Bunkers and Other Risk Assessments: (Im-)Material Calculations of Military and Natural Disasters
Tuesday, 8 May 201217:00 - 19:00
Location: CRASSH, Seminar room SG2, Ground floor
Dr Michael Guggenheim (Centre for the Study of Invention and Social Process, Goldsmiths University of London)
What is a risk assessment? How can a bunker be a risk assessment?
Previous literature on risk, risk calculation and preparedness has
either focused on different forms of preparedness or on how risk
calculations as statistical devices are performed. This talk centres
on the implicit and material dimensions of risk calculations through
forms of preparedness. I argue that risk assessments are not just
formal ways of calculating risks but implicit and often material
practices. As such, implicit and material risk assessments were always
made by societies which decided to prepare for some disasters but not
others and which found specific preparation technologies such as
building granaries or constructing houses in a way that makes them
more likely to withstand earthquakes or avalanches. But in modern
states organisations such as civil protection base their operations on
these risk assessments as well. In my talk I will trace how the
operations of civil defence organisations have shifted from focusing
on nuclear war until the 1980s to natural disasters and all hazards
approaches. Comparing Switzerland and the UK, I will show that
calculative risk assessments were impossible because of the different
qualities of the disasters and that implicit and material risk
assessments were instrumental for changes in organizational policy.
A seminar organised by Between Civilisation and Militarisation group (CRASSH) in conjunction with the Twentieth Century Think Tank group (Dept. of the History and Philosophy of Science)
Open to all. No registration required.
Part of Between Civilisation and Militarisation Group, series.
For more information about the group please click the link on the right hand of this page
