Call for Papers

"Environmental Justice and Global Citizenship:
Environments, Sustainability and Technologies"
4th Global Conference
Inter-Disciplinary.Net
Mansfield College, University of Oxford
Oxford (UK)
5-7 July 2005


This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary conference aims to explore the 
role of ecology and
environmental ideas in the context of contemporary society and international 
politics, and assess the
implications for our understandings of fairness, justice and global citizenship.

In particular, the 4th Global Conference on Ecological Justice and Global 
Citizenship will explicitly
explore the relationships between environments, sustainability and technology, 
the role of technology in
creating possibilities for sustainable resources for the future, and the 
inherent problems and dangers
which accompany that role.

Papers, presentations, reports and workshops are invited on any of the 
following indicative themes;

1. GM
* GM as a symbol of public perceptions of the possibilities and challenges 
offered by technology and
public understanding of risks of technological developments in relation to the 
environment
* Expert vs. lay knowledge; Who decides? Scientists, politicians or 'the 
people'?
* Participatory decision-making; e.g., the 'GM Nation' debate that took place 
in the UK in summer 2003
* Environmental ethics; relations between humans and 'nature'
* 'New and emerging thinkers and trends of thought; e.g., recent books - Bill 
McKibben's Enough,
Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake; other examples welcome
* The role and place of Environmental protest; forms of resistance to GM, their 
significance and impact
* The political economy of GM; trade, aid, justice, international dimensions
* Technology and 'progress'; what counts as technological development? Which is 
more modern - GM food or
organic food?
* Developing countries and GM; the place of developing countries in the GM 
debate; the responsibility of
the developers towards developing countries; whether patterns of development 
are predicated on wrong
perceptions about the role of technology; the coverage of and access to 
alternative technologies

2. Cooperative and Sustainable Development
* Human rights, state sovereignty and the global commons
* The significance of the welfare state; the principle of distribution
* Sustainable employment and cooperation between capital and labour
* Property rights and private insurance vs. pooling of human and ecological 
resources
* Transport and the environment; designing and delivering national and 
international transport systems;
creating sustainable transport networks
* Responsible consumption and corporate transparency and accountability
* Communities taking responsibility for the local environment
* Civil society and the role of NGOs

3. Environmental Education and Intellectual Health
* Environmental issues and the curriculum; integrating environmental awareness 
and education in the
primary, secondary and higher education sectors
* The components of scholarship: discovery-research, teaching, integration and 
application
* The emerging synthesis of perceptual psychology and ecological awareness
* The humanistic model vs the ecological model
* The role of the planning and design sciences
* Teaching citizenship, identity and ethics
* Designing the ecological curriculum
* The integration of distinct disciplines; trans-disciplinary innovations

4. Citizenship, Technological Innovation & Sustainability
* The deployment and mobilisation of technologies
* How we engage with the various ways in which citizens (in lay or professional 
roles) can, are, or
could be involved in the processes of achieving increased sustainability in the 
way they design, make and
implement technologies
* The social nature of technologies;
* Developing understandings of user and community 'participation' in design and 
decision making processes
* The need for greater multi- and trans-disciplinary collaboration and its 
essential accompanying
characteristic of inter-disciplinary or joined-up thinking
* Technology, buildings, cities and planning policies: the role of technology 
in designing and
constructing buildings and cities to more sustainable effect; the impact of 
information technologies;
knowledge management and the environment

Papers are also solicited for special sessions which will be held in common 
with a second research
project running at the same time entitled "Making Sense Of: Health, Illness and 
Disease". Papers dealing
with issues surrounding the health impacts of technological developments are 
encouraged. For example, we
welcome submissions dealing with themes exploring the notion of 'environments' 
(both natural, built and
virtual) as a backdrop where technologies are used through thought and action 
to achieve sustainability,
but where mismatches between environmental issues and technological solutions 
have experienceable effects
on health which, untreated (such as non- recognition of stress, mental ill 
health), result in illness.
Papers could also deal with the gap between environmental ills and 
technological and technical solutions,
and the possible consequent greater probability of disease and death. Holistic 
solutions to health,
illness and environmental issues could usefully be explored, along with 
citizenship issues and access to
health care.

Perspectives are sought from
* people engaged in actor network theory, agriculture and agricultural 
economics, the built environment
disciplines, conflict resolution and mediation, critical geography, 
environmental studies, human
development and ecology, industrial relations and design, philosophy and 
ethics, political science and
international affairs, public policy and advising, social sciences, sociology 
of science, theology, urban
studies, western European studies
* people in the public and private sectors who are involved in planning and 
project development,
policy-making and implementation, and negotiation and mediation at national and 
international levels
* people in Governmental, inter-governmental and non-governmental 
organisations, voluntary sector
bodies, environmental charities and groups, business and professional 
associations

Papers will be considered on any related theme. 300 word abstracts should be 
submitted by Friday 11th
March 2005. If selected for presentation, 8 page draft conference papers should 
be submitted by Friday
10th June 2005.

Papers should be submitted to the Joint Organising Chairs: these should be sent 
as an email attachment
in Word or WordPerfect; abstracts can also be submitted in the body of the 
email text rather than as an
attachment.
Joint Organising Chairs

Dr. S. Ram Vemuri
School of Law and Business
Faculty of Law, Business and Arts
Charles Darwin University
Darwin, NT 0909, Australia
Email: [email protected]    

Dr Rob Fisher
Inter-Disciplinary.Net
Priory House, 149B Wroslyn Road
Freeland, Oxfordshire OX29 8HR
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]

All papers accepted for and presented at the conference will be published in an 
ISBN eBook. Selected
papers accepted for and presented at the conference will be published in a 
themed hard copy volume. Two
themed volumes are in print and one themed volume is in press from the previous 
conferences.

The conference is sponsored by Inter-Disciplinary.Net as part of the 'Probing 
the Boundaries' programme
of research projects. It aims to bring together people from different areas and 
interests to share ideas
and explore various discussions which are innovative and exciting.

For further details about the project please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/ptb/ejgc/ejgc.htm

For further details about the conference please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/ptb/ejgc/ejgc4/cfp.htm



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