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Carbon classified? Unpacking heterogeneous relations inscribed into corporate carbon emissions
[journal article]
Abstract How does a corporation know it emits carbon? Acquiring such knowledge starts with the classification of environmentally relevant consumption information. This paper visits the corporate location at which this underlying element for their knowledge is assembled to give rise to carbon emissions. Using... view more
How does a corporation know it emits carbon? Acquiring such knowledge starts with the classification of environmentally relevant consumption information. This paper visits the corporate location at which this underlying element for their knowledge is assembled to give rise to carbon emissions. Using an actor-network theory (ANT) framework, the aim is to investigate the actors who bring together the elements needed to classify their carbon emission sources and unpack the heterogeneous relations drawn on. Based on an ethnographic study of corporate agents of ecological modernisation over a period of 13 months, this paper provides an exploration of three cases of enacting classification. Drawing on ANT, we problematise the silencing of a range of possible modalities of consumption facts and point to the ontological ethics involved in such performances. In a context of global warming and corporations construing themselves as able and suitable to manage their emissions, and, additionally, given that the construction of carbon emissions has performative consequences, the underlying practices need to be declassified, i.e. opened for public scrutiny. Hence the paper concludes by arguing for a collective engagement with the ontological politics of carbon.... view less
Keywords
emission; corporate social responibility; environmental sociology; environmental management; ethnography; political economy; actor-network-theory; enterprise; climate change
Classification
Ecology, Environment
Free Keywords
carbon dioxide; carbon emissions; carbon accounting; environmental accounting; corporate environmental management
Document language
English
Publication Year
2012
Page/Pages
p. 138-161
Journal
Ephemera : critical dialogues on organization, 12 (2012) 1/2
Issue topic
The atmosphere business
ISSN
1473-2866
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0