Dear colleagues, please see the message below from Jamie Mayerfeld. If
interested, please reply to him directly.

Best,
John

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Jamie Mayerfeld <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, Jan 2, 2023 at 5:02 PM
Subject: Working group to lower APSA's carbon emissions
To: John M Meyer <[email protected]>

Dear Friends,

2030 is seven years away, and carbon emissions are still increasing. I
believe U.S. political science associations including APSA, WPSA, MPSA, and
SPSA among others can and must do more to lower their carbon emissions.
The cumulative and per capita carbon footprints of our annual in-person
meetings are very high, principally because of air travel. Until we learn
how to decarbonize air travel, this is a serious problem.  We should look
for ways to maximize scholarly value while avoiding harm.



A research article published two years ago in *Nature *examined different
ways in which academic associations could reduce their carbon emissions.
(Milan Klöwer, Debbie Hopkins, Myles Allen, and James Higham, “An analysis
of ways to decarbonize conference travel after COVID-19
<https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02057-2>,” *Nature*, 15 July
2020). One of the most significant steps that associations can take is to
limit in-person conferences to every other year.



Other academic associations are taking action. The American Philosophical
Association decided <https://www.apaonline.org/news/news.asp?id=610518> (on
a 3 year-trial basis) that each year starting in 2025, it will hold one of
its three divisional conferences online. You can learn more about this
decision here
<https://www.philosophersforsustainability.com/apa-2-plus-1-campaign/>.
The Middle East Studies Association has moved its 2024 conference mostly
online
<https://mesana.org/news/2022/12/13/frequently-asked-questions-about-the-future-annual-meeting-format>,
citing the climate crisis as one of its main reasons. The American
Association of Geographers is considering
<https://www.aag.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Climate_Action_Task_Force_Report_Spring_2021.pdf>
limiting its physical meetings to every other year, alongside other
possible measures to reduce carbon emissions. The Western Political Science
Association has established a Virtual Communities Program
<http://wpsanet.org/virtual/wpsavc.php> that hosts regular online meetings
for intellectual exchange and professional development without need of air
travel. (I am past president of WPSA, and serve on the WPSA Climate Action
Committee <http://www.wpsanet.org/75_anniv/climateactioncommittee.pdf>.). A
petition submitted to the American Sociological Association suggests
<https://www.change.org/p/american-sociological-association-council-decarbonize-asa-meetings>
holding some of its conferences online.  To see other examples of
professional associations that have tried moving to low-carbon meetings,
please visit this page
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1URRRh4zMSpvtZY08F9-Rkbx0qkNNmfzIzqOlqZWKxkE/edit#heading=h.wwj1kmoqjxqm>
.



I am interested in forming a working group of like-minded political
scientists seeking to achieve significant reductions in the carbon
emissions of our professional associations.  One idea worth exploring might
be to alternate in-person and virtual conferences. As philosopher Helen De
Cruz has argued
<https://blog.apaonline.org/2021/07/15/the-case-for-alternating-in-person-and-virtual-conferences/>,
there are additional equity-based reasons to take this step.  The success
of Philosophers for Sustainability in persuading the American Philosophical
Association to adopt the 2+1 Plan is a model we can emulate. Please contact
me at [email protected], if you are potentially interested in forming part of
such a working group. Please send the names of other political scientists
who might be interested, or forward this message to them yourself.



Some relevant resources:



Joseph Nevins and Parke Wilde, eds., “Reducing Academica’s Carbon Footprint
<http://flyingless.org/>,” aka flyingless.org, a website filled with
articles, reviews, updates, resources, and two excellent FAQ pages.



Ryan Katz-Rosene, “Flying Less in Academia: A Resource Guide
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vSLG573KG2YrLhpT8SBgTKNvrEUBtTCN_NBVtdEl8jqHK_vY6MhonM4DeiEoMoh18CdyyfNdxCfp6gp/pub>,”
a treasure trove of resources and information.



Philosophers for Sustainability
<https://www.philosophersforsustainability.com/>, website with resources
for teaching, research, and the adoption of low-carbon academic practices.
The website defines sustainability in broad terms.



Milan Klöwer, Debbie Hopkins, Myles Allen, and James Higham, “An analysis
of ways to decarbonize conference travel after COVID-19
<https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02057-2>,” *Nature*, 15 July
2020.



Helen De Cruz, “The Case for Alternating In-Person and Virtual Conferences
<https://blog.apaonline.org/2021/07/15/the-case-for-alternating-in-person-and-virtual-conferences/>,”
*Blog of the American Philosophical Association*, 15 July 2021



“The Climate Crisis and the Ethics of Flying
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1FEdLKKzAU&t=250s>,” webinar hosted by
the University of Washington, October 25, 2022



Jamie Mayerfeld, “Our Individual and Collective Duty to Reduce Flying
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1S30Muavo95Qk7-qV_b46S9fEMF_4wKVORGemYXHyg9I/edit?usp=sharing>,”
text of remarks delivered to Oct. 25 webinar on “The Climate Crisis and the
Ethics of Flying <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1FEdLKKzAU&t=250s>.”



Julian Allwood, “The only way to hit net zero by 2050 is to stop flying
<https://www.ft.com/content/e00819ba-4814-11ea-aee2-9ddbdc86190d>,” *Financial
Times*, February 6, 2020


Philosophers for Sustainability white paper on virtual networking
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/17hwLsp8SN3cIRF2Tf7AqCWxMBKxMytieW27odSv1Lx0/edit#heading=h.lc2ckk6bz1bc>



Thank you!


Jamie Mayerfeld
Professor of Political Science
University of Washington
https://sites.uw.edu/jasonm/
Author of *The Promise of Human Rights
<https://www.polisci.washington.edu/research/publications/promise-human-rights-constitutional-government-democratic-legitimacy-and>*




-- 

*John M. Meyer* <https://sites.humboldt.edu/johnmeyer> | Professor

Chair (2022-2023), Environmental Studies

*CAL POLY **HUMBOLDT*

DROP-IN OFFICE HOURS: Tues, Thurs 1-2pm FH 138

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Department of Politics | Affiliate: Environment and Community;
Environmental Studies

One Harpst St. |  Arcata, CA 95521 USA

Office: Founders Hall138  |  Phone: +1 707.826.4497

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<https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fenp20/current>; @Env_Pol
<https://twitter.com/Env_Pol>

he/him/his

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