Call for Proposals
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly
Symposium on
Climate Change and the Voluntary Sector
Guest editors:
Beth Gazley, School of Public & Environmental Affairs, Indiana University Bloomington
Aseem Prakash, Department of Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle
Climate change is a defining issue of our times. The threat of its effects to humanity’s welfare is widely understood on a scientific level, even if not yet accepted by all members of the general public Some of these affected humans will turn to help from nonprofit and non-governmental organizations. Injuries or other immediate human needs create demands for short-term help, such as the role played by hundreds of nonprofit and faith-based “voluntary organizations active in disaster”. As extreme weather increases in frequency, demands on these organizations are already increasing.
Long-term assistance normally provided by nonprofits and NGOs will be in greater demand, such as in climate refugee relocation, job training, immigration assistance, education, and food assistance. Taking just healthcare as an example, a major employer of the U.S. nonprofit workforce, climate change will impact public health capacity over the long term through predicted increases in extreme heat, water and insect-borne infectious disease, wildfires, air pollution, injuries, and mental health needs.
In light of the shrinking of the public sphere and a vigorous discussion about governmental policy and market solutions to climate change, we do not hear much about civil society solutions, from the community-based to the cross-national, and how they might aid or impede other solutions. Given the structural and state-centered focus of most Climate discussions, it is not surprising that neither the Green New Deal nor President-Elect Biden’s Climate Plans clearly outline the role of the nonprofit sector to address the climate crisis.
There is an extensive but disparate literature on the role of the voluntary sector on environmental issues, addressing advocacy and social movement organizations, conservation organizations, nonprofits providing public and club goods such as parks foundations and mountaineering clubs, the social and racial justice elements of climate impact, and nonprofits addressing the effects of climate change through disaster response. This Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly symposium seeks to address these topics collectively, in terms of how climate change impacts civil society organizations or how civil society organizations respond to climate change. Climate change in the “voluntaristics” literature is almost entirely used as a general framing device, without focused attention to its nature and impact on nonprofits.
This symposium will be organized around questions such as:
1. Among nonprofits dedicated to sustainability, conservation, and climate change mitigation,
2. Religious and faith-based nonprofits have played an important role in many social movements.
3. How have philanthropic foundations structured the climate field?
4. In the face of climate change, are nonprofit service providers planning differently?
5. How do dominant civil society theories, such as three-failures theory, apply to climate change response? What new theories must be considered?
6. We also invite proposals for comprehensive “review articles” using appropriate methodologies. The symposium will include one such article.
TimeLine
1. March 1, 2021
Extended Abstracts (500-700 words) outlining research questions, data, empirical strategy, theoretical and empirical contributions
2. April 1, 2021
Abstracts Reviewed by Guest Editors, online conference papers invited
3. April 2- August 1, 2021
Invited authors produce full conference papers
4. August 1, 2021
Online Conference
5. September 30, 2021
Revised papers submitted for NVSQ review
6. January 30, 2022
First External Review completed by NVSQ
7. March 15, 2022
Revisions turned in
8. June 1, 2022
Second review completed by NVSQ
9. June 30, 2022
Guest editor recommendations submitted to journal editors
________________________________________________
Aseem
Prakash
Professor,
Department of Political Science
Walker
Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
Founding
Director,
UW
Center for Environmental Politics
University
of Washington, Seattle
aseemprakash.net
(the flagship journal of The Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action)
(the flagship journal of The Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary
Action)
Extended Abstracts (500-700 words) outlining research questions, data, empirical strategy, theoretical and empirical contributions.
Please email: <bga...@indiana.edu> and <as...@uw.edu>
2. April 1, 2021
Abstracts Reviewed by Guest Editors, online conference papers invited
3. April 2- August 1, 2021
Invited authors produce full conference papers
4. August 1, 2021
Online Conference
5. September 30, 2021
Revised papers submitted for NVSQ review
6. January 30, 2022
First External Review completed by NVSQ
7. March 15, 2022
Revisions turned in
8. June 1, 2022
Second review completed by NVSQ
9. June 30, 2022
Guest editor recommendations submitted to journal editors