An ethnography of U.S. nuclear waste policy, and how to understand contemporary societies’ attempts to establish “good” relations with the future.

Contemporary societies are often criticized for their incapacity to account for the long term. Nuclear Remains asks what happens when a society decides to think long term—examining the US efforts to hold present and distant futures together.

Focusing on the case of the US nuclear waste program, Başak Saraç-Lesavre argues that no temporal orientation is inherently ethical; what matters is how temporal orientations construed as desirable get translated into action.

To analyze how concerned actors seek to establish “good” relations between past, present, and future, Saraç-Lesavre introduces the problem of rendez-vous framework—tracing how temporal gaps are identified and resolutions formulated and inscribed in different forms of arrangements. Her multisited ethnographic research takes readers from Congressional debates over funding—to reconcile accountability to and immunity from politics—to Carlsbad, New Mexico, where local actors have been trying to keep their community attached to nuclear futures.

Over time, these arrangements face tests. They are barely ever considered au rendez-vous when meeting contemporary conditions, yet they produce significant effects: material, economic, political, and moral relations, and ultimately, societies themselves. This framework applies broadly to cases where temporal relations are at stake: climate change adaptation, government of commons, pension schemes, energy transition, and care systems.
Introduction
Part 1 Valuing Far Futures in the Time of Nuclear Economy
Chapter 1 Containing the Almost Indefinite Financial Responsibility of Nuclear Waste in a Unit Charge
Chapter 2 Enacting 'Good' Temporal Relations in a Rate
Part 2 Reconciling Project Time and Budgetary Times: The Politics of Budgetary Action
Chapter 3 The Nuclear Waste Fund: Immune from and yet Accountable to Political Institutions
Chapter 4 Death by Budget: The Abandonment of Yucca Mountain during a 'Nuclear Renaissance'
Part 3 Undertaking the Nation's Nuclear Waste Futures in Enterprise Form
Chapter 5 Valuing Nuclear Waste Futures: The Making of America's Nuclear Corridor
Chapter 6 Entrepreneurial Displacements: Yes in Our Backyard and the Reimagining of Nuclear Waste Futures
Conclusion
Bibliography
Notes
Başak Saraç-Lesavre is Assistant Professor in the Center for the Sociology of Organizations at Science Po, Paris, as well as an Affiliate at the University of Saint Andrew’s Center for Energy Ethics. She was awarded the French Fulbright Fellowship and was a Visiting Fellow in the Department of the History of Science at Harvard University.

About

An ethnography of U.S. nuclear waste policy, and how to understand contemporary societies’ attempts to establish “good” relations with the future.

Contemporary societies are often criticized for their incapacity to account for the long term. Nuclear Remains asks what happens when a society decides to think long term—examining the US efforts to hold present and distant futures together.

Focusing on the case of the US nuclear waste program, Başak Saraç-Lesavre argues that no temporal orientation is inherently ethical; what matters is how temporal orientations construed as desirable get translated into action.

To analyze how concerned actors seek to establish “good” relations between past, present, and future, Saraç-Lesavre introduces the problem of rendez-vous framework—tracing how temporal gaps are identified and resolutions formulated and inscribed in different forms of arrangements. Her multisited ethnographic research takes readers from Congressional debates over funding—to reconcile accountability to and immunity from politics—to Carlsbad, New Mexico, where local actors have been trying to keep their community attached to nuclear futures.

Over time, these arrangements face tests. They are barely ever considered au rendez-vous when meeting contemporary conditions, yet they produce significant effects: material, economic, political, and moral relations, and ultimately, societies themselves. This framework applies broadly to cases where temporal relations are at stake: climate change adaptation, government of commons, pension schemes, energy transition, and care systems.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Part 1 Valuing Far Futures in the Time of Nuclear Economy
Chapter 1 Containing the Almost Indefinite Financial Responsibility of Nuclear Waste in a Unit Charge
Chapter 2 Enacting 'Good' Temporal Relations in a Rate
Part 2 Reconciling Project Time and Budgetary Times: The Politics of Budgetary Action
Chapter 3 The Nuclear Waste Fund: Immune from and yet Accountable to Political Institutions
Chapter 4 Death by Budget: The Abandonment of Yucca Mountain during a 'Nuclear Renaissance'
Part 3 Undertaking the Nation's Nuclear Waste Futures in Enterprise Form
Chapter 5 Valuing Nuclear Waste Futures: The Making of America's Nuclear Corridor
Chapter 6 Entrepreneurial Displacements: Yes in Our Backyard and the Reimagining of Nuclear Waste Futures
Conclusion
Bibliography
Notes

Author

Başak Saraç-Lesavre is Assistant Professor in the Center for the Sociology of Organizations at Science Po, Paris, as well as an Affiliate at the University of Saint Andrew’s Center for Energy Ethics. She was awarded the French Fulbright Fellowship and was a Visiting Fellow in the Department of the History of Science at Harvard University.

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