In this paper, I critically interrogate the expectation that insurance is becoming more present through the processes of financialisation and marketisation - as up-to-date policies and/or in the hearts and minds of consumers. I draw upon interviews about house and contents insurance, with householders in the flammable landscapes of south-eastern Tasmania, Australia. The participants identify these landscapes as resilient and permanent and thus ultimately unaffected by fire. In understanding bush-living as co-constituted with fire and not purely threatened by fire, they experience a strong sense of continuance in these places. In this context, the promise of insurance emerges as contingent, and even if an up-to-date policy is present, insurance moves in and out of focus, is present and becomes absent as various human and non-human actants exert agency. Drawing on critical landscape studies in exploring these spatial contingencies, I observe insuring as landscaping practice. As well as contributing to critical insurance studies and financialisation of everyday life research, I provide a signpost for rethinking the role of insurance in disaster management and climate adaptation.
Funding
Australian Research Council
History
Publication title
Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
Pagination
1-20
ISSN
2514-8486
Department/School
School of Geography, Planning and Spatial Sciences
Publisher
Sage
Place of publication
United States
Rights statement
Copyright The Author(s) 2020
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Other culture and society not elsewhere classified; Expanding knowledge in human society