To call this resistance of external forces is to miss the defense of internal practices: You resist the state agenda; you defend self-determination.

Among tactics developed by European activists to resist [sic] formalization processes, we find the use of personal bank accounts or means of transportation, partial undeclared payments and sales, the circulation of money in cash, the use of personal connections to avoid bureaucracy, hidden storage spaces, and the attempt to develop projects of self-certification and artisanal roasting. The organic certification process has generated endless debates both within the autonomous cooperatives and European networks, as official international labels are considered neocolonial devices. In Chiapas, producers don’t believe in Western agencies determining whether their product deserves to be considered organic, but they allow it out of necessity in order to export. This is a particularly delicate subject for a struggle built around peasant and indigenous rights for self-determination [sic]. While similar dilemmas have been discussed in the U.S. context regarding Fair Trade certification (Naylor 2019), European networks engage with these mechanisms in distinct ways. Only a portion of the coffee exported to Europe bears the official Fair Trade label, as many collectives explicitly reject it, and Zapatista producers themselves clearly differentiate their experience from that of non-Zapatista cooperatives. In this context, Fair Trade and organic certifications operate as separate and differently mobilized devices, and the coffees distributed across Europe under diverse “rebel” labels are explicitly marked as political products, openly positioned as part of a broader and collective anticapitalist struggle.

(accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1007/s10624-025-09802-x)

For more on the difference between resistance and defence (especially the role of diversity in the latter), see Kristin Ross (2024), The Commune Form: The Transformation of Everyday Life (London: Verso).

Climate justice? (Major Read)

I

One popular thesis:

Environmental degradation driven by the climate crisis systemically worsens living standards, thereby heightening socioeconomic and political tensions. These tensions often ignite armed conflicts, forcing populations to migrate and creating environmental refugees. The mass migration stems from both the decline of ecosystems and conflicts intensified by resource shortages. As a result, the climate crisis inflicts extensive and lasting damage on ecosystems and human communities, aligning with the definition of ecocide. Recognizing this causal chain highlights the necessity for global governance to address the ecological and humanitarian impacts of climate-induced conflicts.

(accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1177/00323217251382404)

One admittedly incomplete review of the literature:

We draw three initial conclusions from [our review of the literature]. First, across the five environmental issues surveyed, the evidence on the contribution of environmental variables to violent political conflict is thin, weak, uncertain, and/or contradictory. Notwithstanding headline claims about climate being “a risk factor for conflict,” for instance, the consensus view of even the mainstream scholars who reached this verdict is that climate is a relatively low risk factor for conflict (evaluated as fourteenth out of 16 factors considered), is particularly uncertain (evaluated as the most uncertain of 16 factors), and is a factor over which there is “low confidence” in the mechanisms through which
climate affects conflict. . .Second, scarcity accounts of environmental conflict, which focus on the security impacts of natural resource availability shortages, are particularly unconvincing, there being much stronger evidence on the conflict effects of relative resource abundance, as argued in “resource curse” or “honey pot” . . .interpretations of environmental conflict, and discussed further in the next section. And third, although the body of evidence on climatic variables and conflict is much more extensive than on the other environmental issues considered here, dominating climate–security research, it is no less uneven. Indeed, our assessment is that the evidence is most robust on water and forests, through resource curse dynamics; that it is most extensive but also mixed on climatic variables; and that it is thinnest in relation to biodiversity and pollution.

(accessed online at https://www.annualreviews.org/docserver/fulltext/energy/49/1/annurev-environ-112922-114232.pdf?expires=1770499611&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=C4CF5A6FB183C2A3D71433B9DE1662700

In short, the broader the narrative, including those for the climate emergency, the more likely there are granular counternarratives. Does the one negate or cancel the other? No, but it does force new questions, e.g. in this case: What local injustices would the earmarked global justice produce?

II

Some three decades ago, Jon Elster, the political philosopher, wrote Local Justice: How Institutions Allocate Scarce Goods and Necessary Burdens (1992). It’s of continued interest because one of the points is that not only can local justice systems lead to global injustice, global justice systems can lead to local injustices.

First, Elster’s definitions.

Local justice can be contrasted with global justice. Roughly speaking, globally redistributive policies are characterized by three features. First, they are designed centrally, at the level of the national government. Second, they are intended to compensate people for various sorts of bad luck, resulting from the possession of ’morally arbitrary properties.’ Third, they typically take the form of cash transfers [e.g., think reparations]. Principles of local justice differ on all three counts. They are designed by relatively autonomous institutions which, although they may be constrained by guidelines laid down by the center, have some autonomy to design and implement their preferred scheme. Also, they are not compensatory, or only partially so. A scheme for allocating scarce medical resources may compensate patients for bad medical luck, but not for other kinds of bad luck (including the bad luck of being turned down for another scarce good). Finally, local justice concerns allocation in kind of goods (and burdens), not of money.                                                                                                                                    

Elster (1992, p4)

The semi-autonomous institutions are local in three senses for Elster: arena, country and locality. Different arenas, such as organ transplantation, college admissions and job layoffs, follow different principles: “Need is central in allocating organs for transplantation, merit in admitting students to college and seniority in selecting workers for layoffs” in the US. Allocative principles vary by country as well: “In many European countries, need (as measured by number of family dependents) can be a factor in deciding which workers to lay off”. Finally, allocative principles can also vary by locality within the same country or arena, as with the case of local transplantation centers in the US. (In case it requires saying, these systems have changed since Elster’s writing!)

