Dear all,
please see this call for papers on the "politics of pathways” and how to 
approach the concept of transition.

Paper abstracts (200 words max) should be submitted by Monday 15th February to 
the organisers: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
(contact point)

best
johannes



Pathway Politics: geographies of power, practice and publics in the making of 
transitions

Session Proposal for the RGS-IBG Conference, August 30th – September 2nd 2016, 
London

Convenors: Harriet Bulkeley (Durham), James Evans, Mike Hodson (Manchester), 
Kes McCormick, Johannes Stripple (Lund).

Over the past decade the notion of transition has become ever-more integral to 
the pursuit of sustainability, particularly with respect to the challenge of 
decarbonising society. Policy makers, private sector bodies and 
non-governmental organisations increasingly advocate for the need for low 
carbon transitions, across a range of sectors from energy provision to 
mobility, food production to everyday spheres of consumption. Rooted in science 
and technology studies, transition studies has emerged as a vital field of 
academic inquiry, analysing the ways in which incumbent regimes remain ‘locked 
in’ to particular systems of provision and how systemic change emerges or could 
be nurtured through innovation and experimentation. While transition studies 
has opened up the question of how shifts in the socio-technical systems so 
vital to addressing sustainability take place, there has been a growing 
critique within and beyond this field that questions of the geographies and 
politics of transitions have yet to be adequately addressed. In this session, 
we propose to draw together some of these lines of critique to explore how we 
might understand the nature and dynamics of politics unfolding through the 
various strategies, models, interventions and experiments involved in the 
making of transitions. We welcome papers that address the broad theme of 
‘pathway politics’ and which explore the geographies of power, practice and 
publics at work in the making of transitions. We will particularly seek to 
explore the following themes:

·       Conceptualising pathway politics: how useful are concepts of agency, 
authority, legitimacy, institutions, governmentality, assemblage for 
conceptualising the politics of transition
·       Knowledge politics: how are pathways being envisaged through new forms 
of modelling, assessment, and knowledge production; how are transition politics 
reshaping the science/policy interface
·       Political economies and political ecologies: to what extent do the 
politics of pathways reflect existing structural conditions and interests, or 
challenge them? Are new forms of political economy, or new political ecologies, 
being assembled through transition interventions? With what consequences for 
matters of social and environmental justice?
·       Material politics: how and in what ways does the materiality of 
transition itself constitute a site of politics, and how in turn might a 
material political lens reconstitute our understanding of transition?
·       Future politics: how, and with what consequences, are the politics of 
transition a politics of the future? How do the discourses, techniques and 
practices of transition lay claim to particular different futures, and to what 
extent are new agents of change engaged in shaping these futures?

Paper abstracts (200 words max) should be submitted by Monday 15th February to 
the organisers: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
(contact point)

Number of session timeslots sought: 2-3 depending on demand

Indication of preferred organisation of session: 4 x 20min presentation, plus 
20min discussion.





Johannes Stripple
Dept. of Political Science
Lund University, Sweden
+46 46 708197129 (mobile)
http://www.svet.lu.se/en/johannes-stripple



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