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Dr. Wil Burns
Co-Executive Director, Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment, School of 
International Service, American University

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From: Connor Joseph Cavanagh [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 24, 2017 1:39 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [EnvironmentalGovernance] 2nd CfP- POLLEN18: Political Ecology, the 
Green Economy, and Alternative Sustainabilities


**With apologies for cross-posting***

Dear All,

Just a reminder about the Second Biennial Conference of the Political Ecology 
Network (POLLEN). We have already received a considerable number of abstracts, 
and several very interesting panel proposals are now in circulation.

If you have not already done so, please also consider signing up for (free!) 
membership in the network. For more information about how to do so, please 
visit https://politicalecologynetwork.com/


Second Biennial Conference of the Political Ecology Network (POLLEN)

 POLLEN18: Political Ecology, the Green Economy, and Alternative 
Sustainabilities
When: 20-22 June 2018
Where: Oslo and Akershus University College, Oslo, Norway
Organised by: The Political Ecology Network (POLLEN) Secretariat; Oslo and 
Akershus University College; Centre for Environment and Development (SUM), 
University of Oslo; Noragric, Norwegian University of Life Sciences
Abstract/Panel Submission Deadline: 15 December 2017
Conference Website: 
https://politicalecologynetwork.com/pollen-biannual-conference/
Contact: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Over the past two decades, political ecologists have provided extensive 
critiques of the privatization, commodification, and marketization of nature, 
including of the new forms of accumulation and appropriation that these might 
facilitate under the more recent guise of the so-called green economy. These 
critiques have often demonstrated that such approaches can retain deleterious 
implications for certain vulnerable populations across the developing world and 
beyond, including in urban centres and within the interstices of the ‘Global 
North’. With few exceptions, however, political ecologists have paid decidedly 
less attention to exploring, critically engaging, and ‘planting the seed’ of 
alternative initiatives for pursuing both sustainability and 
socio-environmental justice. Surely, many scholars have begun to both support 
and study movements pursuing alternative socio-ecological relations rooted in 
critical traditions such as degrowth, postcolonialism, feminism, anarchism, and 
eco-Marxism. Yet much more could be done to understand and illuminate the 
prospects for these movements, as well as potential sources of tension and 
synergy between and amongst them.

Accordingly, this second biennial conference of the Political Ecology Network 
(POLLEN) aims to engage the emergence of the green economy or green growth in 
their various iterations explicitly as a terrain of struggle. In doing so, we 
invite empirical, conceptual, political, and methodological contributions 
appraising the ways in which there are many potential ‘alternative 
sustainabilities’ for pursuing human and non-human well-being in the context of 
global economic and ecological crises. Each of these reflects often quite 
variable constellations of social, political, and economic relations. However, 
there are also diverse efforts underway to pre-empt or to foreclose upon these 
alternatives – as well as tensions, contradictions, and fissions within 
movements aiming to actualize or enact them – highlighting an implicit politics 
of precisely whose conception of sustainability is deemed to be possible or 
desirable in any given time and place.

In pursuit of this objective, proposals for papers and panels are invited that 
address one or more of the following themes and issues:

•      Concrete forms and effects of green economy practices including the 
translation of global discourses into place-based projects and programmes for – 
inter alia – carbon pricing and forestry schemes or other payments for 
ecosystem services (PES) initiatives; diverse urban socio-ecological 
metabolisms in the form of ‘green’ gentrification, resilience, or ‘sustainable 
cities’ planning arrangements; mobilities related to ecotourism, 
refuge-seeking, and/or environmental displacement; biofuels and renewable 
energy; ‘climate smart agriculture’ and landscape conservation approaches; 
‘neoliberal’ conservation or environmental governance strategies.

•      Drivers and consequences of the emergence of green capitalism, such as 
effects on socioeconomic inequality; conflict, contestations, and ‘green 
violence’; environmental securitization or militarization; altered patterns of 
resource access, including along class and gender lines; shifting relations 
between capital, civil society, and the state; financial crises under 
conditions of global environmental change; dynamics of land, ‘green’ and water 
‘grabbing’ or acquisition; intersections between past and present varieties of 
green capitalism and ‘environmental’ colonialism.

•      Challenges for and pathways to alternative sustainabilities, such as 
those rooted in degrowth, postcolonialism or decolonial thought, eco-Marxism, 
feminism, anarchism, and environmental justice; synergies and tensions between 
movements of workers, peasants and indigenous peoples; support and opposition 
to various alternatives from both ‘above’ and ‘below’; prospects for 
resistances and contestations operating locally as well as across places, 
spaces, and scales; emerging or mutating forms of rural and urban populism on 
the political ‘right’ as well as the left; new racisms and identity-based 
antagonisms in both the Global North and South.

•      Conceptual, political and methodological reflections about the role of 
twenty-first century political ecologies vis-à-vis alternative 
sustainabilities, including those examining promises and complications of 
‘engaged’ political ecologies; methodological implications of combined 
scholarship and activism, as well as other methodological and study design 
challenges in political ecology; the prefiguration of ‘alternative political 
ecologies’ and scholarly practices to synergize with ‘alternative 
sustainabilities’.

