Dear all,

Please see the below call for papers for a special feature of the Journal of 
Peasant Studies on bridging critical agrarian studies and political ecology. 
Please consider submitting an abstract, or forward to others who might be 
interested.

Thanks very much!
Bram and Dan


Bridging Critical Agrarian Studies and Political Ecology

A call for papers for Journal of Peasant Studies

Critical agrarian studies and political ecology are both known for their 
in-depth analyses of rural and more-than-rural transformation processes. Both 
look at diverse aspects of environmental change, livelihood change and capital 
accumulation and both study how people deal with, influence and relate to these 
changes. But they have done so with different emphases, looking at similar 
phenomena through different lenses. Critical agrarian studies has focused more 
on class dynamics and its impacts on rural peasantries and the rural poor. 
Political ecology traditions has entailed less attention to class, and more to 
local environmental knowledge, representations of environmental change, 
conservation politics and the like.

Clearly the two fields (could) overlap a good deal, but their epistemic 
communities, debates and questions are still too distinct. They tend to publish 
in different journals, only occasionally go to the same conferences or sessions 
and rarely come together in research projects. At the same time, they take 
theoretical inspiration from some of the same thinkers and share a professed 
deep interest in the material environments that make distinctive social 
dynamics possible. Despite these common interests they have so been more 
frequently characterised by their differences than their common work.

Such divisions are unsatisfying in and of themselves. They become particularly 
unfortunate in eras of rising green grabs, which bring conservation studies (a 
traditional political ecology domain) more firmly into the class dynamics of 
the rural poor (and the domain of agrarian studies); ever more complicated 
value chains and production networks, and the proliferation of representations 
that these entail on the internet and social media which again means that 
discourse and image analysis (associated with political ecology) becomes 
embroiled in rural production systems and rural capitalism (associated with 
agrarian studies).

We seek to transcend these academic divides with contributions that draw on 
both traditions. We invite papers that take on this challenge, that will be 
submitted as a special section to the Journal of Peasant Studies. The purpose 
of this collection is to illustrate what becomes possible by bridging these 
divides. Between 3 and 5 papers will be submitted for review. We will look for 
a geographical diversity of interests, for papers which are able to set 
research agendas. This means that we are less interested in case-studies per 
se. Rather we want arguments which synthesise across a variety of cases, or 
which use empirical material to illustrate larger arguments.

Authors interested in contributing should submit titles and 300-400 word 
abstracts by Monday July 10th  2018 jointly to Dan Brockington and Bram Büscher 
(emails below). Selected contributions will be required by Feb 28th 2019 and 
will be peer-reviewed.

[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
[email protected].


--------------------------------
Prof. Dr. Bram Büscher

Professor and chair, sociology of development and change, Wageningen University
Visiting Professor, Department of Geography, Environmental Management and 
Energy Studies - University of Johannesburg
Research Associate, Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology, 
Stellenbosch University

De Leeuwenborch, Hollandseweg 1, 6707 KN Wageningen, Netherlands.
T: +31317482015 E: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.
I: http://brambuscher.com<http://brambuscher.com/> / 
http://www.wageningenur.nl/en/Expertise-Services/Chair-groups/Social-Sciences/sdc.htm

Senior editor Conservation & Society: please consider submitting a paper! See: 
http://www.conservationandsociety.org/
For recent publications, see: https://brambuscher.com/publications/

[WageningenUR logo]

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