Dear all,

We are submitting a panel on climate-biodiversity governance for the Earth 
System Governance conference<https://www.earthsystemgovernance.org/2026-bath/> 
in Bath 2026 (8 - 10 September), details are listed below.
If you are interested, please reach out to us, Benedikte Raft 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) and Anouk Fransen 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) by the 12th of January 2026.

All the best,

Benedikte and Anouk


The Frontiers of Climate and Biodiversity Governance
Unprecedented heatwaves, floods, and accelerating ecosystem degradation 
underscore a growing scientific consensus: climate change and biodiversity loss 
are deeply intertwined and cannot be governed in isolation. This panel explores 
emerging approaches to climate-biodiversity governance by taking the notion of 
the frontier not as a rigid conceptual lens but as an entry point for 
rethinking the entanglements of climate, biodiversity, and justice.

Frontiers have long evoked territorial and conceptual boundaries, historically 
shaped by colonial imaginaries of conquest, expansion, and control. Yet, 
drawing on postcolonial and feminist scholarship, we approach frontiers as not 
fixed lines but fluid, contested spaces where boundaries, actors, and values 
are continually produced and contested. Thinking of governance in terms of 
frontiers foregrounds how institutions, actors, institutions, and ecologies are 
rendered governable (or excluded), and how boundaries between climate and 
biodiversity are actively (re)made.
By approaching climate-biodiversity governance as an evolving frontier, this 
panel opens space for examining the challenges, tensions, and possibilities 
emerging in efforts to align these twinning challenges.

This panel seek to explore the following questions:

  *   Where and how is climate-biodiversity governance emerging, and what 
consequences does it generate?
  *   What tensions arise when climate action is prioritized over biodiversity 
protection - or when biodiversity is prioritized over climate action?
  *   How are climate and biodiversity being framed (e.g. as interconnected 
risks, opportunities, governance targets) and enacted through tools and 
techniques (e.g. Nature Tech)?
  *   Who is considered to be a legitimate actor to govern these twin 
challenges, and who is deemed illegitimate? Who gains and who loses as new 
governance arrangements take shape?
  *   How are issues of justice articulated, contested, and transformed in 
these evolving frontiers?
This panel directly engages with the theme of Architecture and Agency by 
interrogating how authority, knowledge, and justice are configured across the 
shifting frontiers of climate and biodiversity governance. If interested, 
please send abstracts of up to 300 words to Benedikte Raft 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) and Anouk Fransen 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) by the 12th of January 2026. The 
panel organisers will then submit the full set of abstracts by the 15th of 
January 2026.


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