In short, complexity in local justice systems comes not just from the fact that the goods are scarce, heterogeneous and in kind and that the sites of allocation may well be local contingent. Local justice systems vary also because principles are tied to complex arrays of criteria, mechanisms, procedures, and schemes.

Implications, including for climate justice.

Not only are local justice systems not designed to compensate for global injustices, they can also lead to those injustices:

From childhood to old age, [the individual] encounters a succession of institutions, each of which has the power to give or deny him some scarce good. In some cases the cumulative impact of these decisions may be grossly unfair. We can easily imagine an individual who through sheer bad luck is chosen for all the necessary burdens and denied all the scarce goods, because in each case he is just below the cutoff point of selection. To my knowledge this source of injustice has not been recognized so far…. Those who are entrusted with the task of allocating a scarce good rarely if ever evaluate recipients in the light of their past successes or failures in receiving other goods. Local justice is largely noncompensatory. There is no mechanism of redress across allocative spheres….

[B]y the nature of chance events, some individuals will miss every train: they are turned down for medical school, chosen by the draft lottery, laid off by the firm in a recession, and refused scarce medical resources; in addition, their spouse develops cancer, their stocks become worthless, and their neighborhood is chosen for a toxic waste dump. It is neither desirable nor possible to create a mechanism of redress to compensate all forms of cumulative bad luck. For one thing, the problems of moral hazard would be immense [i.e. if people knew they were going to be compensated for whatever happened to them, they could take more risks and thereby incur more harm]. For another, the machinery of administering redress for bad luck would be hopelessly complex and costly.                     

(Ibid 133-4)

Where so, local justice clearly can lead to global injustice.

But just as clearly from a local justice perspective, the global justice promised in, say, climate justice (e.g., via reparations), leads to local injustices, when the former is implemented uniformly over an otherwise differentiated landscape. One thinks immediately of how to define an “extreme event” that triggers so-called automatic debt relief.

To expand, the more uniform the application of climate justice policies, the greater the local pressure for suitably heterogeneous applications, if not alternatives. But the more differentiated on the ground, the greater the chance of global injustice when considered as universal principles uniformly applicable at the micro-level.

So what?

For one thing, the continued insistence that global climate justice involves money transfers (as distinct from in-kind compensation typical of local justice systems) ends up further monetarizing a global environment that local systems take to be quite otherwise.

In so doing, the insistence obscures the huge importance of in-kind compensations at the local level. Think here of the livestock sharing systems (e.g., khlata in Tunisia and mafisa in Botswana). These are local justice systems irrespective of the livestock involved being methane producers from a techno-managerial perspective on global climate. Indeed, I can’t think of a better example of global climate justice at odds with local justice systems, globally.

It also remains an open question—to be settled case by case in my view—as to whether the persistence of in-kind transfers within a cash economy (e.g., Scoones 2024) is more about pastoralist systems that are locally just than it is about the global injustices of the cash nexus.

III

What needs further highlighting is how far we can only get analytically and normatively in deploying that binary of justice/injustice. Indeed, some critics who question binaries, like nature/nurture or human/non-human to assume that there are justice systems which can or should correct for the equally well-known injustices others undergo and have undergone.

The twofold obstacle to any such conclusion is that (1) all manner of injustices are incurred without specific reference to principles or norms of justice and, anyway (2) those principles and norms prove contradictory, inconsistent or ambiguous when it comes to specific contexts (Douglass 2025). This is both an empirical and theoretical argument most recently associated with the political philosopher, Judith Shklar:

What sort of problem is injustice? One way of thinking about it is as an ethical problem. If not the first virtue of social institutions, justice is one of the most important moral values that should guide our reflections on politics. Injustice negates (or is a departure from) justice and is therefore a problem. Understood this way, there is a strong case for maintaining that we require principles of justice to evaluate cases of injustice: we can only identify the nature and scale of injustices with reference to some prior idea of justice. As should now be evident, this is not Shklar’s approach to theorizing injustice. She instead starts from our experiences of injustice and explores the political problems to which they give rise. The sense of injustice that we all experience should be understood in reference to the plural, competing, and ever-changing expectations that exist within any society, which cannot be formalized into determinate principles of justice. As this sense of injustice is a deep and inescapable feature of all social life, there is a political imperative to find ways of living together that can mitigate it as effectively as possible without (at the extreme) descending into cycles of violent revenge. To understand the problem of injustice in this way is to treat it as a political problem, first and foremost, rather than as an ethical one.

