Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The politics of promise in a climate emergency

Associated organisational unit

Electronic data

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

The politics of promise in a climate emergency: The case of West Cumbria

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Published

Standard

The politics of promise in a climate emergency: The case of West Cumbria. / Lewis, Pancho.
Lancaster University, 2025.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Lewis P. The politics of promise in a climate emergency: The case of West Cumbria. Lancaster University, 2025. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2730

Author

Bibtex

@phdthesis{370cef923f8c4eb188fdae0afdfbf6d9,
title = "The politics of promise in a climate emergency: The case of West Cumbria",
abstract = "How do people{\textquoteright}s attachments to (post)fossil-fuelled lives form and morph over time? What does this mean for the imperative of a {\textquoteleft}net zero{\textquoteright} transition? In this thesis, I critically examine these questions, offering novel contributions to a nascent line of inquiry which examines the politics of promise in a climate emergency. My focus is West Cumbria (WC), an English region which has been thrust into the centre of controversy because of plans to open a new coal mine in the area. By employing qualitative methodologies including interview and creative methods, I attune to how feelings and affects surface in my fieldwork site. I argue that attachments to high-carbon lives (re)form in material cultures wherein fossil fuel industries have the upper hand over renewable industries. Fossil capital can take advantage of these conditions to reproduce high-carbon development trajectories. In addition, people{\textquoteright}s industrial attachments can render proposals for a net zero transition a {\textquoteleft}non-promise{\textquoteright}, stymieing attempts to move away from environmentally deleterious ways of life. I simultaneously trace the shapeshifting nature of people{\textquoteright}s attachments. This suggests that the promises which people become tethered to change, often at speed, opening opportunities to build sustainable futures. I offer the concept of {\textquoteleft}fluid hope{\textquoteright} to demonstrate people{\textquoteright}s capacities to imagine post-carbon futures in the face of adversity. I open by introducing the thesis and its outline, setting out the research field my arguments are positioned within, and explaining my methodology. I then present a portfolio of papers. Paper 1 begins with a UK-wide focus. Papers 2 to 4 then zoom in to examine climate politics in West Cumbria. Throughout my papers, I shift between exploring political-affective dynamics in West Cumbria and examining their wider implications. I conclude by analysing the implications of my thesis to further explore the politics of promise in a climate crisis.",
author = "Pancho Lewis",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
day = "23",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2730",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - The politics of promise in a climate emergency

T2 - The case of West Cumbria

AU - Lewis, Pancho

PY - 2025/4/23

Y1 - 2025/4/23

N2 - How do people’s attachments to (post)fossil-fuelled lives form and morph over time? What does this mean for the imperative of a ‘net zero’ transition? In this thesis, I critically examine these questions, offering novel contributions to a nascent line of inquiry which examines the politics of promise in a climate emergency. My focus is West Cumbria (WC), an English region which has been thrust into the centre of controversy because of plans to open a new coal mine in the area. By employing qualitative methodologies including interview and creative methods, I attune to how feelings and affects surface in my fieldwork site. I argue that attachments to high-carbon lives (re)form in material cultures wherein fossil fuel industries have the upper hand over renewable industries. Fossil capital can take advantage of these conditions to reproduce high-carbon development trajectories. In addition, people’s industrial attachments can render proposals for a net zero transition a ‘non-promise’, stymieing attempts to move away from environmentally deleterious ways of life. I simultaneously trace the shapeshifting nature of people’s attachments. This suggests that the promises which people become tethered to change, often at speed, opening opportunities to build sustainable futures. I offer the concept of ‘fluid hope’ to demonstrate people’s capacities to imagine post-carbon futures in the face of adversity. I open by introducing the thesis and its outline, setting out the research field my arguments are positioned within, and explaining my methodology. I then present a portfolio of papers. Paper 1 begins with a UK-wide focus. Papers 2 to 4 then zoom in to examine climate politics in West Cumbria. Throughout my papers, I shift between exploring political-affective dynamics in West Cumbria and examining their wider implications. I conclude by analysing the implications of my thesis to further explore the politics of promise in a climate crisis.

AB - How do people’s attachments to (post)fossil-fuelled lives form and morph over time? What does this mean for the imperative of a ‘net zero’ transition? In this thesis, I critically examine these questions, offering novel contributions to a nascent line of inquiry which examines the politics of promise in a climate emergency. My focus is West Cumbria (WC), an English region which has been thrust into the centre of controversy because of plans to open a new coal mine in the area. By employing qualitative methodologies including interview and creative methods, I attune to how feelings and affects surface in my fieldwork site. I argue that attachments to high-carbon lives (re)form in material cultures wherein fossil fuel industries have the upper hand over renewable industries. Fossil capital can take advantage of these conditions to reproduce high-carbon development trajectories. In addition, people’s industrial attachments can render proposals for a net zero transition a ‘non-promise’, stymieing attempts to move away from environmentally deleterious ways of life. I simultaneously trace the shapeshifting nature of people’s attachments. This suggests that the promises which people become tethered to change, often at speed, opening opportunities to build sustainable futures. I offer the concept of ‘fluid hope’ to demonstrate people’s capacities to imagine post-carbon futures in the face of adversity. I open by introducing the thesis and its outline, setting out the research field my arguments are positioned within, and explaining my methodology. I then present a portfolio of papers. Paper 1 begins with a UK-wide focus. Papers 2 to 4 then zoom in to examine climate politics in West Cumbria. Throughout my papers, I shift between exploring political-affective dynamics in West Cumbria and examining their wider implications. I conclude by analysing the implications of my thesis to further explore the politics of promise in a climate crisis.

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2730

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2730

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -