE WELCOME!

For more information: ycar@yorku.ca | www.yorku.ca/ycar/Events/urban_asia.html.  

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