Such a sense of injustice repeatedly appears in the pastoralist literature (e.g., Krätli and Toulmin 2020, p. 68). Is it any wonder then that existing local justice systems are commended for providing some everyday order and stability? Scott-Villiers et al (p.35) write in their cases study of Somali-Kenya borderlands:

Most importantly, it is the ways in which people have been served by the Xeer system and Sharia over the many years of state neglect and war that is our focus here. Flawed though the system may be in relation to current circumstances and aspirations, community members across the rural borderlands feel that, on balance, it is a vital element in their lives. Its capacities not only to provide justice, but also insurance should also not be underestimated. Where else, people ask, do we have any assurances for carrying out business?

If your premiss is that global justice systems should correct for local injustices, then I don’t see how you can avoid your starting point being the really-existing messy nature of global justice and of local justice.

IV

An example of this messiness is geoengineering. It’s offered up as a last-ditch effort to save the planet in the midst of its very real climate emergency. Such indeed is the rationale for having in place robust monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems of the geoengineering interventions. Now of course, much of the current debate is about the unintended consequences of geoengineering and about the early warning systems for monitoring and evaluating them. But those consequences are almost exclusively dominated by concerns of global North and South experts and scientists.

I suggest that the major priority of governments and the regulators of geoengineering initiatives is to ensure that the early warning systems for droughts and bad weather still in operation among pastoralists and agriculturists of the developing world are also included and canvassed. Otherwise, we will be measuring the decrease (or increase for that matter) in the murders of local “rainmakers” (forecasters) because of a globalizing geoengineering.

Which takes us full circle, back to where the more global the system, the more unavoidable are local differences for policy and management.


Other sources

Douglass, R. 2025. “Who Needs a Theory of Justice? Judith Shklar and the Politics of Injustice.” American Political Science Review: 1–12 (accessed online at http://cambridge.org/core/journals/american-political-science-review/article/who-needs-a-theory-of-justice-judith-shklar-and-the-politics-of-injustice/5B25A4AF90526DAE217F93E87765E074)

Elster, J. 1992. Local Justice: How Institutions Allocate Scarce Goods and Necessary Burdens, Russell Sage Foundation: New York NY

Krätli S., C. Toulmin 2020. Farmer–Herder Conflict in Sub-saharan Africa? IIED, Briefing. International Institute for Environment and Development, London (accessed online at http://pubs.iied. org/17753IIED)

Roe, E. 2023. When Complex is as Simple as it Gets: Guide for Recasting Policy and Management in the Anthropocene. IDS Working Paper 589, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/IDS.2023.025

Scoones, I. 2024. “Managing money: savings and investment in Zimbabwean agriculture” (accessed online athttps://zimbabweland.wordpress.com/2024/01/29/managing-money-savings-and-investment-in-zimbabwean-agriculture/)Scoones, I.  2024b. Navigating Uncertainty: Radical Rethinking for a Turbulent World. Polity: Cambridge, UK

Scott-Villiers, P., A. Scott-Villiers, and the team from Action for Social and Economic Progress, Somalia 2025. Navigating Violence and Negotiating Order in the Somalia–Kenya Borderlands. IDS Working Paper 618, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies (accessed online at https://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/articles/report/Navigating_Violence_and_Negotiating_Order_in_the_Somalia_Kenya_Borderlands/28715012?file=53375021)

. . .and then there are more granular levels of analysis

One popular thesis:

Environmental degradation driven by the climate crisis systemically worsens living standards, thereby heightening socioeconomic and political tensions. These tensions often ignite armed conflicts, forcing populations to migrate and creating environmental refugees. The mass migration stems from both the decline of ecosystems and conflicts intensified by resource shortages. As a result, the climate crisis inflicts extensive and lasting damage on ecosystems and human communities, aligning with the definition of ecocide. Recognizing this causal chain highlights the necessity for global governance to address the ecological and humanitarian impacts of climate-induced conflicts.

(accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1177/00323217251382404)

One admittedly incomplete review of the literature:

We draw three initial conclusions from [our review of the literature]. First, across the five environmental issues surveyed, the evidence on the contribution of environmental variables to violent political conflict is thin, weak, uncertain, and/or contradictory. Notwithstanding headline claims about climate being “a risk factor for conflict,” for instance, the consensus view of even the mainstream scholars who reached this verdict is that climate is a relatively low risk factor for conflict (evaluated as fourteenth out of 16 factors considered), is particularly uncertain (evaluated as the most uncertain of 16 factors), and is a factor over which there is “low confidence” in the mechanisms through which
climate affects conflict. . .Second, scarcity accounts of environmental conflict, which focus on the security impacts of natural resource availability shortages, are particularly unconvincing, there being much stronger evidence on the conflict effects of relative resource abundance, as argued in “resource curse” or “honey pot” . . .interpretations of environmental conflict, and discussed further in the next section. And third, although the body of evidence on climatic variables and conflict is much more extensive than on the other environmental issues considered here, dominating climate–security research, it is no less uneven. Indeed, our assessment is that the evidence is most robust on water and forests, through resource curse dynamics; that it is most extensive but also mixed on climatic variables; and that it is thinnest in relation to biodiversity and pollution.

(accessed online at https://www.annualreviews.org/docserver/fulltext/energy/49/1/annurev-environ-112922-114232.pdf?expires=1770499611&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=C4CF5A6FB183C2A3D71433B9DE1662700

Moral: All broad narratives, including those for the climate emergency, come with more granular counternarratives. Does one negate or cancel the other? No, but it does force new questions, e.g. in this case: What local injustices would the earmarked global justice produce?