We invite paper and full panel proposals for this conference. Abstracts for 
paper proposals should be approximately 300 words and include author 
affiliations and contact information. Panel proposals should include a brief 
description of the session theme, and a maximum of 4 paper abstracts for 1 
panel. Please send these to 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> before 15 
December 2017.

Keynote speakers:

1. Paige West (Barnard College and Columbia University, USA)

2. Tania Murray Li (University of Toronto, Canada)

3. Ashish Kothari (Kalpavriksh, India)

Organizing committee

Noragric, Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Tor A. Benjaminsen, Connor 
Joseph Cavanagh, Mikael Bergius, Jill T. Buseth, Shai Divon

Oslo and Akershus University College: Hanne Svarstad, Roy Krøvel, Thorgeir 
Kolshus, Andreas Ytterstad, Berit Aasen

Centre for Environment and Development (SUM), University of Oslo: Mariel 
Aguilar Støen, Susanne Normann, Jostein Jakobsen

 Advisory board
Bram Büscher (Wageningen University, the Netherlands)
Christine Noe (University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania)
Denis Gautier (CIRAD, Montpellier, France)
Sian Sullivan (Bath Spa University, UK)
Nitin Rai (ATREE, India)
Kathleen McAfee (San Francisco State University, USA)
Simon Batterbury (Lancaster University, UK)
Tracey Osborne (University of Arizona, USA)
Wendy Harcourt (ISS, Erasmus University, the Netherlands)
Adrian Nel (University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa)
Andrea Nightingale (University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)
Wolfram Dressler (University of Melbourne, Australia)
Rosaleen Duffy (University of Sheffield, UK)
Ashish Kothari (Kalpavriksh, India)
Susan Paulson (University of Florida, USA)
Robert Fletcher (Wageningen University, the Netherlands)
Amber Huff (IDS, University of Sussex, UK)
Amita Baviskar (Institute for Economic Growth, India)
Paul Robbins (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
Frances Cleaver (University of Sheffield, UK)
Maano Ramutsindela (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Peter Wilshusen (Bucknell University, USA)
Noella Gray (University of Guelph, Canada)
Marta Irving (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
Dan Brockington (University of Sheffield, UK)
Kristen Lyons (University of Queensland, Australia)
Esteve Corbera (ICTA, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain)
Elizabeth Shapiro-Garza (Duke University, USA)
Scott Prudham (University of Toronto, Canada)
Lyla Mehta (IDS, University of Sussex, UK)
Jim Igoe (University of Virginia, USA)
Catherine Corson (Mount Holyoke College, USA)
Elizabeth Lunstrum (York University, Canada)
Jun Borras (ISS, Erasmus University, the Netherlands)
Leah Horowitz (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
David Tumusiime (Makerere University, Uganda)
Ken MacDonald (University of Toronto, Canada)
Marja Spierenburg (Radboud University, the Netherlands)
Ben Neimark (Lancaster University, UK)
Isabelle Anguelovski (Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain)
Robin Roth (University of Guelph, Canada)
Christos Zografos (Johns Hopkins University - Pompeu Fabra University, Spain)
Jessica Dempsey (University of British Columbia, Canada)
Bill Adams (University of Cambridge, UK)
Place and venue: The Norwegian capital of Oslo is beautifully situated on the 
coastal Oslofjord, straddling the scenic Akerselva river and surrounded by 
forests and cultural landscapes. The Oslo and Akershus University College is 
exceptionally well-situated in the centre of the city, within walking distance 
of major landmarks and attractions.
About POLLEN: The Political Ecology Network (POLLEN) is an umbrella 
organisation of political ecology researchers, groups, projects, networks and 
‘nodes’ across the globe. As the name suggests, POLLEN seeks to provide a 
platform for the ‘cross fertilization’ of ideas where the world’s many rich and 
diverse intellectual traditions of environmental thought can come together, 
discuss, and debate the latest developments in the field. For more information 
or to sign up for (free!) membership in the network, please visit 
https://politicalecologynetwork.com/
——-
Dr. Connor Joseph Cavanagh
Postdoctoral Fellow
Department of International Environment and Development Studies (Noragric),
Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)
NMBU Staff Profile<https://www.nmbu.no/ans/2766> | Google Scholar 
<http://goo.gl/KXP03j> | ResearchGate<http://goo.gl/EIuhdR> | Twitter 
<http://goo.gl/D2vozx>
Latest publications:
Cavanagh, C.J. and A. Chemarum, P. Vedeld, and J.G. Petursson. (2017). Old 
wine, new bottles? Investigating the differential adoption of ‘climate-smart’ 
agricultural practices in western 
Kenya<http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0743016716304697>. 
Journal of Rural Studies 56: 114-123.
Cavanagh, C.J. (2017). Anthropos into humanitas: civilizing violence, 
scientific forestry, and the ‘Dorobo question’ in eastern 
Africa<http://epd.sagepub.com/content/early/2016/11/17/0263775816678620.abstract>.
 Environment and Planning D: Society and Space.
Cavanagh, C.J. and T.A. Benjaminsen. (2017). Political ecology, variegated 
green economies, and the foreclosure of alternative 
sustainabilities<http://jpe.library.arizona.edu/volume_24/Greeneconomiesintro.pdf>.
 Journal of Political Ecology 24: 200-  216.



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