Dear colleagues,

Manisha Anantharaman and I are organizing a panel for ISA 2024 exploring
the intersection of discarding and global environmental governance.
Please contact us if interested in joining or share with folks who may be
working on relevant areas! See our working title and description:


*Discarding and the aesthetic politics of global environmental governance*
The emergence and development of global environmental governance regimes
has relied on the valuation and normalization of certain “clean” and
“green” aesthetic practices. By extension, this cleaning and greening, be
it of global environmental summits, host cities, or even the reputations of
corporate and state actors, also requires the devaluation and discarding of
people, places, and things that do not align with dominant forms of
environmentalism. Attention to wasting as a technique of power (Liboiron
and Lepawsky 2022) illuminates these processes and enables us to
interrogate naturalized norms and practices of GEG. This panel will
investigate the relationships between the aesthetic politics of global
environmental governance and systems of discarding. How does the
construction of global environmental governance value some ways of being
while enabling the destruction of other distinct lifeworlds through its
discursive, aesthetic and calculative modes? What role do aesthetic and
discursive practices play in the rebranding of waste and pollution as
resources in GEG? How do locally disenfranchised actors such as informal
waste pickers and frontline communities who bear the brunt of waste-related
pollution, amongst others, leverage the discourse and spaces of global
environmental governance to make political claims and reposition themselves
as “environmental” actors? How are aesthetic performances in the
negotiation of global environmental regimes used to gloss over ongoing
injustices connected to systems of extraction and discard?

We welcome paper proposals utilizing a diverse range of methodologies and
theoretical approaches that address these issues. We particularly welcome
papers that integrate Indigenous, Decolonial, Black, Intersectional,
Abolitionist, Queer, and Marxist Feminist lineages of thought, or
incorporate activist and engaged research approaches into the work.

Please send an abstract to Manisha Anantharaman at [email protected] and
Lauren Baker at [email protected] by Friday May 26.


-------
Lauren M. Baker (she/her)
PhD Candidate, Department of Political Science
Chicago Field Studies, Instructor
Northwestern University
Homelands of the Council of Three Fires*
    *beyond Land Acknowledgements*
<https://nativegov.org/a-self-assessment/>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/gep-ed/CANNPOs4RAbAHfMbxqzEsAd5S0YBnTqWcuhTbUjw59fpX5dOC8A%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to