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What is the ‘Social’ in Climate Change Research? A Case Study on Scientific Representations from Chile
Authors:Billi  Marco  Blanco  Gustavo  Urquiza  Anahí
Institution:1.Center for Climate and Resilience Research (CR)2, Av. Blanco Encalada 2002, piso 4, Santiago de Chile, Chile
;2.Escuela de Gobierno y Centro de Estudios Modelos de Crisis, Universidad Adolfo Ibá?ez, Diagonal Las Torres 2640, Pe?alolén, Santiago de Chile, Chile
;3.Centro de Investigación en Dinámica de Ecosistemas Marinos de Altas Latitudes, Universidad Austral de Chile, Campus Isla Teja, Casilla 567, Valdivia, Chile
;4.Instituto de Historia y Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Austral de Chile, Campus Isla Teja, Casilla 567, Valdivia, Chile
;5.Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de Chile, Av. Capitán Ignacio Carrera Pinto 1045, ?u?oa, Santiago de Chile, Chile
;
Abstract:

Over the last few decades climate change has been gaining importance in international scientific and political debates. However, the social sciences, especially in Latin America, have only lately become interested in the subject and their approach is still vague. Scientific understanding of global environmental change and the process of designing public policies to face them are characterized by their complexity as well as by epistemic and normative uncertainties. This makes it necessary to problematize the way in which research efforts understand ‘the social’ of climate change. How do ‘the climate’ and ‘the social’ interpenetrate as scientific objects? What does the resulting field look like? Is the combination capable of promoting reflexivity and collaboration on the issue, or does it merely become dispersed with diffuse boundaries? Our paper seeks to answer these and other related questions using Chile as a case study and examining peer-reviewed scientific research on the topic. By combining in-depth qualitative content analysis of each paper with a statistical meta-analysis, we were able to: characterize the key content and forms of such literature; identify divisions and patterns within it; and, discuss some factors and trends that may help explain these. We conclude that the literature displays two competing trends: while it is inclined to become fragmented beyond the scope of the ‘mitigation’ black box, it also tends to cluster along the lines of methodological distinctions traditionally contested within the social sciences. This, in turn, highlights the persistence of disciplinary divisions within an allegedly interdisciplinary field.

Keywords:
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