Dear colleagues,
I would much appreciate your help in circulating this call widely.
Many thanks, and I hope to see many of you in Norwich next July!
Heike


<http://norwich2014.earthsystemgovernance.org/>
[Access and Allocation]<http://norwich2014.earthsystemgovernance.org/>
Call for Papers

We invite you to the 2014 Norwich Conference on Earth System Governance on 
“Access and Allocation in the Anthropocene”, to be held 1-3 July 2014 at the 
University of East Anglia in Norwich, UK.

This event will be the fifth in a global conference series organized by the 
Earth System Governance Project, a ten-year research programme under the 
auspices of the International Human Dimensions Programme on Global 
Environmental Change (IHDP).

The 2014 Norwich Conference on Earth System Governance will be jointly hosted 
by the University of East Anglia and the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change 
Research on behalf of the Earth System Governance Project.

ABOUT EARTH SYSTEM GOVERNANCE

The challenge of establishing effective strategies for mediating the 
relationship between humans and the natural world represents one of the most 
daunting tasks in the quest for environmental sustainability at all levels, 
from the local to the global. 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. There is 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 was launched in 2009 to address these 
problems of environmental governance. In this project, “earth system 
governance” is defined as the interrelated system of formal and informal rules, 
rule-making mechanisms 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 earth 
system transformation, within the normative context of sustainable development. 
The Earth System Governance Project’s Science Plan (available at 
www.earthsystemgovernance.org<http://www.earthsystemgovernance.org/>) is 
organized around five analytical themes. 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, access and allocation deal 
with justice, equity, and fairness.

The 2014 Norwich Conference on Earth System Governance will address these five 
analytical themes with a special focus on access and allocation.

CONFERENCE THEMES

Access and Allocation of Resources (Water, Food, Energy, Health and Wellbeing, 
Forests and Carbon Rights)

Access and Allocation not only relates to material resources (e.g. water, 
forests) but also to the access and allocation of immaterial values such as 
rights, benefits, responsibilities and risks. Issues of access and allocation 
demand new answers in times of the Anthropocene, an era of human-dominated 
ecosystems. Such responses need to be interdisciplinary and reconcile with 
governance effectiveness. Conflicts about natural resources such as water, 
forests, food, energy and carbon are in essence questions related to the 
allocation of and access to these resources, and often linked to concepts of 
security, i.e. “food security” and “water security”.

Transformative Pathways to Sustainability

This theme is one of the three themes under Future Earth and attempts to 
understand transformation processes and options across sectors and scales to 
identify strategies for the sustainable governance of the global environment 
and the relationship to human values, emerging technologies and economic 
paradigms. It will address the various blockages to these transformations and 
how to overcome them. This analysis will also involve new forms of localism and 
collective self-reliance at the scale of community across the whole planet.

Papers addressing the other analytical themes of architecture, agency, 
adaptiveness and accountability as well as methodological issues relevant to 
earth system governance research, science-society interface and 
interdisciplinarity are also invited.

SUBMISSION PROCESS

Abstracts and panel proposals must be submitted electronically by 15 November 
2013 and not exceed 300 words. Please submit your abstract 
here<https://earthsystemgov.conference-services.net/authorlogin.asp?conferenceID=3936&language=en-uk>.

More information about the review process is 
here<http://norwich2014.earthsystemgovernance.org/?page_id=244>.

More information about the Oran R. Young Prize for Early Career Scholars is 
here<http://norwich2014.earthsystemgovernance.org/?page_id=247>.

KEY DATES

15 November 2013 – Deadline for abstract and panel proposal submission
1 February 2014 – Notifications sent
15 May 2015 – Paper submission deadline for Oran R. Young Prize for best 
early-career paper
1 July 2014 – Announcement of Oran R. Young Prize winner



Dr. Heike Schroeder
Senior Lecturer in Climate Change and International Development
School of International Development
University of East Anglia
Norwich, NR4 7TJ
Tel. 01603 591036
Email: [email protected]
Profile: http://www.uea.ac.uk/dev/schroeder

Senior Visiting Research Associate
Environmental Change Institute
University of Oxford
Profile: http://www.eci.ox.ac.uk/people/schroederheike.php

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