Saturday, 16 November 2013

Book review


Climate Politics And The Climate Movement In Australia
Verity Burgmann and Hans Baer

Melbourne University Press
ISBN: (Paperback)9780522861334
ISBN: (E-Book)9780522861341
15/Jun/2012
399 pages
Paperback $59.99
E-Book $49.99

This is a book about activists by activists and for activists. The authors are both significant scholars with impressive records of research and publication in the social sciences but they have somehow found time to combine their academic careers with the pursuit of social and political causes well beyond the narrow confines of university life. In a sense this book is an example of action anthropology at its best in that it combines well-documented participatory research with a resounding call to action and a clearly formulated concluding section on what they see as the best approach to the politics of combatting dangerous climate change. The book was launched by Adam Bandt, still the solitary Green in the House of Representatives, and he praised the book for its comprehensive analysis of climate politics in Australia and especially for its ambition to go beyond analysis and suggest a program of effective action. The authors are upfront in their political stance and in their enthusiasm to promote the cause of climate action and contribute to the building of a powerful climate movement in this country.

I should make a full disclosure and declare my own interest in the book. One of the authors is a close friend and I am slightly acquainted with the other. I have great admiration for both of them and for the energy, intelligence and courage that they bring to their work. They are people who walk the walk and, by contrast with some of the high priests of the climate movement, they do their very best to ensure that their lifestyles reflect their concerns about the climate. However, my friend describes me as a 'climate agnostic' and has spent many long hours trying to convert me to what he calls climate realism. I think that he was hoping that after reading this book I might shift from my agnosticism. In fact, I have shifted but probably not in the direction that he hoped. It has always been clear to me that the climate is changing and has doubtless been doing so since the planet was formed. It also seems clear that it is not changing now in the way that was predicted by some of the models of change that were developed in the first decade of this century. I can accept that humans contribute in some way to climate change inasmuch as we are part of the biosphere but I don't see compelling evidence that human activity is a major driver of global warming. I am certainly doubtful that we can halt the warming (or cooling) of the planet by limiting the amount of carbon dioxide that we produce. That seems way too mechanistic an approach to an incredibly fluid and complex phenomenon like the climate. A better approach might be to think of adapting to probable changes and getting prepared to maximise the benefits of possible changes in the climate. I just don't believe we have the capacity to halt climate change and to act as a sort of planetary thermostat even if that were desirable.

The book begins by asserting that climate change is the hottest topic of the twenty-first century. This is a nice play on words but others might argue that there are many hot topics and that, for instance, the issue of refugees and asylum seekers is a more pressing concern. I guess the authors could suggest that climate change exacerbates many other social problems and is likely to generate a tidal wave of refugees fleeing from rising sea levels, fires, drought and flooding. I am not convinced that addressing climate change is the best way of dealing with other issues like poverty, migration and indigenous health. If, on the other hand, you believe that climate change is a priority then this is the book for you. It lays out the options clearly and is not just a call to action but also provides a persuasive strategy. I'm sorry to confess that I remain agnostic about anthropogenic global warming but I do believe that this a book worth buying, reading and keeping on your shelf. Actually, as it is available as an ebook I'm sure the authors would rather you purchased the electronic version for its smaller carbon footprint.

George Silberbauer at Bells Road


Obituary of George Silberbauer


George Bertrand Silberbauer was born on the 19th of March 1931 in Pretoria, South Africa. His father was a farmer who had studied agriculture at Cambridge. He was an only child and did his schooling in Pretoria. He studied at the University of Stellenbosh, doing forestry followed by majors in Zulu, Sotho and African Law and minors in anthropology and Roman Dutch Law. He began military service with the South African Air Force in 1950, first as a navigator and then a pilot flying fighter aircraft (including Spitfires) and then moved to a maritime squadron flying Venturas, Sunderlands and Dakotas for 3 years. Leaving the air force he moved to London where he completed a law degree at the London School of Economics. He subsequently joined the British Colonial Service and was posted to the Bechuanaland Protectorate after a year of training in London. He was sent to Maun in Bechuanaland (now Botswana) as District Officer for 3 years before being promoted to District Commissioner, the youngest in the history of the Colonial Service. He was sent to the University of the Witwatersrand to do honours in social anthropology (with Max Marwick) and linguistics (with Des Cole) preparatory to beginning the great Bushman survey which formed the basis of his most important contribution to anthropology. For the duration of the survey he was based in Ghanzi but travelled extensively throughout the central Kalahari Desert. One of his lasting contributions was the declaration of the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, envisioned as a homeland for the San (Bushmen) people where they could continue to pursue a hunter-gatherer way of life vital to their survival as a people and a culture. The posting wound up in 1967 when the Colonial Service departed, as a prelude to the country’s independence. George had started a PhD at the University of the Witwatersrand supervised by John Blacking. The focus of his thesis (hunter gatherer socioecology) grew out of his interaction with the Bushmen over more than a decade of the survey and his work as a District Commissioner. The PhD was completed at Monash University with Max Marwick supervising after he took a job as senior lecturer in anthropology at Monash. He told me he got the job when a telegram from Marwick arrived saying “You have been appointed as senior lecturer. Please apply!” He came to Monash in 1967 and lectured on the Bushman and kinship, politics and religion. He and his family which now included two young daughters moved to Upper Beaconsfield in 1972. George joined the local fire brigade when he arrived at Upper Beaconsfield (during the second world war he had trained as an auxiliary fire fighter and was involved in fighting grass and forest fires in South Africa). In a tragic and ironic twist the Ash Wednesday fires of 1983 razed the family home in Upper Beaconsfield. He retired from Monash in 1996 at the age 65. He continued to be involved with the Country Fire Authority and worked as fire fighter and consultant (his particular interest was the investigation of bush fires and community recovery after disaster). He moved to a house in the country near Korumburra in 1993 and spent his later years writing and advising colleagues worldwide. From 2004-06 George again acted on behalf of Bushmen people as an expert advisor and witness in the successful case before the Botswana High Court to reinstate traditional settlement and hunting by the Bushmen in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. He died on the 29th of August 2013 at the age of 82. He is survived by his daughters Letitia, Victoria and Celeste, and his granddaughters Sophia and Claire. George Silberbauer's contribution to anthropology in general and to Bushman Studies in particular was significant and multi-faceted and this is not the place for a broad assessment. Let me conclude then with this quote from Alan Barnard's book on Anthropology and the Bushman: “It is hard to know what makes a great ethnography. Bushman studies have been blessed with many, but Silberbauer's (1981) Hunter and Habitat in the Central Kalahari Desert remains my own favourite.”