Correspondence from the Unseen: Prismatic Agri-environmental Governance in the Anthropocene
| dc.contributor.author | Carcamo, Pablo | en |
| dc.contributor.committeechair | Gardezi, Syed Maaz Hassaan | en |
| dc.contributor.committeechair | Harrison, Anthony Kwame | en |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Ritchie, Liesel Ashley | en |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Breslau, Daniel | en |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | McCumber, Andrew | en |
| dc.contributor.department | Sociology | en |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2026-06-03T08:00:35Z | en |
| dc.date.available | 2026-06-03T08:00:35Z | en |
| dc.date.issued | 2026-06-02 | en |
| dc.description.abstract | Climate change is transforming agriculture and the governance frameworks responsible for it. Adaptation programs, efficiency measures, and technical interventions are offered as solutions, but across many settings they fail to address the conditions that farmers, ecosystems, and animals actually inhabit. This dissertation examines three such settings, drawing on political ontology's concept of the anthropo-not-seen to name what governance categories are structurally unable to perceive, and developing correspondence as the positive term for engaging what governance currently forecloses. Chapter 1 analyzes U.S. nutrient governance and practices and shows how metrological regimes, the arrangements through which environmental flows are turned into calculable variables, produce certain realities as governable while foreclosing others, including soil life as a living ecological community. Chapter 2 draws on ethnographic observations and interviews in Chile's Limarí Valley during the ongoing megadrought, where farmers describe a threshold crossing from chronic adversity into ontological breakdown, and where governance is present and active but cannot perceive the collapse of the configuration that made farming viable. Considering drought as a disaster in the making, the chapter extends the sociological concept of recreancy into slow-onset climate contexts and proposes failure to correspond as an analytical concept. Chapter 3 builds on ethnographic fieldwork at a farm animal sanctuary and argues that empathy, developed through bodily participation in care labor, produces knowledge about animal subjectivity that governance frameworks organized around animals as resources and emissions sources structurally cannot hold. The concluding chapter proposes prismatic governance as an orientation for agri-environmental governance in the Anthropocene, one that accepts ontological multiplicity and works with it. Under conditions where governance categories cannot perceive the situations communities, species, and ecosystems inhabit, the harms of climate change fall unevenly and the frameworks meant to address them reproduce the injustices they were supposed to resolve. | en |
| dc.description.abstractgeneral | Climate change is reshaping agriculture, and the institutions responsible for managing the relationship between farming and the environment are struggling to keep up. Programs and policies continue to be offered as solutions, but in many places they do not address the conditions farmers, ecosystems, and animals actually face. This dissertation studies three particular places where climate change is changing how agriculture is governed. In the United States, it examines how policy tools meant to reduce agricultural pollution measure some things carefully while missing others, including the living soil that farmers and scientists are learning to take seriously. In Chile's Limarí Valley, where a decade-long drought has transformed what farming can even mean, it follows farmers who describe a crisis that governance programs keep responding to as if it were a temporary problem. At a farm animal sanctuary, the third chapter describes the kind of knowledge that develops through daily care work with animals, and asks why this knowledge cannot enter the frameworks through which agricultural animals are governed. Across these three studies, the dissertation argues that governance often fails even when institutions are present and active, because the categories they work with cannot register what is actually happening on the ground. The concluding chapter proposes prismatic governance as a way of rethinking environmental policy, one that accepts that reality under climate change is more varied and more alive than current frameworks allow, and that institutions need new ways of perceiving what they are responsible for managing. When governance cannot see what is actually happening, the harms of climate change fall unevenly on some communities, species, and ecosystems more than others, and the policies meant to help often end up reinforcing the unfairness they were supposed to address. | en |
| dc.description.degree | Doctor of Philosophy | en |
| dc.format.medium | ETD | en |
| dc.identifier.other | vt_gsexam:46186 | en |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/10919/143233 | en |
| dc.language.iso | en | en |
| dc.publisher | Virginia Tech | en |
| dc.rights | Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International | en |
| dc.rights.uri | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ | en |
| dc.subject | Climate Change | en |
| dc.subject | Agriculture | en |
| dc.subject | Governance | en |
| dc.subject | Sustainability | en |
| dc.subject | Ontology | en |
| dc.title | Correspondence from the Unseen: Prismatic Agri-environmental Governance in the Anthropocene | en |
| dc.type | Dissertation | en |
| thesis.degree.discipline | Sociology | en |
| thesis.degree.grantor | Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University | en |
| thesis.degree.level | doctoral | en |
| thesis.degree.name | Doctor of Philosophy | en |
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