__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Global Environmental Justice and Its Limits
Subtitle: Complexities of Time and Space
Type: 2nd Annual Conference
Institution: Network for Global Justice and the Environmental
Humanities
   Centre for Environmental Humanities, Aarhus University
Location: Aarhus (Denmark) – Online
Date: 3.–5.11.2022
Deadline: 22.8.2022

__________________________________________________


The 2nd Annual Conference of the Network for Global Justice and the
Environmental Humanities will take place at the Centre for
Environmental Humanities, Aarhus University, 3–5 November 2022.

We warmly welcome proposals from diverse participants including
junior and senior researchers, environmental activists, artists,
journalists as well as other civil society actors who wish to engage
in a dialogue about concepts, practices, and multiple understandings
of global justice in a moment of mounting environmental urgencies.

With this year's conference, we intend to bring together scholarly
and activist experiences that speak from different backgrounds or
that crisscross the boundaries of North and South. The conference
will feature keynote lectures by scholars and activists reflecting
multiple approaches to questions of justice linked to their situated
and specific contexts. It will further include traditional panel and
round-table formats alongside more experimental forms of
participation such as walks and transformative design challenges. We
thus encourage proposals for innovative formats, interactive events,
and multimedia presentations, alongside more traditional academic
genres, such as talks, papers, and roundtable discussions. Overall,
we solicit diverse kinds of contributions that address the
conference’s themes and topics as they also promote cross-boundary
scholarly and societal engagement.


Conference Theme

We intend to spark discussions about plural understandings of justice
by exploring how scholars, activists and other civil society actors
relate with the concept, and how they negotiate justice claims
through space and time. We explicitly seek to address the temporal
and spatial dimensions of global environmental justice by considering
how colonial/postcolonial trajectories inform mobilization and
communication strategies in ongoing conflicts over resources,
territories and the distribution of risks. Crucial to speaking back
to and denouncing global environmental injustices are questions of
how to give shape to stories of global justice. How do we tell
"terrible" stories that are still motivating, empowering and hopeful
– if these are the stories to tell?

In particular, we intend to discuss how the different temporalities
and histories inherent to different notions of global justice play
out in environmental justice movements and how imperial/colonial
pathways of extraction shape environmental justice claims and
practices of transformative future-making. Furthermore, we intend to
explore how to give form to (through narration, storytelling,
performance, theories, video, writing) such histories and how stories
– or other forms – can be assistive in breaking the course of
environmental injustice.

Environmental justice practices often include strong engagements with
histories, including via the documentation of histories of pollution,
expulsions from homelands, alienating forms of urban planning, and
the more-than-human lifeworlds damaged by industrial agriculture or
buried beneath concrete. Justice movements work with histories not
only to trace practices of harm, but also to identify inspiration for
ongoing struggles in examples of past resistances. Importantly, they
often experiment with other modes of narrating pasts – including
histories that challenge logics of growth and denaturalize state
claims. Thus, when we seek to focus on "histories" within the context
of this conference, we are not interested merely in the work of
historians or in mainstream histories. Instead, we are broadly
interested in everyday ways of invoking the past within practices of
activism and in relation to wide-ranging questions about justice,
ecologies, and environments.


Guiding Questions

- How do histories matter to current (global) environmental justice
  practices?
- How can a historical understanding of imperial modes of living and
  material histories of modernization inform transformative practices
  today?
- How do we identify and work with the (hi)stories that need to be
  told, and in what ways do the mode of telling them matter?
- What past modes of resistance/resilience can and do inform
  environmental justice practices?
- What temporalities enliven diverse practices of conserving,
  restoring and caring?
- What is the relationship between histories of colonialism and
  current debates and practices around conservation and environmental
  stewardship?
- How have notions of global environmental justice evolved
  historically?
- How can we account for historical uncertainty and its role in
  questions of justice?
- What kinds of storytelling and other ways of knowing and telling
  about pasts can help animate more just presents and futures?
- What kinds of memories and uses of the past are at play in
  discussions over loss, irreparable damage and ecological grief?
- What roles do natural history and historical ecology research play
  in justice struggles?
- How can (post)colonial natural collections be appropriated/reworked
  in contemporary justice struggles?
- Do historical renderings of global environmental justice enable or
  complicate transnational solidarities?


Submission Details

Paper contributions may be proposed by submitting a maximum 300 word
abstract. Other kinds of contributions may be proposed by submitting
a maximum 300 word description, accompanied by (visual or other)
materials presenting the proposed format. Examples of such
contributions may be - but are not limited to - performances, film
screenings, dialogue-provoking exhibitions of objects or artefacts,
conversations about dilemmas, etc. We also welcome groups that want
to propose paper panels or other assemblages of contributions. In
this case, please offer maximum 300 words about each aspect of the
overall collection/assemblage. For all submissions, please indicate
if you wish to participate on-site in Aarhus, Denmark, or online. Be
sure to include name, organisational affiliation (if relevant), and
email address for all people included in the proposal.

Submission & questions:
ehjust...@cas.au.dk

Deadline to submit:
22 August 2022


Funding

We have very little funding for travel expenses. In practice, this
means that most participants should be prepared to either fund their
own travel or participate online. We will use the funds that we do
have to support people with financial need who think they would
especially benefit from in person attendance. If you would like to be
considered for funding, please note this at the bottom of your
submission, along with a short explanation of why you are seeking
funding.


Local Organizers

Georg Fischer
Email: fisc...@cas.au.dk

Heather Swanson
Email: c...@cas.au.dk


Conference website:
https://arts.au.dk/en/ehjustice/view/artikel/ehjusticeconference2022






__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/interphil@list.polylog.org/

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to