Dear Colleagues,

We are delighted to invite abstract submissions to a workshop we are hosting at 
the Nordic Environmental Social Science (NESS) Conference at Uppsala 
University, Sweden, 9-11 June 2026:

****
Workshop 21: Backlash, rollback, and backsliding: Comparing the dynamics and 
implications of reversing climate and environmental policies
Policy reversal is now a major scholarly, political, and public concern in 
contemporary climate and environmental politics. From accumulating experiences 
of backlash to climate policies across a variety of countries (Patterson 2023; 
Patterson et al., 2025), to public and parliamentary pushback against European 
Green Deal policies, and dismantling of policies and institutions in the United 
States and elsewhere, climate and environmental policy is being challenged in 
new and profound ways. Yet, the rapidly growing research on these topics 
remains highly fragmented (e.g., in terms of concepts, causal explanations, 
methods, and interpretations).

Bridging gaps in scientific knowledge on these proliferating phenomena is 
urgently needed. This requires: (i) bringing diverse emerging (and 
longstanding) cases and lines of enquiry into productive dialogue to explain 
the dynamics and implications of policy reversals, and (ii) identifying 
similarities and distinguishing differences across and within cases (including 
among different actor perspectives), to (iii) make sense of the rapidly 
evolving contexts of climate and environmental policymaking. Doing so is 
crucial to not only bridging gaps between the urgency of transformation and 
real-world policy implementation, but also gaps between differing social 
science disciplines and approaches to such research.

Questions also arise about the implications of policy reversal for 
environmental politics and future ecological and social outcomes. How does the 
apparently widespread occurrence of policy reversal challenge our understanding 
of environmental politics? Might it suggest potential blindspots in theorizing 
policy and broader political change? Are there circumstances under which policy 
reversals may be generative (e.g., revealing overlooked interests and values, 
stimulating new debates, or provoking new strategies for policy action)? If so, 
under which conditions does this occur, and how does this vary for different 
actors within heterogeneous and unequal societies? Can we develop systemic 
comparative and transnational frameworks to understand these phenomena?

We welcome empirical and conceptual fully drafted manuscripts across 
geographies, political spaces, and disciplinary and interdisciplinary 
approaches. The workshop will engage deeply with all authors, and discuss 
comparative learning across differing cases, insights, and arguments.
​****

Key information:

  *   Deadline for abstracts: 8 Dec 2025 23:59 Central European Time (CET). 
Notification of acceptance in January 2026.
  *   Participation is open to scholars globally. The NESS conference has run 
for over 30 years bringing together scholars across social sciences and 
humanities in environmental studies.
  *   Please find the conference website here: 
https://www.uu.se/en/department/earth-sciences/research/natural-resources-and-sustainable-development/ness2026
 (click on ‘Workshops’ to make a submission).
  *   Submissions must be done via the conference website (not directly to the 
workshop convenors). When submitting your abstract, please make sure to choose 
the correct workshop.
  *   If your abstract is accepted, you will be required to submit a fully 
drafted manuscript to the workshop convenors in May 2026. Discussion of full 
papers is a widely appreciated feature of the NESS conferences. Please only 
submit an abstract if it will indeed be possible for you to present and discuss 
a full draft of the paper at the conference.
  *   Abstracts will be evaluated based on scientific quality, fit with the 
workshop theme, and likelihood that a fully drafted manuscript will be 
available by May 2026.
  *   Please see the conference website for further information about how to 
prepare your abstract.

Please pass on this email to relevant colleagues, and/or feel free to reach out 
if you have any questions.

We look forward to receiving your abstract!

With kind regards,

James Patterson - Utrecht University ([email protected])
Stacy VanDeveer - University of Massachusetts, Boston ([email protected])
Ksenia Anisimova - Utrecht University ([email protected])

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