Call for Papers for Panel Proposal for Earth Systems Governance 2020 in
Bratislava, Slovakia, Sept. 15-17, 2020.



Proposed Panel: *Methodologies for Multiple Scales in Earth Systems
Governance*



*Abstract: *Scale is a defining feature of Earth Systems Governance
research. Referring to the “spatial, temporal, quantitative, and analytical
dimensions used to measure and study phenomena,” scale is something that
not only complexifies efforts to address global environmental challenges
but also complicates empirical investigations into ongoing problems
(Termeer et al 2010, 28). Questions of scale are also tightly connected to
disciplinary approaches (e.g., individual minds - cognitive science, small
groups - sociology, local community/municipality - political science),
requiring interdisciplinary research designs for the study of multi- and
cross-scale governance processes. This panel explores methodologies for
examining the temporal, geographic, jurisdictional, and other scales
involved in ESG. How can and do scholars connect complex phenomena across
multiple scales? What do effective research designs look like and how does
this translate into impactful research for global environmental change?
This panel will bring together early career and senior scholars to explore
how questions about the past and the future can be studied; how the
relational dynamics between people and place evolve across geographic
scales; and what it would mean to unbound studies of Earth Systems
Governance from temporal and jurisdictional scales. The panel aims to push
conceptual and methodological boundaries around scale in Earth Systems
Governance while also providing practical insights for those new to the
field.



We seek papers that specifically seek to advance knowledge of multi-scalar
empirical phenomena through a methodological lens. Please submit an
abstract of up to 400 words to Kim Marion Suiseeya (
[email protected]) and Manjana Milkoreit (
[email protected]) by *January 5, 2020. *



Additional information on the conference is available at:
http://earthsystemgovernance.net/bratislava2020/call-for-papers/



All the best,



Kim and Manjana

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Kimberly R. Marion Suiseeya, PhD

Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science

Environmental Policy and Culture Program

Northwestern University

Website: https://sites.northwestern.edu/suiseeya/

Office Hours: https://calendly.com/kimberly-marion/




*The Northwestern campus sits on the traditional homelands of the people of
the Council of Three Fires, the Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawa as well as
the Menominee, Miami and Ho-Chunk nations. It was also a site of trade,
travel, gathering and healing for more than a dozen other Native tribes and
is still home to over 100,000 tribal members in the state of Illinois. I
also recognize Northwestern University’s historical relationship with the
Cheyenne and Arapaho. These lands continue to carry the stories of these
Nations, their forced removal, and their struggles for survival and
recognition. As a scholar, I have a responsibility to acknowledge both the
Peoples as well as the histories of dispossession that have allowed for the
growth of this institution. By reflecting on these histories, I hope to
actively address the role that my university has played in shaping them. *

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