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ANTHROPOLOGY-MATTERS  November 2019

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Subject:

Abstract submission open! - Sustainability, complexity and change: critical, alternative and complementary perspectives to SDGs

From:

rita campos <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

rita campos <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 11 Nov 2019 15:05:23 +0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

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Dear all,



[English below]


O XIV Congresso Luso-Afro-Brasileiro (CONLAB) e 3º Congresso da Associação
Internacional de Ciências Sociais e Humanas de Língua Portuguesa, vai ter
lugar em Coimbra, de 2 a 4 de Setembro de 2020



Convidamos todos/as os/as interessados em discutir tópicos relacionados com
o desenvolvimento sustentável e os ODS a submeter um resumo ao *GT77:
Sustentabilidade, complexidade e mudança: perspectivas críticas,
alternativas e complementares aos ODS*



*Coordenação:* Rita Campos e Ana Teixeira Melo (CES-UC - Centro de Estudos
Sociais, Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal); e Magnólia Araújo (UFRN -
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Brasil)



*** A submissão de resumos está aberta, até ao dia 31 de Dezembro 2019 ***



*>>>>> Ir a https://www.conftool.pro/conlab2020
<https://www.conftool.pro/conlab2020>. Depois de se registar, escolher o
grupo de trabalho e submeter então a proposta de comunicação.*


Resumo do GT77:


Este Grupo de Trabalho (GT) pretende abordar os temas da sustentabilidade,
no enquadramento da sua complexidade e de compreensão dos processos e
constrangimentos à mudança. Pretende-se discutir teorias, formas de
pensamento e práticas face à construção de alternativas sustentáveis para o
lugar da humanidade. Constitui-se como espaço de encontro entre diferentes
visões críticas sobre os Objectivos do Desenvolvimento Sustentável (ODS),
orientando para a promoção de um diálogo construtivo sobre as suas
limitações e potencialidades bem como sobre perspetivas alternativas e
complementares. Pretende-se recrutar para o debate uma pluralidade de
abordagens e saberes que orientem a ação face a objetivos de mudança.



Apresentado em 1987, o conceito de desenvolvimento sustentável é
considerado como um marco global para a consciencialização em relação à
necessidade de um novo paradigma de desenvolvimento. Desde então faz parte
da agenda política internacional, guiando políticas que visem o respeito
pela interconexão entre crescimento económico, inclusão social e protecção
ambiental enquanto pilares para o bem-estar individual e colectivo.
Procurando implementar globalmente estas políticas, em 2015 as Nações
Unidas apresentaram 17 ODS, que pretendiam responder a algumas das
principais críticas aos seus predecessores oito Objectivos de
Desenvolvimento do Milénio (ODM). Entre as críticas, destacava-se a falta
de interligação entre objectivos, a sua pouca adequação a regiões mais
desfavorecidas e a incapacidade de acomodar diferentes discursos. O desafio
passa por integrar as complexidades dos sistemas - naturais, sociais e
económicos - no pensar novas formas de desenvolvimento, em especial numa
época em que as actividades humanas são consideradas as grandes
responsáveis pela crise climática que o globo enfrenta, com sérios impactos
negativos numa escala local e global.



Nesse contexto, é reconhecido o esforço para que os ODS possam reverter
alguns dos principais fracassos dos ODM, nomeadamente por apresentarem
maior adequação a temas, regiões geográficas e populações que menos
beneficiaram dos progressos dos ODM. No entanto, tanto a construção e
implementação dos ODS como a própria definição de desenvolvimento
sustentável permanecem sob discussão. Especificamente, interrogamo-nos
sobre a sua adequação a locais, contextos e problemas específicos, que
práticas sustentam o conceito de desenvolvimento sustentável e como a
ausência de um pensamento complexo, e consequente simplificação de
processos e cenários, poderá impedir ou limitar o sucesso desta nova
agenda.



É neste ponto que situamos este GT, procurando estabelecer um diálogo inter
e transdisciplinar sobre o pensar e agir face à sustentabilidade.





………………………………………………………..



The XIV Luso-Afro-Brazilian Congress (CONLAB) and 3rd International
Association of Portuguese Language Social and Human Sciences Congress will
be held from September 2-4 2020 in Coimbra, Portugal.

We invite all of you interested in discussing sustainable development and
SDGs to submit an abstract to *GT77: Sustainability, complexity and change:
critical, alternative and complementary perspectives to SDGs*



*Coordination:* Rita Campos and Ana Teixeira Melo (CES-UC - Centre for
Social Studies, University of Coimbra, Portugal); and Magnólia Araújo (UFRN
- Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil)





*** Abstract submission is now open, until the 31 December 2019 ** *

*>>>>> Go to **https://www.conftool.pro/conlab2020
<https://www.conftool.pro/conlab2020>**, register, choose GT77 and then
proceed to the abstract submission.*



GT77 Abstract:



This Working Group (WG) intends to address the themes of sustainability,
within the framework of their complexity and understanding of the processes
and constraints to change. The aim is to discuss theories, ways of thinking
and practices regarding the construction of sustainable alternatives to the
place of humanity. It is a meeting place between different critical views
on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), leading to the promotion of a
constructive dialogue on their limitations and potentials as well as on
alternative and complementary perspectives. We wish to recruit for the
debate a plurality of approaches and knowledge that may guide action
towards change goals.



Introduced in 1987, the concept of sustainable development is regarded as a
global framework for raising awareness of the need for a new development
paradigm. It has since been part of the international political agenda,
guiding policies aimed at respecting the interconnectedness of economic
growth, social inclusion and environmental protection as pillars for
individual and collective well-being. Seeking to implement these policies
globally, in 2015 the United Nations presented 17 SDGs, which aimed to
address some of the main criticisms of its predecessors eight Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs). Criticisms included the lack of
interconnectedness of objectives, their poor suitability for disadvantaged
regions and the inability to accommodate different discourses. The
challenge is to integrate the complexities of systems - natural, social and
economic - into thinking about new forms of development, especially at a
time when human activities are held largely responsible for the global
climate crisis, with serious negative impacts on a local and global scale.



In this context, the effort was made to ensure that the SDGs can reverse
some of the major MDG failures, namely by being more suited to the themes,
geographical regions and populations that have least benefited from the MDG
progress. However, both the construction and implementation of the SDGs and
the very definition of sustainable development remain under
discussion. Specifically,
we question its suitability for specific locations, contexts and problems,
what practices underpin the concept of sustainable development, and how the
absence of complex thinking, and consequent simplification of processes and
scenarios, may hinder or limit the success of this new agenda.



It is at this point that we situate this WG, seeking to establish an inter
and transdisciplinary dialogue on thinking and acting towards
sustainability.

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