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RE: RGS-IBG second CFP: Science, politics and the nature of environmental debates

Speaking of which, this is a fascinating analysis of the 'climategate' emails:

http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/images/stories/papers/reprint/climategate_analysis.pdf

Jon


-----Original Message-----
From: A forum for critical and radical geographers on behalf of Chiara Certomà
Sent: Sat 1/23/2010 11:57 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: RGS-IBG second CFP:   Science, politics and the nature of environmental debates


Second Call for Papers: RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, 
London, 1-3 September 2010.
  Science, politics and the nature of environmental debates

The recent attention given to scientific discourses and practices in 
providing effective guidance to global environmental policies has 
shown that expert knowledge is not exempt of politics. On the 
contrary, scientific knowledge is the resulting product of continuous 
epistemological negotiations occurring amongst scientists as well as 
between scientists and non-scientists on what scientific data mean.

The very recent controversy generated by the possible manipulation of 
climate data by several climate scientists a week before the 
Copenhagen summit can be seen as an explicit demonstration of how 
politics and science are intertwined and cannot be thought 
independently. Although this event raised the awareness of non-
scientists about the uncertainties of climate sciences, how the 
interplay between politics and science occurs is still largely 
unquestioned and misunderstood. This miscomprehension has significant 
impacts on the formulation and application of environmental policies 
but also on how the non human world is imagined. For example, the 
epistemic realm through which scientific discourses and practices are 
produced and articulated makes it possible for scientists 'to provide 
a voice' (as a material semiotic approach suggests) to the biophysical 
environment that is generally considered as external to human 
societies and apolitical. In turn, the predominance of scientific 
discourses and practices in environmental NGOs and policy makers' 
circles when engaging with the non-human world makes it rather 
difficult to reorganise and challenge the power relationships 
constituting environmental sciences and politics.

By not engaging with the politics at the centre of the production of 
knowledge as well as acknowledging its impact on the comprehension of 
the non-human world, environmental politics are building on shaky 
foundations that can result in important local and international 
policy failures, widely addressed by the post-environmentalist 
critiques.

Thus, this session aims at bringing together contributions that are 
seeking to interrogate and re-conceptualise the relationships between 
politics, 'the political' and science in environmental governance. 
Topics may include, but are not limited to:

·      How non-scientific epistemologies can give voice to nonhumans 
and thus being part of a renewal of environmental politics, as a non-
foundationalist and non-normative political view?

·      What are the different relationships occurring in the process 
of making scientific subjects political?

·      How scientific practices and discourses could inform us about 
the essence of the political?

·      How knowing about the politics of science would improve policy 
making and application?


Abstracts (250 words max) should be submitted, by email, to session 
organisers Sébastien Nobert, King's College, London ([log in to unmask]
) and Chiara Certomà; Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa ([log in to unmask]
) by 1st of February at the latest.