Dear all,
Please find below the announcement and call for sessions of the 2nd SCORAI 
(Sustainable Consumption Research and Action Initiative) Conference June 15-17, 
2016 at the University of Maine. Please forward this to your own networks and 
listserves of which you are a member. Please let us know asap if you are 
interested to organize a session at this conference.
This announcement appeared in the last SCORAI newsletter. Please go to the 
SCORAI website www.scorai.org<http://www.scorai.org> to subscribe for the 
newsletter and for updates on the SCORAI conference.


[cid:[email protected]]CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENT & PRE-CALL FOR 
PARTICIPATION

Second International Conference of the Sustainable Consumption Research and 
Action Initiative (SCORAI)

Transitions Beyond the Consumer Society

University of Maine, Orono, Maine, USA
June 15-17, 2016

http://www.scorai.org<http://www.scorai.org/>
https://www.confmanager.com/main.cfm?cid=2865

Aims and Objectives
The Sustainable Consumption Research and Action Initiative (SCORAI) is 
organizing its Second International Conference on June 15-17, 2016 at the 
University of Maine located in Orono, Maine, USA. The conference theme is 
"Transitions Beyond the Consumer Society" and is intended to provide a space 
for:

[cid:[email protected]]      The continued development of a 
network for the interdisciplinary and international exchange of ideas, 
research, and best practices related to sustainable consumption practice and 
policy.

[cid:[email protected]]      The presentation of innovative 
research and applied projects which improve our understanding of consumerist 
lifestyles and/or provide original insights into processes of societal 
transitions in the context of ecological limits, unequal distribution, and 
economic globalization.

[cid:[email protected]]      The generation of collective insights 
into key strategies, policies, and institutions designed to foster alternative 
means to pursue individual and societal well-being.

We invite diverse participation―including theoretical and applied contributions 
from representatives in academia, industry, government, and civil society 
organizations. Interdisciplinary perspectives and the work of emerging young 
scholars and practitioners are especially encouraged. SCORAI will establish a 
prize for the best paper by a young scholar or practitioner with details to 
follow.

Work to be considered might address, but is not limited to, the following 
topics:

[cid:[email protected]]      Visions of societies where the 
economy and culture are not principally built on mass consumption: sustainable 
lifestyles, steady state economies, degrowth, systemic change, new economies 
(sharing, solidarity, local, grassroots), sustainable business/production, 
alternative financial systems, the commons, equity of wealth and income, 
sufficiency, sustainable cities, well-being, and post-capitalist/alternative 
futures.

[cid:[email protected]]      Insights into the obstacles to a 
transition beyond consumerist societies: dominant consumer culture, 
laissez-faire market capitalism, institutional lock-in and path dependency, 
prevalent value systems, dominant power relations, peer/social pressure, 
materialism and focus on economic growth, income and wealth inequality, class 
and gender inequalities.

[cid:[email protected]]      Strategies for successful 
transitions: leverage points for systemic change, government policies, new 
business practices, partnerships, multi-stakeholder collaborations, grassroots 
innovations and bounded socio-technical experiments, design for 
sustainability/roles for designers, law as agent of change, communication and 
framing, teaching sustainable consumption, and methodologies for measuring 
progress/indicators.

[cid:[email protected]]      Theories of social change: 
socio-technical transitions, social movement theories, theories of cultural 
change, social learning theories, communication (including mass and social 
media), scenarios, visioning and backcasting.

[cid:[email protected]]      Thematic domains of consumption 
including agribusiness and food, transportation, building and housing, energy, 
the energy transition, and climate change, leisure and vacation, households, 
cities and urbanism, and others.

Instructions for Submissions
We invite the submission of proposals for academic and dialogue sessions, 
papers, and posters. Session proposals should include an abstract (maximum 250 
words) and a list of prospective participants and be e-mailed to conference 
co-chairs Philip Vergragt ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) 
and Cindy Isenhour 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) by August 15, 
2015. From August 15, the conference website will be open for paper and poster 
submissions; abstracts for papers and posters (maximum 250 words) should be 
submitted online at the<http://www.scorai.org> conference website 
(https://www.confmanager.com/main.cfm?cid=2865) by September 30, 2015. 
Additional information about the conference, timetable, registration 
instructions and fees, and accommodations will soon be available on the SCORAI 
and conference websites.

Important Dates
2015
End of May                 Conference announcement and pre-call for 
participation
August 15                   Official call for participation and opening of 
conference website
August 15                  Session abstracts and list of presenters due via 
email to co-chairs
September 7                Notification of acceptance of session abstracts
September 30             Deadline for submission of paper and poster abstracts
November 15             Notification of acceptance of papers and posters
2016
January 15                   Publication of draft conference program and 
opening of registration
March 15                     Early-bird registration closes
May 1                          Full paper submission deadline
June 15-17                 Second International SCORAI Conference

About the Sustainable Consumption Action and Research Initiative (SCORAI):
Established in 2008, SCORAI is a knowledge network of professionals working at 
the interface of material consumption, human well-being, and technological and 
cultural change. We aim to provide a forum for scholars and practitioners 
striving to understand the drivers of the consumerist economy in affluent 
technological societies; to formulate and analyze options for post-consumerist 
lifestyles, social institutions, and economic systems; and to provide the 
knowledge for emergent grassroots innovations, social movements, and public 
policies. Since its first highly successful international conference hosted at 
Clark University in 2013, SCORAI has evolved into a network of more than 700 
affiliates. Recent activities include co-sponsorship (with the Urban 
Sustainability Directors Network and the City of Eugene, Oregon, USA) of a 
workshop on sustainable consumption and cities in October 2014 and a colloquium 
series on consumption and social change in collaboration with the Tellus 
Institute. SCORAI also supports collaborating networks in Europe, China, and 
Israel

SCORAI 2016 Conference Organizing Committee
Cindy Isenhour (University of Maine), Conference Co-chair and Local Coordinator
Philip Vergragt (Clark University, Tellus Institute, and SCORAI Board), 
Conference Co-chair
Anders Hayden (Dalhousie University)
Ahmad Mahdavi (University of Tehran)
Caroline Noblet (University of Maine), Local Organizer
Rachael Shwom (Rutgers University)
Esther Zipori (New Jersey Institute of Technology)


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