Dear colleagues,

We warmly invite you to submit abstracts to our workshop at the 2026 NESS 
(Nordic Environmental Social Science 
Conference<https://www.uu.se/en/department/earth-sciences/research/natural-resources-and-sustainable-development/ness2026>,
 June 9-11, 2026, Uppsala, Sweden).

Workshop 6: Governing global trade: Facilitating effective policy mixes from 
the local to the global
European countries are deeply embedded in the global economy, which often 
results in the outsourcing of environmental impacts to other regions. In 
response, a wide range of governance interventions has emerged to promote the 
sustainability of European supply chains. These include voluntary certification 
schemes, corporate commitments, binding human rights and environmental due 
diligence laws, and environmental provisions in trade agreements.
Despite these initiatives, multiple challenges persist. Policies often face 
limited legitimacy or support in producer countries, political pushback and 
dilution within Europe due to geopolitical tensions and competitiveness 
concerns, insufficient transparency and traceability along supply chains, as 
well as delays and gaps in implementation. Another challenge is to meaningfully 
incorporate the lived experiences of actors in producer countries into policy 
design and implementation, ensuring that these policies are responsive to 
on-the-ground realities. Beyond the shortcomings of individual instruments, the 
central challenge lies in designing a coherent policy landscape that fosters 
synergies and complementarities across different interventions, while avoiding 
conflicts and governance gaps.
Key questions include:

  *   What are the limitations of individual governance instruments, and how 
can these be addressed through well-designed policy packages?
  *   To what extent can experiences from different sectors such as mining, 
agriculture, and textiles, as well as from different countries and governance 
levels, provide transferable lessons?
  *   What implementation gaps persist in Nordic countries, and how might they 
be closed?
  *   How can scientific evidence inform policy debates in a European political 
climate that has become increasingly resistant to mandatory supply chain 
regulations?
This workshop invites fully drafted manuscripts that offer both theoretical and 
empirical contributions on the environmental governance of global supply 
chains, drawing on diverse cases, sectors, and national contexts. We seek 
comparative insights across these experiences while also aiming to identify 
policy mixes that can most effectively tackle sustainability challenges 
associated with global supply chains. Submissions using a wide range of 
methodological approaches are welcome, including qualitative, quantitative, and 
mixed-methods research.

The workshop is convened by Martin Persson, Malaika Yanou, and myself.

Deadline for abstract submission is next Monday, December 8.

We look forward to receiving your submissions!

Best regards,
Johanna

--
Dr. Johanna Coenen
Postdoctoral researcher
Department of Political Science
Stockholm University
SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden

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