Dear Colleagues,

We have extended the abstract submission deadline for the Colorado Conference 
on Earth System Governance to September 15. Additional details are available at 
http://cc2011.earthsystemgovernance.org.

Best,
Michele


From: Earth System Governance Project 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: August 10, 2010 3:32:02 PM MDT
To: <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [Earth System Governance News] CfP - Colorado Conference (extended 
submission deadline)

-------- CFP - COLORADO CONFERENCE (EXTENDED SUBMISSION DEADLINE) ------------

Colorado Conference on Earth System Governance:
Crossing Boundaries and Building Bridges

Colorado State University, 17-20 May 2011

http://cc2011.earthsystemgovernance.org

We invite you to the Colorado Conference on Earth System Governance to be
held 17-20 May 2011 on the campus of Colorado State University in Fort
Collins, Colorado, USA. This conference is part of a global series organized
by the Earth System Governance Project, a ten-year research program under the
auspices of the International Human Dimensions Programme on Global
Environmental Change (IHDP). The first Earth System Governance conference was
held in Amsterdam in December 2009. The Colorado Conference on Earth System
Governance is hosted jointly by the Environmental Governance Working Group
and the School of Global Environmental Sustainability at Colorado State
University along with the IHDP Earth System Governance Project.

* Key Dates

- Deadline for paper abstracts: 15 September 2010 (extended deadline)
- Notification of acceptance: 15 November 2010
- Full papers due: 1 May 2011

* Concept Note:

Establishing effective strategies for mediating the relationship between
humans and the natural world represents one of the most daunting tasks in the
quest for global environmental sustainability. Environmental problems, such
as climate change, biodiversity loss, water quality and access problems, soil
erosion and others, call into question the fundamental viability of how
humans have organized the relationship between society and nature over the
last two hundred years, creating an urgent need to identify and develop new
strategies for steering societies towards a more sustainable relationship
with the natural world.

The Earth System Governance Project of the International Human Dimensions
Programme on Global Environmental Change was launched in 2009 to address
these problems of environmental governance. In this project “earth system
governance” is defined as the interrelated and increasingly integrated
system of formal and informal rules, rule-making systems, and actor-networks
at all levels of human society (from local to global) that are set up to
steer societies towards preventing, mitigating, and adapting to global and
local environmental change and, in particular, earth system transformation,
within the normative context of sustainable development. The Earth System
Governance Project’s Science Plan (available at
http://www.earthsystemgovernance.org) is organized around five analytical
problems. Architecture relates to the emergence, design and effectiveness of
governance arrangements. Agency addresses questions of who governs the earth
system and how. Adaptiveness research explores the ability of governance
systems to change in the face of new knowledge and challenges as well as to
enhance adaptiveness of social-ecological systems in the face of major
disturbances. Accountability refers to the democratic quality of
environmental governance arrangements. Finally, allocation and access
concerns justice, equity, and fairness. These analytical problems are united
by the cross-cutting themes of power, knowledge, norms and scale.

* Colorado Conference Themes:

One of the most significant challenges of earth system governance is the need
to create new types of linkages, crossing boundaries and building bridges to
connect research on social and ecological processes operating across
different scales, between the social and natural sciences, and between
scholars and practitioners working in the global North and South. The
Colorado Conference will advance the Earth System Governance project’s
research agenda by bringing together scholars from a wide range of
disciplines as well as practitioners to address these linkage issues. The
conference will be organized around four types of linkages that cut across
the “5 As” at the core of the Earth System Governance Science Plan with
the expectation that these discussions will open new and fruitful areas of
research and collaboration on earth system governance. The four conference
themes are:

1. LINKING ACROSS SCALE: Many problems related to earth system transformation
involve social and ecological processes operating at different spatial,
temporal, and social organizational scales. We invite papers that address
these cross-scale and multilevel dimensions of earth system governance. For
example, what theoretical concepts, frameworks, and methodologies can be used
to analyze and understand how social and ecological processes interact across
scale? In what ways do innovations or changes in governance arrangements
across scales and levels of political jurisdiction produce more or less
accountable, adaptive, accessible and equitable processes/outcomes? What
obstacles to earth system governance are created by conflict rooted in the
multiscalar dimension of social and ecological processes?

2. LINKING THE SOCIAL AND NATURAL SCIENCES: Earth system governance research
must consider social as well as ecological systems. Collaboration between
scholars in the social and natural sciences is essential but often difficult
in large part because of differences in methodological traditions. We invite
papers that explore ways of better integrating the social and natural
sciences in the study of earth system governance. For example, what are the
ecological impacts of different architectures of earth system governance?
What methodological and conceptual tools can be used to integrate insights
from research on governance and institutions into understandings of the earth
as a complex coupled social-ecological system?

3. LINKING RESEARCH TO PRACTICE: Earth system governance research must engage
diverse individuals who participate in the formal and informal rule-making
processes and actor networks that comprise earth system governance. How may
research on earth system governance inform policy making and practice? How
might the knowledge and insights of practitioners be better communicated to
researchers? What research and exchange strategies can be used to build
relationships between scholars and practitioners? Is “action research” an
effective strategy for linking research and practice?

4. LINKING THE "5 As": Some of the most important questions of earth system
governance lie at the intersection of the five analytical problems at the
core of the Earth System Governance science plan. We invite papers that
explore these linkages and interactions. For instance, how can equity and
fairness concerns (Allocation and Access) be addressed in the design and
implementation of environmental and development institutions (Architecture)?
In what ways can private actors (Agency) be held accountable (Accountability)
for the social and ecological effects of their decisions? What types of
social conflicts are created (Allocation and Access) by different ways of
structuring efforts (Architecture) to enhance the resilience of
social-ecological systems (Adaptiveness)?

* Abstract Submission:

We invite abstracts on one of these four conference themes from scholars in
the social and natural sciences as well as practitioners from the global
North and South. Abstracts must be submitted electronically through the
conference website (http://cc2011.earthsystemgovernance.org) by 15 September
2010 (extended deadline) and may not exceed 250 words. All abstracts will be
evaluated in a double-blind peer-review process by several members of the
conference review panel. For additional information on the IHDP Earth System
Governance Project, including its Science and Implementation Plan, go to
http://www.earthsystemgovernance.org. For additional information on the
Colorado Conference on Earth System Governance, e-mail us at
mailto:[email protected].

We look forward to welcoming you to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains! On
behalf of all co-hosts,

Michele Betsill, Tony Cheng, and Pete Taylor
Co-Chairs, 2011 Colorado Conference on Earth System Governance
Co-leaders, Environmental Governance Working Group, Colorado State University



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