Key Blog Entries: Updated February 7, 2026

Latest blog entries include

**”A curious asymmetry, analytically and normatively, in disaster management

**”Emerging counternarratives on: migrants, border controls, digital networks, remittances, child labor, COVID’s impact (Africa and Europe), and housing affordability [newly added]

When Complex is as Simple as it Gets: Guide for recasting policy and management in the Anthropocene, along with a useful schematic, can now be found at

When Complex is as Simple as it Gets: Guide for Recasting Policy and Management in the Anthropocene (links to the Guide and schematic)

This working paper updates many blog entries prior to its June 2023 publication.

Those interested in newly updated extensions of the Guide, please see:

**”Major Read: Sourcing new ideas from the humanities, fine arts, and other media for complex policy analysis and management (newly added)” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2025/07/03/major-read-sourcing-new-ideas-from-the-humanities-fine-arts-and-other-media-for-complex-policy-analysis-and-management/

**”16 examples on how genre differences affect the structure and substance of policy and management [newly added]: https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2025/12/07/sixteen-examples-on-how-differences-in-genre-affect-the-structure-and-substance-of-policy-and-management-4-newly-added/

**”Major Read: Instead of “differentiated by gender, race and class,” why not “differentiated by heterogeneity and complexity”? Ten examples of racism, class, capitalism, inequalities, border controls, authoritarianism, COVID and more” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2025/08/31/major-read-instead-of-differentiated-by-gender-race-and-class-why-not-differentiated-by-heterogeneity-and-complexity-t/

**”New method matters in reframing policy and management: 14 examples (14th example newly added)” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2026/01/07/major-read-new-method-matters-in-reframing-policy-and-management-14th-example-new/

**”Emerging counternarratives on: migrants, border controls, digital networks, remittances, child labor, COVID’s impact (Africa and Europe), and deglobalization” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2026/02/04/emerging-counternarratives-on-migrants-border-controls-digital-networks-remittances-child-labor-covids-impact-africa-and-europe-and-deglobalization-newly-added/

Other major new reads:

**”The ‘future’ in HRO Studies: the example of networked reliability” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2024/10/17/the-future-in-hro-studies-the-example-of-networked-reliability-as-a-form-of-reliability-seeking/

**”The siloing of approaches to discourse and narrative analyses in public policy” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2024/07/25/major-read-the-siloing-of-approaches-to-discourse-and-narrative-analyses-in-public-policy/

**”A National Academy of Reliable Infrastructure Management” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2024/08/21/a-national-academy-of-reliable-infrastructure-management-resent/

Key blog entries on livestock herders, pastoralists and pastoralisms are:

**”New Implications of the Framework for Reliability Professionals and Pastoralism-as-Infrastructure (updated)” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2025/09/06/update-and-new-implications-of-the-framework-for-reliability-professionals-and-pastoralism-as-infrastructure-updated/

**”A ‘reliability-seeking economics in pastoralist development” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2026/01/16/a-reliability-seeking-economics-in-pastoralist-development/

**”Recasting traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) in pastoralist systems: the detection of creeping crises” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2025/08/18/recasting-traditional-ecological-knowledge-tek-in-pastoralist-systems/

**”Twelve new extensions of “pastoralists as reliability professionals” and “pastoralism as a critical infrastructure” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2024/12/20/new-extensions-of-the-framework-for-pastoralists-as-reliability-professionals-and-pastoralism-as-a-critical-infrastructure/

**”Other fresh perspectives on pastoralists and pastoralism: 17 brief cases (last newly added)” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2025/05/11/other-fresh-perspectives-on-pastoralists-and-pastoralism-17-brief-cases-last-newly-added/

**”First complicate those for-or-against-pastoralism arguments and then see the policy relevance: four brief examples” https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2025/08/12/four-briefer-points-of-policy-relevance-for-pastoralists-and-herders/

A curious asymmetry, analytically and normatively, in disaster management

I

Let’s look at the implications of that curious asymmetry in the analysis of socio-technical disasters, past and future.

If you start analysis by elucidating the genesis of a disaster, then how far back in history do you go in the diagnoses of causes to be ameliorated? There’s no closure rule, or at least like the one in place after the disaster. Then there’s urgency and a clarity about what needs to be done by way of immediate emergency response and initial service restoration. Even longer-term recovery funds can increase–never again!–until the hype fades. All the while, causal explanations of past disasters continue and compete, are incomplete or open-ended, and rarely fade away entirely.

What’s at issue, I think, is much more than the fact that ex post analysis of the past ends up more a search for ultimate causes while ex ante analysis of measures to prevent the next disaster focuses on proximate causes.

Say we readily agree our economic systems get us into some, or many, of socio-technical disasters. But the very same infrastructures that need to be restored immediately, if only for mass care, after the disaster–energy, water, transportation, telecommunications–are those that undergird these economic systems up to and now through the emergency. How else do you stabilize post-disaster conditions, even if the aspirations are to recover to new normals economically different? Improvising with what’s at hand is necessary, whether or not alternative futures are out of reach.

