2nd Call

Call for Papers Richard Wesley Conference on Environmental Politics & Governance
University of Washington, Seattle
May 14-16, 2015

Sponsored by
Center for Environmental Politics
University of Washington, Seattle(http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/)


Dear Colleagues:
University of Washington’s Center for Environmental Politics is organizing an 
international conference on Environmental Politics and Governance (EPG) in 
Seattle on May 14-16, 2015. The conference aims to showcase the cutting edge 
scholarship on EPG, provide a venue for scholars to present their research and 
network, and shape future EPG research across subfields in political science 
(American, Comparative, and International), or other social sciences.


Agenda and Rationale
Few will deny the importance of environmental challenges in the contemporary 
era. As scholars we are asked by policy practioners for solutions to 
environmental challenges. Universities increasingly are recognizing the immense 
interest among students for environmental courses. The Nobel Prize to Elinor 
Ostrom for her work on common-pool resources showed that international 
community recognizes the scholarly contributions of EPG scholars. Yet, and 
tragically so, EPG remains an under-studied area in political science and in 
other social sciences as well. One reason is that the study of EPG tends to 
take place in different subfields. This
silo approach leads to inadequate sharing and accumulation of knowledge, and 
the tendency to work with issue-focused frameworks instead of generalizable 
theories. We hope this and subsequent conferences will motivate EPG scholars to 
advance theoretical insights, work with generalizable theories, and use 
cutting-edge empirical methods.

Why focus on politics and governance? Although there has been substantial 
progress in the development of technical and scientific knowledge about the 
causes of several environmental problems, the translation of these ideas into 
politically feasible policy regimes has been a major stumbling block. The 
repeated lessons of these failures underscore the basic point that 
environmental issues pose important political challenges that need to be 
addressed with equal footing to their economic and technical dimensions.

This conference will provide a forum for EPG scholars to present research and 
develop research networks with the objective to push the frontiers of knowledge 
via theoretically informed, rigorous empirical work. The format of the 
conference will allow for substantial give and take, and opportunities to 
network with others.


Venue
The 2015 conference will be held at the bucolic Islandwood conference facility 
near Seattle
(http://www.islandwood.org/gatherings-and-events/lodging). With its majestic 
Northwest architecture and the location on Bainbridge Island, this facility 
provides an ideal venue for EPG scholars to meet, network, and present their 
work. Recognizing that conference participants confront issues of information 
overload and cabin fever, we will leave ample time for them to enjoy the 
beautiful Northwest surroundings. To top it all, the food at this resort is 
excellent, a testimony to the reputation of Seattle as a foodie city!

We will email information on logistics to conference participants in due 
course. For planning purposes, participants should plan on arriving by late 
afternoon on Thursday 14 May and leave on the morning of Sunday May 17.


Expenses
This conference has been made possible by the generous gift of Dr. Richard 
Wesley, who is a longtime supporter and benefactor of University of 
Washington’s Department of Political Science and has a strong interest in 
environmental issues. Thanks to his gift, the Center for Environmental Politics 
will defray the following costs (for one participant per paper only).

- Lodging and food (3 nights, May 14, 15 & 16).
- Economy Airfare and local travel expenses up to $500 for participants from 
North America and $1,000 for participants from others part of the world.

There are no conference fees. We have reserved a limited number of rooms in the 
Islandwood facility for participants. Should a co-author desire to attend at 
their own expense, please contact us upon acceptance to explore relevant 
options.


Process
An international steering committee of leading EPG scholars will review paper 
proposals. Through a double-blind review process, this committee will identify 
the most promising paper proposals.

Paper proposals should consist of electronic submission of a Word document with 
a cover page listing authors, affiliations, and contact information; and up to 
two pages of a paper abstract that details the relevance of the work to the EPG 
literature. To submit your paper proposal, please go to the Center’s website 
(http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/) and click on “2015 conference” (top 
right corner).

We will consider work-in-progress only. Please DO NOT submit published, 
forthcoming, or accepted work.


Time Line:
1. Proposal submission deadline: November 3, 2014.
2. Notification of paper acceptance: January 15, 2015.
3. Arrival in Seattle: the afternoon of Thursday, May 14, 2015
4. Conference begins: evening of May 14, 2015.
5. Organized panels: Friday, May 15 and Saturday May 16, 2015.
6. Conference ends: the morning of Sunday, May 17, 2015


Steering Committee

Co-Chairs
Aseem Prakash, University of Washington, Seattle
Peter J. May, University of Washington, Seattle

Members
Arun Agrawal, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Liliana Andonova, Graduate Institute for International & Development Studies, 
Geneva
Thomas Bernauer, ETH Zurich, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Xun Cao, Pennsylvania State University
Ashwini Chhatre, Indian School of Business, Hyderabad
Stephen Dovers, Australian National University
Andreas Duit, Stockholm University
Riley Dunlap, Oklahama State University
Adrienne Heritier, EUI Florence
Robert Keohane, Princeton University
David Konisky, Georgetown University
Wai-Fung (Danny) Lam, University of Hong Kong
Mark Lubell, UC Davis
Helen Milner, Princeton University
Ronald Mitchell, University of Oregon
Matthew Potoski, UC Santa Barbara
Hugh Ward, University of Essex




 
**********************************************************************

Aseem Prakash
Professor, Department of Political Science
Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
Director, UW Center for Environmental Politics
39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
University of Washington
Seattle, WA 98195-3530

http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/
http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/

--
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/d/optout.

Reply via email to