Dear colleagues,

Adding to the chorus of those proposing panels for the International Studies 
Association meeting in Chicago in March 2025.

Shardul Tiwari and I are organizing a panel on carbon lock-in and 
carbon-related technologies, and are putting out a call for papers. As many of 
you know, ISA panels need 5 papers, a chair and a discussant. Paper proposals 
should have a title (50 words max), an author list (names, emails, 
affiliations), and an abstract (200 words max). Proposals are due by June 1, so 
please be in touch with us by email (to 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> and 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) by Friday, May 18 with 
expressions of interest to participate in this panel (even if you don’t have a 
finalized abstract, let me know if you’re interested!).

To submit a proposal, all authors must have an ISA account (these are free to 
register for); if the panel is accepted, panelists must register for the 
conference (you can register as a non-member, or become an ISA member and get 
member prices for conference registration – note there is a sliding scale for 
registration and membership depending on your career stage and income).

And a note on the topic of the panel: this brief abstract doesn’t indicate 
this, but of course these ideas on carbon lock-in, decarbonization pathways, 
climate delay as denial, ownership structures for technology, and more draw on 
the work many of you have been doing for a long time! We’re looking forward to 
continuing and building on these conversations.

Panel title: Critical perspectives on carbon lock-in: Capture, storage, and 
fuel synthesis technologies in energy transitions

Panel abstract: At present, most carbon capture, utilization, and storage 
(CCUS) technologies are being developed and used to improve emissions intensity 
of production or extend the life of oil and gas wells. The critical social 
science research suggests that the current trajectories and projected uses of 
these technologies will prolong fossil fuel dependence, reinforce the incumbent 
power of the fossil fuel industry, and delay climate action. However, 
theoretically, there are possibilities for carbon capture, storage, conversion, 
and re-use pathways that could disentangle the ongoing use of hydrocarbons from 
fossil fuel extraction. The technological promise is that fuel synthesis could 
enable longer-term renewable energy storage and could decouple 
hard-to-transition sectors from their reliance on new extraction. Is this just 
another incremental improvement that locks in carbon-intensive futures? Can 
changing the systems of governance or the ownership of technology or the sites 
of technological experimentation provide pathways for these technologies to 
support or enable more transformative energy futures? Do these anticipated 
circular carbon economies disrupt fossil fuels but create other social and 
environmental harm? This panel explores these questions.


All best,
Kate


-------
Dr. Kate J. Neville
Associate Professor, Political Science and School of the Environment
University of Toronto
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

** Forthcoming book: Going to Seed: Essays on Idleness, Nature, and Sustainable 
Work **
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