II

This asymmetrical nature of socio-technical infrastructures, at least under emergency conditions, is under-acknowledged normatively. For example, it’s easy to document the harms done by digital surveillance of border controls (just tap in a Google search). Less cited are the real-time upsides of digitalization for those seeking to cross the borders:

. . . .social media platforms also become dynamic infrastructures which actively mediate global migration. It performs three key functions. First, it fosters individual digital resilience. Migrants use encrypted or anonymous apps to evade law enforcement, navigate dangerous terrains, and plan clandestine departures. They share their journeys through videos and posts, and make public documentation, including pleas for help or evidence of abuse, to support their asylum claims and attract attention to their lived experiences (Leurs & Smets, 2018). Second, social media creates and strengthens online diasporic communities (Díaz de León, 2022). Platforms such as Facebook, WeChat, and Telegram maintain interpersonal ties and develop support networks for both practical assistance and affective support (Gillespie et al., 2018). Third, social media platforms offer real-time updates on shelters, routes, smugglers, and visa policies (Lõrincz & Németh, 2022). This user-driven information ecosystem allows for decentralized but immediate decision-making. The reputation of migration intermediaries, once relied on offline word-of-mouth, has been fostered by online reviews.

(accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1186/s40878-025-00519-y

It’s difficult for me to imagine that for these people, digital infrastructure will be of less normative use in whatever new normals they achieve, however economically different the latter are.

Emerging counternarratives on: migrants, border controls, digital networks, remittances, child labor, COVID’s impact (Africa and Europe), and housing affordability [newly added]

It’s easy to dismiss counternarratives. “To be ‘counter’ to hegemonic planning and history is to remain within their logic, playing the same game under a different banner. To be radical, this article proposes, is to make the game itself irrelevant.” That said, the sheer number of counternarratives already in a complex world is the best indication we have of the sheer number of radical alternatives also out there.

Climate Migrants

“The discourse of apocalyptic climate change-induced mass migration is now past its prime. Particularly since the early 2010s, it has been extensively critiqued (see Hartmann 2010; Bettini 2013; Piguet, Kaenzig, and Guélat 2018; Wiegel, Boas, and Warner 2019), and the majority of migration scholarship no longer expects a linear, massive and world-transforming movement of people under climate change. Indeed, an ever-rising number of studies shows the opposite is the case: that relations between climate change and human migration are often indirect, small-scale, and taking shape in context-specific ways, influenced by a host of other socio-economic and political factors. The ways in which people move in a changing climate are diverse, and typically consist of relatively local mobilities (for overviews see: Black et al. 2011a; Foresight 2011; McLeman and Gemenne 2018; Hoffmann et al. 2020; De Sherbinin 2020).”

(accessed online at https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2066264#abstract)

Migrants into Europe

“Specifically, the current mainstream narrative is one that looks at these people as passive components of large-scale flows, driven by conflicts, migration policies and human smuggling. Even when the personal dimension is brought to the fore, it tends to be in order to depict migrants as victims at the receiving end of external forces. Whilst there is no denying that most of those crossing the Mediterranean experience violence, exploitation and are often deprived of their freedom for considerable periods of time (Albahari, 2015; D’Angelo, 2018a), it is also important to recognize and analyse their agency as individuals, as well as the complex sets of local and transnational networks that they own, develop and use before, during and after travelling to Europe.”

(accessed online at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/glob.12312)

Latin American Mobility and Border Controls

“While this spectrum defines the cognitive horizon within which most migration law operates, it misses what the infrastructuring perspective is able to show, namely that border regulation in practice is less hermetic and controlled (by states), and that those on the move have considerably more agency than is often assumed, and that the particular legal configurations that enable or disrupt mobility are constantly being infrastructured and (thereby) changed. Again, Latin America is a prime case study here as it features all the factors that allow for such legal infrastructuring.”

(accessed online at https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/qm9pr_v1)

Digital Networks

“With all the usual caveats about surveillance and manipulation by the big tech companies, digital technology has played a transformative role in the mobility and organisation of refugee, migrant and diaspora communities. People on the move make impressive use of GPS technology, increasing their capacities to anticipate danger, plan new routes, connect with family and communities at home and in their planned destinations, and liaise with sympathetic citizens in host settings. As well as for functions like sending remittances, refugee networks have turned to digital platforms to mobilise resources, share information, and advocate for their rights. For example, WhatsApp groups enable refugees to use digital tools to take control of their circumstances, particularly in regions where state infrastructure is weak or non-existent. Among Somalis, this use of digital technology has enabled a form of ‘platform kinship’, where online networks function as substitutes for state-based social welfare systems and even some functions of governance and justice – in the latter case, exclusion from a digital group provides a sanction for infraction and dereliction. In the Somali case this has been dubbed a ‘WhatsAppocracy’.”

