After my presentation
Jennifer Gabrys asked me a question. She wanted to know whether the way I was working with the issue of the double social life of methods meant I was also claiming that different forms of evidencing might mobilize different forms of politics or practices in relation to electronic waste. To summarize my spontaneous response at the time: yes. Here are a some additional thoughts.
Another part of Jennifer's question was about the status of 'indeterminacy' in my presentation and the work it is developing. She wanted to know whether part of the point, as it were, is to assert indeterminacy of e-waste as waste. Indeterminacy for its own sake is not what I am after because it is too easy and too dangerous. Asserting indeterminacy and leaving it at that shapes the exchange into basically the same form that climate science/climate denial talk takes. We cannot foreclose on action because we don't have
certain knowledge. The only way we will have certain knowledge of climate change is after it has happened. It is this kind of fundamental indeterminacy with which we must deal - we must find ways to act
in spite (or perhaps because of) that indeterminacy.
Jennifer has a fantastic idea in her book,
Digital Rubbish: A Natural History of Electronics, where she writes that because some form of remainder always occurs (be it in raw material extraction, manufacturing, logistics, consumption, or discard management) and the idea of zero waste is a mythic impossibility, we need to learn to 'waste well'. This is, I think, a profound point. What would it mean to waste well? We don't know yet (and who this 'we' is is itself an important question). Zsuzsa Gille (2007) argues that the public conversation about waste management has to be changed so that it can also be about how that-which-will-become-waste is produced in the first place. If the conversation doesn't shift in that direction then, she argues, the best democracy can do is regulate waste that is already produced. Her suggestion is that production itself must be democratized, though she stops short of laying out a plan of how to do that. However, this idea of democratizing production, in the sense of pushing public action inside the factory gate, is not as utopic as it might sound since it is in some ways happening already. Think of the European Union's (EU)
Reduction of Hazardous Substances (
RoHS) regulations. They stipulate that the use of certain compounds in manufacturing must be reduced or eliminated where alternatives exist. So RoHS does have a real effect on how that which will become waste is produced in the first place. The EU's
Regulation on Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (
REACH) legislation does similar work. RoHS and REACH are not panaceas - they do nothing to change, say, the intensity of work on the factory floor in the EU or elsewhere - but they are two examples that show us democratizing production is not mere utopic daydreaming (I've written a bit about related issues
here). What if, as is the case with pharmaceuticals, manufacturers had to prove the material safety of their products before they could be manufactured for sale? In other words, we (there's that problematic grouping again ... 'we' who?) already accept that one multi-billion dollar industry should have to jump the hurdle of showing its products are safe
before they may be manufactured and put out for sale, so why not others? Why shouldn't electronics manufacturers have to prove that the materials of which their products are made pose no threat to the health of humans or other biological beings? Yes, pharmaceutical companies find ways to get around the public health principles that regulate them, but nevertheless there are laws that have been written that require them to prove safety before manufacture and sale. It's a model - flawed for sure - but it exists. If it exists, then it is possible. And if it exists, it can also be modified and improved.
Flagging up the indeterminacy of e-waste is not enough. We need to find ways to act in an uncertain, indeterminate world (see Callon et al, 2009) or worlds (see Law, 2011). My intent in this presentation - and as I increasingly understand my own project - is to not just describe, but to interfere (see Law, 2009; Munk and Abrahamsson, 2012) with the phenomenon I purport to study (electronic discards). So, for example, in this presentation I explored the work done by different methods used to know e-waste, that is, to make claims to authoritative knowledge about it. While apparently very different from one another, all of these methods - documentary photography and film, trade statistics - all rely on the literary technique of
modest witnessing. This is the case, too, in a forthcoming paper where I mobilize trade statistics to question - to interfere with - the often taken for granted assumption that 'the' problem with e-waste is that it is dumped from 'developed' to 'developing' countries.
Instead of trying to solve 'the e-waste problem', it might be useful to modify this injunction into a question: how might e-waste be done carefully? Some minimal responses to that question would, I think, include:
- Questioning the utility and effects of trade bans.
- Interrogating the claims that posit industrial recycling of electronics (i.e., 'shredding') as a responsible e-waste management system.
- Investigating the potential of repair, reuse, and recovery practices for dealing with electronic discards already generated.
- Examining the roles and extent of waste, discards, and remainders generated in electronics manufacturing, in contrast to e-waste as strictly a post-consumption problem.
- Finding ways to interfere in how the production of electronics manufactures that-which-will-become-waste so that it may become a clean(er), safe(r) set of practices.
In attempting to interfere in these ways, my research into electronic discards is a way of engaging with issues well beyond that of electronic discards, but which are - I am convinced - of fundamental import: how to devise a renewed 'contract' (as
Mol calls it) between practices that deliberate over means and ends ('politics') and practices that deliberate over truth and falsity ('science').