skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Environment: Critical Reflections on a Concept
Is the environment worth the effort? The environment often seems far too easy, far too obligatory, and far too footloose a concept to warrant serious attention. It somehow evokes both bookish abstraction and populist rousing, it cobbles together science and advocacy only to blunt their conjoined insights, and it continues to elude fixed definition even while basking in stately recognition. The banalities of this mess can give the impression that the environment has no real history, no critical content, and heralds no true rupture of thought and practice. The environment, in the eyes of some, is mere advertising. If there is a story to the environment, others suggest, it’s largely one of misplaced materialism, middle class aesthetics, and first world problems. Such has been the sentiment, such has been the dismissal. In the rush to move past the environment, few have attended to the history of the concept. This is curious as the constitution of the environment remains a surprisingly recent achievement. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the environment shifted from an erudite shorthand for the influence of context to the premier diagnostic of a troubling new world of induced precarity (whether called Umwelt, l’environnement, medio ambiente, huanjing, mazingira, or lingkungan). The environment – a term “once so infrequent and now becoming so universal,” as the director of the Nature Conservatory commented in 1970 (Nicholson: 5) – soon came to monopolize popular and scientific understandings of damaged life and the states’ obligation to it worldwide. Even as the environment has been immensely productive for research and policy in the following decades, the formation of the environment itself remains understudied. In the United States, this is particularly clear in two aspects of the environment: 1) the role of fossil fuels in making the environment visible, factual, and politically operable; and 2) the precocious if weightless critique authorized by the environment.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1832973
PAR ID:
10133815
Author(s) / Creator(s):
Date Published:
Journal Name:
IASK working papers
Issue:
64
ISSN:
2676-8895
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Despite little evidence of efficacy, public information campaigns have been a popular strategy for deterring migration. Advertising campaigns to dissuade would-be migrants from leaving home or seeking asylum are increasingly prevalent around the world, and Australia has devoted millions of dollars to these campaigns. Perhaps the most famous is the campaign launched in 2014, with the message: “No Way. You will not make Australia home.” In this article, I develop the concept of enforcement infrastructure to illustrate the relationships, technologies, actors, and policies that together facilitate enforcement of Australia’s borders and produce campaigns such as the “No Way” campaign. Just as infrastructure facilitates the production of value in other contexts, so too does the creation of enforcement infrastructure produce different types of value in the context of enforcement. Mapping the enforcement infrastructure highlights the different types of value produced by this constellation of actors, from profitable market research to reinforcing colonial logics of exclusion. 
    more » « less
  2. Statistical learning (SL) is typically assumed to be a core mechanism by which organisms learn covarying structures and recurrent patterns in the environment, with the main purpose of facilitating processing of expected events. Within this theoretical framework, the environment is viewed as relatively stable, and SL ‘captures’ the regularities therein through implicit unsupervised learning by mere exposure. Focusing primarily on language— the domain in which SL theory has been most influential—we review evidence that the environment is far from fixed: it is dynamic, in continual flux, and learners are far from passive absorbers of regularities; they interact with their environments, thereby selecting and even altering the patterns they learn from. We therefore argue for an alternative cognitive architecture, where SL serves as a subcomponent of an information foraging (IF) system. IF aims to detect and assimilate novel recurrent patterns in the input that deviate from randomness, for which SL supplies a baseline. The broad implications of this viewpoint and their relevance to recent debates in cognitive neuroscience are discussed. 
    more » « less
  3. One of the most popular existing models for task allocation in ant colonies is the so-called threshold-based task allocation model. Here, each ant has a fixed, and possibly distinct, threshold. Each task has a fixed demand which represents the number of ants required to perform the task.1Thestimulusanant receives for a task is defined as the demand of the task minus the number of ants currently working at the task. An ant joins a task if the stimulus of the task exceeds the ant’s threshold.A large body of results has studied this model for over four decades; however, most of the theoretical works focuses on the study of two tasks. Interestingly, no work in this line of research shows that the number of ants working at a task eventually converges towards the demand nor does any work bound the distance to the demands over time.In this work, we study precisely this convergence. Our results show that while the threshold-based model works fine in the case of two tasks (for certain distributions of thresholds); the threshold model no longer works for the case of more than two tasks. In fact, we show that there is no possible setting of thresholds that yields a satisfactory deficit (demand minus number of ants working on the task) for each task.This is in stark contrast to other theoretical results in the same setting [CDLN14] that rely on state-machines, i.e., some form of small memory together with probabilistic decisions. Note that, the classical threshold model assumes no states or memory (apart from the bare minimum number of states required to encode which task an ant is working on). The resulting task allocation is near-optimal and much better than what is possible using joining thresholds. This remains true even in a noisy environment [DLM+18]. While the deficit is not the only important metric, it is conceivably one of the most important metrics to guarantee the survival of a colony: for example if the number of workers assigned for foraging stays significantly below the demand, then starvation may occur. Moreover, our results do not imply that ants do not use thresholds; we merely argue that relying on thresholds yields a considerable worse performance. 
    more » « less
  4. Liwendowski, H. (Ed.)
    The electrons and atoms inside molecules can rearrange rapidly during photoexcitation or collisions, moving angstroms in a few femtoseconds or less. This non-classical many-body quantum evolution is far too small and too fast to be resolved in any imaging microscope, but if we could film it, what should we expect to see? New tools based on ultrafast lasers, electron accelerators, and x-ray free-electron lasers have now begun to record this motion with increasing detail, and for a growing array of atomic and molecular systems. Here I will attempt to answer the question, "So what?" What have we learned, and how are molecular movies guiding us toward future discoveries in AMO physics? *Much of this work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES), Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences Division (CSGB). Other work described here has been supported by the National Science Foundation 
    more » « less
  5. Abstract The United States has witnessed waves of immigration throughout its history, with the current immigration policies regulated by the reforms enacted under President Lyndon Johnson in 1965. Immigrants now come from all over the world, with China and India supplying the largest numbers in science and engineering (S&E) fields. Although the US is seen as coping rather successfully with immigration from Europe, that is not the case with Asian immigration. Assimilation theorists have long argued that Asian immigrants face problems in adapting to the American culture and lifestyles; in contrast, multicultural theorists have hailed cultural diversity brought by Asian immigrants. Ethnic organizations can play an integral role in Asian immigrants’ adaptation and integration in the United States. Utilizing 40 in-depth interviews of Indian immigrant engineers working in the US technology companies, the present study examines if they belong to ethnic associations. If yes, why do they feel a need to belong to these associations? If no, why not? It further sheds light on their need to belong to such associations. The findings show that the need to belong to Indian associations varied with the stage of their lives, which can be depicted as a U-shaped curve. 
    more » « less