(accessed online at https://reliefweb.int/report/world/rsc-working-paper-series-no-143-refugia-reflection-five-years-june-2025)

Remittances and the COVID Pandemic

“1.6% — The decline in global remittances, or money that foreign-born workers sent back to their home countries, to low- and middle-income nations last year. That drop was far less than the 20% decline projected by the World Bank early in the pandemic. Migrant remittances have become crucial economic lifelines as the recoveries of rich and poor countries diverge.” (accessed online at https://whatsnews.cmail20.com/t/d-e-qidpld-jdkdtdwtj-r/)

“Remittance flows to low- and middle-income countries in 2020 as a whole remained resilient, contrary to initial projections and despite having recorded a strong decline in Q2 2020. The latest available data shows remittances are estimated to have reached USD 540 billion in 2020, just 1.6% below the 2019 total of USD 548 billion. . .The decline was smaller than that recorded in 2009 during the global financial crisis. Fiscal measures in migrants’ host countries, including cash transfers and employment support programmes implemented in many large economies, the widespread use of remote work, and migrants’ commitment to continue providing a lifeline to families by cutting consumption or drawing on savings contributed to this better-than-expected outcome. However, there are important regional and intra-regional differences, including between the countries covered in this study.” (accessed online at https://www.esm.europa.eu/system/files/document/2022-11/ESM_DP_18.pdf)

Children’s Labor

“We examined a number of dimensions of children’s work in African agriculture in papers published in 2020 and 2022. It is certainly the case that some children are harmed by the work they do, and others may be forced to work, exploited or trafficked.

Yet, based on this and other work informed by extensive literature review and initial research, children who are harmed by working represent a minority of working children. And critically, neither their interests, nor those of other rural children, are necessarily served by ongoing efforts to eradicate child labour from African agriculture.”

(accessed online at https://www.ids.ac.uk/opinions/child-labour-on-farms-in-africa-its-important-to-make-a-distinction-between-whats-harmful-and-what-isnt/)

COVID Pandemic in Africa

“Viewed through the lens of the COVID-19 crisis narrative, Africa’s exceptionally low rates of COVID-19 mortality amid pervasive informality have widely been regarded as a delayed reaction, or a product of low testing capacity, masking a ‘ticking time bomb’. Yet, the statistical evidence shows that, nearly two years into the pandemic, high levels of informality remain inversely related to levels of COVID-19 mortality in Africa, and this pattern has continued to the present. The reality is, for a variety of reasons, larger informal economies are not associated with a higher level of COVID-19 mortality, either at a global level, or at the level of African sub-regions. However, social policy measures to facilitate lockdowns for precarious workers have been more problematic, supporting efforts to crowd the poor together in informal settlements and social provisioning activities.”

(accessed online at https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9877792/)

COVID Pandemic in Europe (newly added)

“In the weeks that followed the late March summit [the EU Council’s video summit of March 26 2020), a new morality tale seemed to gain shape in the public debate around governing the pandemic. According to the interviews, it took a short time for the idea of a coordinated response to emerge as consensual and for divisions to emerge on
the relative weight of grants and loans: ‘By May everyone agreed that we had to throw money at this’ (Interview #3). Pushed by southern countries, but also by the heads of EU institutions, the crisis was framed not as a result of faulty domestic politics, but as an exogenous, symmetric (if delayed) shock for which, as the letter affirmed, no country could be held responsible. As an interviewee put it:

To phrase it in a very blunt way, as if I was Dutch, it was not their fault. It was not the question of spending on booze and women as Dijsselbloem [former Eurozone President and Dutch Finance Minister] said back in 2009 or 2010. . .(Interview #3)

During the pandemic, a consensus emerged that failure of EU coordinated action – and
solidarity – would pose an existential threat to the bloc (Ferrera et al., 2021), already affected by
the long and difficult process of partial disintegration posed by Brexit. As Conte said to the
German media in April 2020, ‘we are writing history, not an economics textbook’ (Fortuna, 2020).”

(accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1017/s1755773925100295)

Housing Affordability (newly added)

“A popular view holds that declining housing affordability stems from regulations that
restrict new supply, and that deregulation will spur sufficient market-rate construction to
meaningfully improve affordability. We argue that this ‘deregulationist’ view rests upon flawed
assumptions. Through empirical simulation, we show that even a dramatic, deregulation-driven
supply expansion would take decades to generate widespread affordability in high-cost U.S.
markets. We advance an alternative explanation of declining affordability grounded in demand
structure and geography: uneven demand growth – driven by rising interpersonal and
interregional inequality – is the primary driver of declining affordability in recent decades. For
cost-burdened households, trickle-down benefits from deregulation will be insufficient and too
slow.”

(accessed online at https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/131070/1/III_Working_Paper_159.pdf

NB. In some cases, footnote numbers and internal citations have been deleted for ease of reading.

Which global crisis to choose as our #1 priority

We are living our whole lives in a state of emergency. DENISE LEVERTOV, poet; 1967

I

I could pick recent articles from any well-known media outlet. That I choose the online Guardian is not intended to single it out as worse. It’s just that these four competing examples came at around the same time there:

With so many #1 crises competing for our attention, which to choose?

II

The fact of the matter is that there is no choice. Not one of the four is at a level of granularity with which to assess whether this #1 is more hazardous than the other #1’s and under what conditions. This is particularly true as the hazards are in terms of uncertainties (i.e., their respective unknown knowns, known unknowns and unknown unknowns.)

