More dates

Payment plans

How does it work?

  • Reserve your order today and pay over time in regular, automatic payments.
  • You’ll receive your tickets and items once the final payment is complete.
  • No credit checks or third-party accounts - just simple, secure, automatic payments using your saved card.

"Building Resilience or Reinforcing Vulnerability?" with Dr Justin See

Share
The Lab - Room 213, Arts West Building (West Wing)
Parkville VIC, Australia
Add to calendar

Thu, 18 Sep, 3pm - 4pm AEST

Event description

The ADS Seminar Series Committee is proud to present "Building Resistance or Reinforcing Vulnerability?", a talk by Dr Justin See (University of Melbourne).

Associate Professor Brooke Wilmsen (La Trobe University) will be discussant for the event.

Justin's seminar will be followed by drinks and conversation at University House. Please note that this is an in-person only event.

Building resilience or reinforcing vulnerability? The enduring allure of hard infrastructure as adaptation

 

This presentation examines a climate buffer infrastructural paradox: that, despite an expansive archive documenting the limits of hard structural solutions, they retain their allure as a popular technical solution to protect against climatic hazards. The Leyte Tide Embankment Project (LTEP) in the Philippines, also known as “The Great Wall of Leyte”, is one of dozens of climate buffer megaprojects proliferating globally that promise to protect coastal zones from increasingly devastating climate hazards. Using the LTEP as a case study, I ask: what and who drives and sustains hard infrastructure as climate adaptation, and through what processes? Working with an interdisciplinary group of scholars, we conducted 45 in-depth interviews with project proponents, government officials, academics, practitioners and community members, as well as reviewed relevant documents to unravel the relations of power and politics that position the project as an effective and popular adaptation strategy. Through the lenses of urban political ecology and infrastructure studies, we argue that the LTEP derives its allure from the infrastructural politics of (in)visibility: the strategic deployment of hard infrastructures as visual tools to advance political agendas. These politics selectively highlight elements that symbolise protection and progress while obscuring aspects that fail to meet technical and aesthetic standards. The infrastructural politics of (in)visibility are shaped by multi-scalar power dynamics linking global and local interests that are propelled by a constellation of actors with diverse agendas and become active sites of negotiation and contestation where communities can organise and voice dissent.

Dr Justin See is a lecturer in Development Studies at the School of Social and Political Sciences (University of Melbourne) whose research critically examines climate adaptation interventions, including planned relocation, climate buffer infrastructures, and community-driven climate experiments. His work examines how structural inequalities shape adaptation processes and outcomes, and foregrounds diverse pathways toward more just and transformative forms of adaptation. He is a former Research Fellow at the Sydney Environment Institute (University of Sydney) and at the Centre for Sustainable Communities (University of Canberra).

 

Powered by

Tickets for good, not greed Humanitix dedicates 100% of profits from booking fees to charity

The Lab - Room 213, Arts West Building (West Wing)
Parkville VIC, Australia