Valuations and its problems: How economists value the environment

Kristin Asdal speaks on Valuations and its problems in the STIS Seminar series at University of Edinburgh

The abstract for the talk is as follows:
 
In a series of noteworthy papers, the Berkeley scholar Marion Fourcade  has analyzed the means by which economists and economics value the environment. In her analysis of various so called contingent valuation techniques she has not only traced these means, but also taken an interest in the relation between these techniques and the object, nature, upon which these techniques work. In related ways, this paper asks how economists value nature. But rather than analyzing contingent valuation techniques in relation to contemporary environmental issues, this paper is concerned with how such techniques emerged as the economist’s response to environmental problems in the first place. That is, the paper is concerned with how economists, when engaging with environmental problems, turned to ‘the market’. Whereas Fourcade takes the courtroom as her point of departure, the current paper explores ‘valuation work’ from within one distinct office, namely a Ministry of Finance. In doing so the paper is concerned with the setting in relation to which a profession works, and the little tools such settings work by. Hence, I am not only interested in the distinct tools of economics, but the little tools of bureaucracy more broadly. This is crucial I argue, if we are to understand how economics are enacted, or are performative, in practice – not the least if we are to understand how markets are made and modified from within bureaucratic offices. In pursuing this analysis, the objective is simultaneously to address, and contribute to solving, what I argue are a set of core problems or challenges in the increasingly rich field of valuation studies.
 
I will start out by locating these problems, and continue demonstrating through my empirical material why these problems need to be addressed if we are to be able to answer in any good way the question I am asking: How is it that economists value the environment? The problems are related, first, to how we choose to employ the notion ‘valuation’ and second to how we relate, or not, to the relation between the object upon which the relevant valuations are supposed to act, and the devices or tools that perform the valuations.
Published Mar. 22, 2017 10:56 AM - Last modified Mar. 22, 2017 10:56 AM