Dear colleagues,

 

We are writing to
invite you to apply for a workshop that will be held Tuesday March 15, 2011, one
day prior to next year’s International Studies Association (ISA) annual 
conference,
in Montreal. 

 

The workshop is
titled, “Global Environmental Politics on a New Earth: Deepening Community and
Research for the Environmental Studies Section.”  It will bring together 60 
members of the
Environmental Studies Section of the ISA for a day of discussions and
fellowship.

 

This email has some
general information about the workshop, along with instructions about how to
submit an application.  We hope that you
will join us.  Please also feel free to forward this message along to other 
lists and to colleagues who may be interested.   

 

 

Introduction 

 

Over the past two decades or so, the ISA’s Environmental
Studies Section (ESS) has helped build a tradition of scholarship focused on
global environmental politics.  Over this same period of time, the very
ground on which it and everything else rests has shifted.  Today, humanity 
governs the planet, though
often in ways that are accidental or ill considered.  With close to 7 billion 
people, of whom many
are plugged into globalized technologies, patterns of consumption, and systems
of world-spanning commerce and interaction, humanity is pressing the ecological
foundations of the planet like never before.  Our species’ collective
impact has created what author Bill McKibben calls a new “eaarth”—one in which
the human signature is everywhere and in desperate need of humane and
insightful guidance. 

 

As researchers and teachers of international studies, how are
we to make sense of this new earth?  How are we to act as responsible and
privileged citizens, and what are the most meaningful forms of research and
teaching that need to take place?   

 

Please join the ESS for a day-long workshop to wrestle
together with these questions.  As scholars of global environmental
affairs, ESS members have a responsibility to generate and disseminate clear
understanding of the stakes, the state of knowledge, and the questions that are
as yet unanswered and even unasked about the planet’s new socio-ecological
condition and fate.  The workshop will provide a forum for ESS members to
learn from each other about living on a new earth, and to consider how best to
respond through scholarship and action.   

 

 

Logistics 

 

The format for the workshop is derived from a similar event
that was organized for the 2002 ISA annual meeting in New Orleans.  The 
workshop will be participatory and
experiential, with the aim of fostering collective reflection, interchange, and
a sense of community, as well as to help chart the way for a new generation of
global environmental politics scholarship. 


 

The day will be organized around small-group sessions, with
each session devoted to one of eight major themes.  In the morning,
participants will consider the ecological and political conditions that define
the new earth; the afternoon will focus on responses.

 

All sessions will be held at one of the ISA conference
hotels.  Information about the program and about each of the sessions is
available here: http://tiny.cc/mc7wmt02uh


 

 

Applying for the
Workshop

 

A short application form is attached to this message.  To apply for the 
workshop, please return the
form, along with a short (ideally 1-page) CV that gives a clear sense of your
work, to: [email protected].

 

We need all applications, please, by Friday October 15.  We apologize for the 
short timeframe.  However, we recognize that people will want to
lock in their travel and hotel arrangements for the ISA conference as soon as
possible.  To allow for this, a firm
response will be sent back to all who apply by Friday October 22.

 

We apologize, too, that we will not be able to accommodate
everyone who is interested in participating.  When Paul Wapner and I (Simon 
Nicholson) last
ran a workshop of this nature, in New
  Orleans back in 2002, the 60-person cap meant that we
had room for most of the section’s members.  Times have changed.  The section 
is now a good deal larger, in
keeping with the fact that environmental challenges are becoming ever more
pressing.  Please note, too, that we have
been asked by the ISA to put together a list of participants that takes proper
account of the section’s geographic and other diversities.  Given all of these 
factors, please forgive us
if we are unable to find space for you this time around.

 

 

Workshop only open to
members of the ISA

 

Please note that this workshop will only be open to members of
the International Studies Association. If you are not a member and would like
to join, please see http://www.isanet.org/joinisa/


 

Also, we have been asked by ISA headquarters to let you know
that participation in this workshop does NOT allow, of itself, participation in
the rest of the ISA annual conference. To register for the conference, please
visit http://www.isanet.org/montreal2011/ 

 

Please contact Simon Nicholson with any questions: [email protected]

 

 

Kindest regards,

 

Simon Nicholson, Paul Wapner, and Sikina Jinnah

 

 

 





Simon Nicholson, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor

School of International
Service

American University

4400 Massachusetts Avenue, NW

Washington DC 20016

 

Phone: +1-202-885-1614

E-mail: [email protected] 

 

www.american.edu/sis/faculty/snichols.cfm   

                                          

Attachment: Participant Application.doc
Description: MS-Word document

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