SASE Mini-Conference: The Political Economy of Climate Change; submissions due January 25

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Simone Pulver

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Jan 18, 2022, 3:26:09 PM1/18/22
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Dear Colleagues-

 

I am writing to draw your attention to an upcoming submissions deadline for a mini-conference on the Political Economy of Climate Change, hosted by SASE, at its annual meeting in Amsterdam, 9-11 July, 2022.

 

Paper submissions are due by Tuesday, 25 January 2022.

https://sase.org/event/2022-amsterdam/

 

 

SASE Mini-Conference: The Political Economy of Climate Change

Climate change is one of the defining issues of the 21st century. Humans are being challenged to find a set of policies, practices, and standards of behavior that provide long-term economic opportunities and improved quality of life around the world while maintaining a sustainable climate and viable ecosystems. At the core of how we collectively respond to this challenge are questions of global governance and coordination and political activism arrayed against the organized opposition of large sectors of the world economy like energy extraction and energy production, agriculture, and mining. Governments and communities who depend on these activities for their principal forms of revenue and employment are dug in to oppose efforts at climate mitigation. Put bluntly, the issue of whether and under what conditions capitalism can meet this challenge, and what alternatives to capitalism might look like, is at stake. The purpose of our mini-conference is to explore these themes in order to better understand what is going on and what might be possible. We can think of no other issue that embeds all of these features of our current politics. In addition to addressing possibilities and limits of actions to decarbonize the economy, the social sciences also have an important role to play in better understanding the human dimensions of climate change’s physical impacts and designing strategies for adapting to these negative consequences. Climate change raises major questions of equity concerning how poor and marginalized communities, who have so far borne the brunt of disasters and other climate-driven risks, will cope with the increased pace of change. It also considers how developing countries with more vulnerable populations will suffer in the near future, promoting new waves of migration and social conflict.

We are interested in papers that consider political economy, corporate responses to the climate challenge, the role of markets and financial institutions, social movements and NGOs, cultural and meaning systems, macro-comparative policy research, technological innovations, and the social organization of science and science policy. We are also interested in work that tries to make sense of the social and political effects of climate change including issues like environmental justice, disaster research, impacts on labor, human health, security and conflict, and social demography with some attention to migration. Finally, we are interested in contributions that try and reference ongoing successful and unsuccessful efforts to mitigate and adapt to climate change.

 

____________________________________________________________________________

Dr. Simone Pulver

Associate Professor and Vice Chair, Environmental Studies

Director, Environmental Leadership Incubator

University of California at Santa Barbara

4001 Bren Hall / Santa Barbara, CA 93106

Pronouns: she/her

https://www.es.ucsb.edu/simone-pulver

https://eli.ucsb.edu/

 

 

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