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Call for Papers

Theme: Global Environmental Justice
Type: Interdisciplinary Workshop
Institution: Research Group on Changing Norms of Global Governance
and Institute for Intercultural and International Studies (InIIS),
University of Bremen
Location: Bremen (Germany)
Date: 26.–27.4.2013
Deadline: 7.9.2012

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In recent years, global environmental politics and its study have
increasingly engaged with normative questions, including global
justice. Justice and equity norms have been on the agenda of
international environmental politics ever since the latter's
emergence in the 1970s, but gained much prominence in the context of
more recent debates about global climate change, the conservation of
the world's natural resources (e.g. forests, fisheries or biological
diversity) or the international trade in hazardous wastes. Core
questions include: Who should contribute how much to the avoidance of
future environmental harm? Who ought to pay the costs incurred by the
need to adapt to a changing natural environment? Which obligations do
current generations have towards future ones in preserving the
integrity of the natural environment?

So far, two strands of literature seem to address global
environmental issues from different angles. First, there is a broad
range of philosophically informed writings that focus on what an
appropriate conception of global (environmental) justice would entail
and seek to derive broad principles of global environmental justice.
Second, the more empirically minded writings have thus far primarily
been concerned with how (global) justice norms emerge and develop and
how they affect policy-making at different scales.

The workshop is guided by the notion that it is useful to bridge this
gap and to engage political and legal philosophy and empirical social
science research - most notably from political science, geography and
sociology - in a more encompassing and multi-faceted debate. The kind
of questions we are interested in include (but are not limited to)
questions such as:

- What are the practically relevant differences und conflicts between
different concepts of global environmental justice discussed in the
literature? Would different theories of justice lead us to
fundamentally different assessments of real-world institutions? Or
are the differences mainly a matter of degree?

- How can we recognize and 'measure' global environmental (in)justice?

- How and why do different kinds of international or transnational
environmental regimes differ in their distributive consequences at
different scales? And what does that mean for global environmental
justice?

- How is global environmental justice conceptually and empirically
related to the broader field of global justice? And where and how are
global environmental justice concerns in conflict with other values
such as ecosystem preservation, the conservation of biodiversity,
self-determination, institutional effectiveness, or (legitimate)
self-interest?

We welcome papers from different disciplinary backgrounds, including
political philosophy, political science, geography, sociology and
law. The substantive focus may be on climate change, but given the
fast-growing literature on this particular topic we would also
greatly welcome papers that address other environmental issues.

Abstracts of proposed papers should be up to 500 words; they can be
submitted to: [email protected]
The deadline for submitting abstracts is Friday, 7 September 2012.

Keynote Speaker:
Henry Shue, Oxford University

The workshop will be jointly hosted by the Research Group on Changing
Norms of Global Governance and the Institute for Intercultural and
International Studies (InIIS) at the Universität Bremen.
Reimbursement of travel costs will be available for a limited number
of participants.

Conference organizers:

Klaus Dingwerth
[email protected]

Darrel Moellendorff
[email protected]

Ina Lehmann
[email protected]

Timeline:

Deadline for abstract submissions: 7 September 2012
Notification of selected papers: 15 October 2012
Papers due: 8 April 2013
Workshop date: 26/27 April 2013




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