Crises of course can be reported in short- or long-form media articles. But in the same way that no decisionmaker should want to take a policy decision on the basis of one piece of information only, so too should decisionmakers treat “this is our number 1 crisis” as one piece of the needed information. Real-time action is taken for more granular, context-based reasons. The creators of AI may have a variety of crisis scenarios about the downside of AI. But when the creators say that these scenarios pose threat-equivalent to nuclear war or worse, you need to remind yourself that they have no equivalent level of detail for the latter as they do the former.

The renewed relevance of “refusal” in rethinking social tolerance and the politics of care

Refusal as a political new beginning

Paramilitary officers stationed down Mount Alebban kept the [Moroccan] villagers in check, documenting every move up and down the mount by protestors and clandestine visitors. Signs and banners were drawn on walls and floors at the camp, and sculpted on rocks, producing the [camp] as a site of resistance and refusal: ‘We refuse the depletion of our resources’, ‘we refuse‘ to bow’, ‘this is our land’, ‘we have rights’, ‘we are not leaving’. . .

To refuse is to say no’, Carole McGranahan (2016: 319) argues. ‘Refusal marks the point of a limit having been reached: we refuse to continue on this way’ (ibid.: 320, italics in original). As a political stance, refusal does not signal the ending of the predicament but indicates a new beginning. Many studies converge in defining refusal as constitutive and generative of something new, including political spaces, communities and subjects (ibid.: 322). https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/dech.12726

And yet, refusal can entail a nonpolitical beginning

[Maurice] Blanchot contributed a short text entitled “The Refusal.” “At a certain moment, when faced with public events, we know that we must refuse. Refusal is absolute, categorical. It does not discuss or voice its reasons. This is how it remains silent and solitary, even when it affirms itself, as it should, in broad daylight”. . . Blanchot refused. He said no. A “firm, unwavering, strict” no. Blanchot not only rejected de Gaulle, but politics in general. It was what he later described as “a total critique,” directed against the techno-political order of politics and the state. . . .

Blanchot rejected de Gaulle and the false choice between civil war or the general — the civil war was already underway in Algeria and continued after de Gaulle came to power — but he also refused to formulate a political demand, a different path, a different solution. The refusal was “silent.” In this way, there was a difference between Blanchot’s refusal and other contemporary interventions (Roland Barthes, Socialisme ou Barbarie, the Situationists, etc.) that took the form of political analyses and mobilization. Blanchot did not mobilize. The rejection was, of course, a political intervention — or, at least, an intervention in politics. . . .

[But the] refusal did not give rise to a political community in any traditional sense. There was no identity, no nation, no republic, not even a working class, nor a program around which the community could unite. . .As Blanchot put it, “the refusal is accomplished neither by us or in our name, but from a very poor beginning that belongs first of all to those who cannot speak.” The refusal was, therefore, a mute statement. It pointed to a gap in representation and did not refer to any recognizable political subject. https://illwill.com/the-movement-of-refusal#fn62 (endnotes deleted)

Huh? A more complicated example of not-speaking as refusal

This aid architecture supported the burgeoning civil society to train Ettadhamun residents in the skill of ‘interpersonal communication’ (tawasul bayna al-afrad) for the purpose of managing social conflict. Yet the members of the only non-religious association in the neighbourhood of Nogra reject the liberal recommendations of their trainers and carve out a tense neighbourhood co-presence without dialogue with their Salafist neighbours. . . .

The basic principle to adopt, Sihem [the meeting facilitator] suggests, is that ‘there is no absolute truth’ (ma famash heta haqiqa thabita). Some participants nod their heads in agreement but Fethi, a young man. . ., intercepts with an objection:

Fethi: Well, there are absolute truths for some people. We live in a Salafist neighbourhood and these guys believe they enact God’s law from the time of the Prophet (peace be upon him).
Sihem: Okay yes. But you can ask them to explain their point of view. What is their rationale (logique) for following this old law to the letter?
Fethi: No, you can’t ask them for their reasons. I know these guys, they are neighbourhood kids (oulad houma). I grew up with them and went to school with them long before they became Salafist. I even have a cousin who is a Salafist. They don’t engage in conversation if someone asks them to explain their position. They just turn around and leave.
Sihem: That’s the biggest problem in our country [Tunisia]. The dictatorship wanted people to be naive and uncritical. This is why we have so much extremism among our youth. But I encourage you to keep trying to speak with your Salafist neighbours. If they leave the discussion with one single doubt about their position, then you have won. This is the power of dialogue (hiwar).
Fethi retorts: Maybe this is case with other people. But not with the Salafists. They are convinced. They want to live in God’s country. If it’s not Tunisia, it’s Syria. We want to live in a people’s democracy. If it’s not Tunisia, it’s Italy.

