Dear all,

A reminder!

Best,
Bram


--------------------------------
Dr. Bram Büscher
Associate Professor of Environment and Sustainable Development, International 
Institute of Social Studies - Erasmus University
Visiting associate Professor, Department of Geography, Environmental Management 
and Energy Studies - University of Johannesburg

Kortenaerkade 12, 2518 AX The Hague, The Netherlands
+31 (0)70 4260 596<tel:%2B31%20%280%2970%204260%20596> / 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://brambuscher.com<http://brambuscher.com/> / http://www/iss.nl

Editor Conservation & Society: please consider submitting a paper! See: 
http://www.conservationandsociety.org/<http://www.conservationandsociety.org./>

New book: Transforming the Frontier. Peace Parks and the Politics of Neoliberal 
Conservation in Southern Africa<http://brambuscher.com/publications/book/> 
(Duke University Press, 2013).


From: Bram Buscher <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Wednesday, 4 December 2013 01:38
To: GEP-ED <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: CfP for fully funded work/writeshop on Nature 2.0, Italy May 2015

Dear colleagues,

Apologies for cross-posting. Please see below CfP for a fully funded workshop 
on social media, online activism and the politics of environmental 
conservation. Do consider applying if you're interested, or please pass on to 
others whose research you feel might fit the theme.

Thanks,
Bram


Call for Papers for fully funded work/writeshop - May 2015, Aosta Valley, Italy
on
Nature 2.0: Social Media, Online Activism and the politics of Environmental 
Conservation



Organized by: Bram Büscher (ISS, Erasmus University, the Netherlands).



Date: 24-30 May 2015.



Place: Plan del la Tour, Aosta Valley, Italy (2 hours from Milan) - see 
http://www.plandelatour.it/index.html.



The idea: through this CfP, I would like to invite scholars working on the 
links between new media (web 2.0 and social media) and environmentalism or 
conservation to submit an abstract for a dedicated work/writeshop in (late) May 
2015 in the Aosta Valley in Italy. The idea is to come together with a small 
group of scholars (max. 10-12) to present and discuss draft papers on this 
topic and have them ready for submission to a journal by the end of the week. 
The workshop will be held in a beautiful agriturismo (plan del la tour), with 
plenty of time and space for hikes, discussions, good dinners and creative 
leisure time.



Below you can find some more information on the topic and the broad array of 
potential contributions we are interested in. If you feel that your research 
fits this description, or that you can quite easily extend your current 
research to fit the topic, do consider submitting an abstract. From the 
abstracts, we will chose 4-6 participants to join 6 others already involved in 
the project in this exciting workshop. If your abstract is selected, your 
participation will be fully funded. Scholars from the global south are 
especially encouraged to submit abstracts.



Deadline for abstracts: We request paper abstracts by 1 February 2014. Please 
send a 250 word abstract, with title, contact information, and three keywords 
as an attachment to [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>. If approved, full 
papers are due 1 May 2015.



More information: if you want more information, please do not hesitate to get 
in touch: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.



The topic:

With much global biodiversity, ecosystems and natural landscapes in persistent 
rapid decline, conservation actors and concerned individuals and organisations 
are looking for novel ways to pursue conservation objectives. A major new 
frontier is the so-called 'web 2.0' and related social media. Web 2.0 
applications like Wikipedia and YouTube and social media such as Facebook and 
Twitter allow people to create, rate and change online content and share these 
within cyberspace. These developments enable internet-users to now 'co-create' 
and co-produce the online activities, services, spaces and information they 
produce or consume, at least within the limits of possible action. Conservation 
actors are rapidly deploying new web 2.0 and social media techniques and 
facilities, allowing those who are concerned about global biodiversity and 
ecosystem decline to (seemingly) more directly engage with conservation 
activities in other parts of the world. The term 'Nature 2.0' aims to capture 
these dynamics and the natures to which they lead.



The workshop and the special issue that it wants to produce aim to produce a 
set of papers on the concept (and practices) of Nature 2.0 and the way it 
changes the global political economy of conservation in our neoliberal times. 
We invite papers that critically interrogate how social media, web 2.0 
applications and new forms of online activism change the politics and 
material/cultural forms and practices of global conservation and how they 
affect people and biodiversity in different spatial and temporal contexts. Of 
special interest are papers that connect spaces of online conservation 
consumption (through activism, images, videos, fundraising, etc) with offline 
spaces of conservation production (protected areas, biodiversity hotspots, 
wildlife corridors, etc) in/from different parts of the globe.


In sum, the workshop and related special issue aim to address the following 
core questions:

-       How can we conceptualize Nature 2.0 as a new space of 
enacting/practicing/experiencing global conservation and what new (or familiar) 
political conservation geographies follow from this?

-       Does the concept of Nature 2.0 reflect an emerging political economy of 
global conservation and what roles do variously positioned conservation 
'producers' and 'consumers' play in this?

-       In what ways do web 2.0 technologies constrain and/or broaden the field 
of possible practices and discourses of environmental conservation?

-       What are the epistemological and methodological challenges of 
conducting Nature 2.0 research?

-       How can we identify the relevant negative and productive aspects of 
power at work in the spaces/bodies/publics of and in relation to Nature 2.0?

-       How have social media and web 2.0 changed online conservation activism 
and the cyberpolitics of global biodiversity conservation?

-       What are some of the dominant Nature 2.0 on-line practices and how do 
they influence the work and activities of conservation producers and consumers?

-       How do online and offline conservation spaces affect and involve each 
other, and how does that influence global, national and local politics of 
conservation?

-       In which ways is Nature 2.0 characterized and influenced by broader 
changes in neoliberal capitalism, and which aspects of nature 2.0 are not 
sufficiently explained by these dynamics?

-       How can race, gender, sexuality, class, emotion, and other concepts 
inform our understanding of Nature 2.0?



For more content info, see also the following two papers, both of which can be 
downloaded from 
www.brambuscher.com/publications<http://www.brambuscher.com/publications>:



Büscher, Bram and Jim Igoe (2013). 'Prosuming' Conservation? Web 2.0, Nature 
and the Intensification of Value-Producing Labour in Late Capitalism. Journal 
of Consumer Culture 13, 3: 283-305.



Büscher, Bram (2013). Nature 2.0. Geoforum 44, 1: 1-3.

Disclaimer
________________________________
De informatie verzonden in dit e-mail bericht is vertrouwelijk en is 
uitsluitend bestemd voor de geadresseerde van dit bericht. Lees verder: 
www.eur.nl/email-disclaimer <http://www.eur.nl/email-disclaimer>
The information in this e-mail message is confidential and may be legally 
privileged. Read more: 
www.eur.nl/english/email-disclaimer<http://www.eur.nl/english/email-disclaimer>
________________________________

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to