Fuzzy boundaries: Simulation and expertise in bushfire prediction
Date
Authors
Neale, Timothy
May, Daniel
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Sage Publications Inc
Abstract
It is becoming apparent that changes in climatic and demographic distributions are increasing
the frequency and social impact of many ‘natural hazards’, including wildfires (or ‘bushfires’
in Australia). Across many national contexts, the governmental agencies legally responsible
for ‘managing’ such hazards been called upon to provide greater foresight into the potential
consequences, occurrence and behaviour of these dynamic phenomena. These conditions,
of growing occurrence and expectation, have given rise to new anticipatory regimes, tools,
practitioners and expertise tasked with revealing near and distant fiery futures. Drawing on
interviews with Fire Behaviour Analysts from across the fire-prone continent of Australia, this
article examines how their expertise has emerged and become institutionalized, exploring how its
embedding in bushfire management agencies reveals cultural boundaries and tensions. This article
provides important insight into the human and nonhuman infrastructures enrolled in predicting
and managing landscape fires, foregrounding the wider social and political implications of these
infrastructures and how their ‘fuzzy boundaries’ are negotiated by practitioners. Such empirical
studies of expertise in practice are also, we suggest, necessary to the continued refinement
of existing critiques of expertise as an individual capacity, derived from science and serving
established social orders.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Social Studies of Science
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description