. . . even though theories of liberal deliberative democracy either historicize or imagine people connecting with an abstracted concept of the public through the affordances of literacy, capitalism, and technological advancement, the democracy promotion aid that I interrogate here focused on the way people spoke to people they already knew or knew enough about. This was definitely the case in communities that training programmes designated as being in conflict. In practice then, the public sphere they aimed at forging through training did not posit interlocutors as biographical strangers. It is also important to highlight that both Shaja ̔a members and Salafists deliberated with their respective publics (like-minded peers) through their associational life, mosque attendance, in cafés, and on social media. What they chose not to do was to speak to each other with a view to bridge their different worldviews. https://rai.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1467-9655.14317?af=R (my underline)

Another way of looking at this

It’s those different worldviews in “What they chose not to do was to speak to each other with a view to bridge their different worldviews” that call to mind the cultural theory of the late Aaron Wildavsky and Mary Douglas.

For them and their students, different worldviews consist of four basic cultures: hierarchist, individualist, egalitarian and fatalist. Each is defined by where people locate themselves in terms of the degree of social constraints and prescriptions they face (‘‘grid’’, high and low; strong or weak) and the degree of group cohesion with which they act (‘‘group’’, high and low; strong or weak).

“Each way of life needs each of its rivals, either to make up for its deficiencies, or to exploit, or to define itself against” Were high group/low grid egalitarians to eliminate low-group/low grid individualists, for instance, “their lack of a target to be against would remove the justification for their strong [high] group boundary and thus undermine their way of life” (Thompson, Ellis, and Wildavsky 1990, 4). Or to take the meeting participants in the Tunisian case: While in conventional culture terms they are all Muslims, they could be redescribed as differing in basic worldviews, some being more individualist (the principal questioner) or hierarchical (the facilitators) than others.

What is of interest to us here, though, is that shared tangency among the four cultures where they meet together in the two-by-two typology. “For a few individuals there is a fifth possible way of life, one in which the individual withdraws from coercive or manipulative social involvement altogether. This is the way of life of the hermit, who escapes social control by refusing to control others or to be controlled by others…” (Ibid, 7). While the terms, “withdraws” and “refusing,” capture what we have been discussing, that term, “hermit,” misleads. Those at the meeting know enough about their neighbors different worldviews to know what to withdraw from and refuse to talk about. They’ve already reached the point of knowing when worldviews are incommensurable. (If you think that latter point is depressing, keep in mind that one major reason why Wildavsky, a senior US political scientist, took such an interest in cultural theory was because it kept alive the notion of pluralism.)

So what?

Sounds a bit like advocating social tolerance, doesn’t it? Neighbors put up with what they disapprove of in the name of something like comity. There is some truth in that, but the matter’s more usefully complex.

The opposite of tolerance as just defined isn’t intolerance: In being intolerant, you’re still disapproving. The actual opposite of putting up with what one disapproves of is, as others have pointed out, indifference–not caring one way or another about whatever. And therein, I think, lies the insight.

What is going on with the neighbors is, actually, a kind of caring. Yes, it is caring one way rather than other ways, but whatever way it too is part of the public sphere. Practices of caring are of course socially constructed, but the “politics of care” is a rather narrow way of summing up the point made in the Tunisia and other cases.

In its most policy-relevant sense, this kind of caring centers on maintenance and repair of the public sphere. It is knowing enough about others to know that saying to them, “Good God, man, get a grip; we’re adults here,” gets you nowhere, while knowing all the time that these ensuing areas of non-discussion leave the remaining public sphere in need of constant repair. Some might call this repair arising from refusal, tact (see Russell 2018, 1 – 11).

It’s all well and good to insist that efforts to decouple, disengage or otherwise detach from the political is itself political. But that is hardly the human starting point for refusal: It is, after all, the planet that refuses to prioritize us (Stevenson 2017, 106). We label this “nature’s indifference,” but only because we refuse any denial that our priorities matter, and matter well beyond caring one way or another.


(Other sources:

Russell, D. (2018). Tact. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Stevenson, A. 2017. About Poems and how poems are not about. Newcastle/Bloodaxe Poetry Series #16. Northumberland, UK: Bloodaxe Books.

Thompson, M., R. Ellis, and A. Wildavsky 1990. Cultural Theory. Boulder, Colo.: Westview.)

As the dimensions of a two-by-two typology are meant to be independent of each other, what then to make of this figure?

In the above figure, the cost of a disturbance and the cost of its response (the arrows on the right and top] mirror the typology’s horizontal and vertical dimensions (on the left and bottom). As the disturbance severity grows larger, for example, so too is its parallel disturbance cost shown to increase.

Yet methodologically the dimensions of the degree of response change and the severity of disturbance are to be independent of each other. Consequently, as the two costs are manifestly correlated and interdependent, the immediate implication is that the two dimensions are not in fact independent.

So what? Well, one thing this means is that the cost ranking, in particular, from low to high of cope, adapt and transform resilience strategies is not presumptively as shown. That is, you can imagine (if not identify) cases where incremental adapting was less costly than indefinite coping or where transformation was not radically (more) costly.


Source

Roig Boixeda, P., E. Corbera, and J. Loos (2025). “Navigating a global crisis: impacts, responses, resilience, and the missed opportunity of African protected areas during the COVID-19 pandemic.” Ecology and Society 30(4):28. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-16352-300428