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ID145979
Title ProperHow the world learned to stop worrying and love failure
Other Title Informationbig data, resilience and emergent causality
LanguageENG
AuthorChandler, David
Summary / Abstract (Note)In modernity, failure was the discourse of critique, today, it is increasingly the discourse of power: failure has changed its allegiances. Over the last two decades, failure has been enfolded into discourses of power, facilitating the development of new policy approaches. Foremost among governing approaches that seek to include and to govern through failure is that of resilience. This article seeks to reflect upon how the understanding of failure has become transformed in this process, particularly linking this transformation to the radical appreciation of contingency and of the limits to instrumental cause-and-effect approaches to rule. Whereas modernity was shaped by a contestation over failure as an epistemological boundary, under conditions of contingency and complexity there appears to be a new consensus on failure as an ontological necessity. This problematic ‘ontological turn’ is illustrated using examples of changing approaches to risks, especially anthropogenic understandings of environmental threats, formerly seen as ‘natural’.
`In' analytical NoteMillennium: Journal of International Studies Vol. 44, No.3; Jun 2016: p.391-410
Journal SourceMillennium: Journal of International Studies 2016-06 44, 3
Key WordsResilience ;  Bruno Latour ;  Ulrich Beck ;  Big Data ;  Emergent Causality