Dear colleagues,

with apologies for cross-posting.

This is the second call for papers for this year's Nordia Geographical 
Publications theme issue: Re-worlding: Pluriversal politics in the 
Anthropocene. Please see details attached below.

Please feel free to get in touch with any questions and proposals that you 
might have. We would also appreciate it if you could forward it to anyone who 
might be interested to contribute.

Deadline to send the abstracts is March 31st.

The full call with instructions for submissions can be accessed here: 
https://nordia.journal.fi/announcement/view/337

Best wishes,
Aapo and Carlos

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





Call for Papers

Nordia Geographical Publications Theme Issue 2021

Re-worlding: Pluriversal politics in the Anthropocene



Aapo Lunden (Oulu) & Carlos Tornel (Durham) (eds.)



The Geographical Society of Northern Finland and the Geography Research Unit at 
the University of Oulu are inviting contributors to the Nordia Geographical 
Publications Theme Issue coming out in late 2021 with the topic Pluriversal 
Politics in the Anthropocene. The Nordia Geographical Publications is a 
peer-reviewed, open access academic journal focusing on contemporary 
conversations and openings in Geography.



In describing the world experiencing accelerating change and multifaceted 
overheating, the anthropologist Thomas Hylland Eriksen (2016) portrays 
contemporary times through powerful endings like the end of cheap nature, the 
end of traditional political thought and the end of overarching 
generalizations. The exhaustion of neoliberalism and the double bind that 
emerges from a relentless pursuit of economic growth and sustainability is 
leading to increasingly tangible forms of social and environmental 
unsustainability. Therefore, there is an urgency not only to move away from 
growth as we know it and reclaiming the commons, but for broader civilizational 
changes and transitions (Escobar, 2015; Kallis,et al., 2020).



Moving beyond modernity’s ever-expanding faith in forms of technological and 
market-based fixes, “solutionisms” (Morozov 2013) and the trust in hacking our 
way out of trouble has become an imperative. Hence, new political strategies 
are needed to foregroundontological politics and the multiplicities of 
differences or ‘otherness’ instead of a binary or apotheotic thinking (Rose 
2013). In order to conceptualise space for these necessary transitions, there 
is a need “to build on the notion of multiple realities and possibilities 
implicit in the agenda of many social movements'' (Escobar, 2020). Turning to 
such realities, or pluriversal politics, means engaging with multiple dialogic 
methods to ‘enhance appreciation of multiple ways of knowing and being in the 
world (...) that decenters models of science and development that have been 
portrayed as universally true and good (Paulson, 2018: 85).



Moreover, we aim to depart from recent debates seeking to ”name the system” in 
academic discussion mainly between framing our current epoch as the 
Anthropocene (Moore 2015; Boneuil and Fressoz, 2016). While we see these 
discussions as a fruitful starting point, we instead turn our interest to the 
multiple scales of change and follow Hylland Eriksen’s approach in scaling down 
to the middle-ground. Here we are interested in conceptualizations that provide 
stronger multi-scalar linkages between the macro and micro, the global and the 
local (Hylland Eriksen, 2018) to analyse environmental and social changes in 
times of increasing shared and particular planetary vulnerabilities (Mbembe, 
2020).


We invite authors to contribute in populating themiddle-ground and discuss 
thepluriversal and ontological politics of the Anthropocene. We welcome the 
conceptual and theoretical, as well as empirical examples that describe living 
and thinking in times of environmental and social change, linking macro-micro 
level changes to specific contexts and geographies. The topics of the 
contribution include, but are not limited to:


·  Multiple scales or multi-scalar clashes in the Anthropocene (Hylland 
Eriksen, 2016);

·  Strategies, case studies and the politics of reclaiming the commons, 
resisting terricide (Escobar, 2020) and ecocide in the content of new and old 
forms of extractivisms (Dunlap, 2020);

·  Conceptualising the double bind of economic growth and sustainability from 
different scales, places and mobitilities (e.g., in the fields of conservation, 
tourism, or natural resource governance, (see: Buscher & Fletcher, 2020);

·  Assessments of the COVID-19 pandemic and planetary degradation as a crisis 
of life (syndemic and other combinatory concepts);

·  Empirical examples and case studies of pluriversal politics in the global 
North or the global South, highlighting synergies and strategies for 
transitions and ontological politics (Escobar, 2015);

·  Strategies and experiences that explore and engage with the ‘decolonization 
of the imaginary’(Latouche, 2009);

·  Empirical and/or theoretical contributions exploring the contributions to 
ontological politics to broader conceptualizations of political economy or 
political ecology;

·  Problematizations of “plastic words”, development schemes and new versions 
of environmental “high modernity” (Scott, 1998; Sachs, 2018) through 
anti-political perspectives;

·  Transitions that aim to articulate changes from ‘predatory’ to ‘sensible’ or 
‘essential’ forms of extractivism (Brand, 2020);

·  The multiple ways that the environmental movements (new and old) can engage 
with pluriversal politics in the Anthropocene.


The contributions can take the form of:


·  Peer reviewed research articles (ca. 6000–9000 words), academic essays or 
review articles (ca. 3000–6000 words).

·  Editorially reviewed interventions and discussions (ca. 2000–4000 words).

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