https://worldecology2016.wordpress.com/
CALL FOR PAPERS
World-Ecology, World-Culture, World-Economy: Crisis, Slump, Revolution?
15-16 July 2016, Durham University, UK
The second annual conference of the World-Ecology Network
KEYNOTES: Jason W. Moore (Binghamton); Kate Soper (London Met); Haroon Akram-Lodhi (Trent)
The downturn in the global economy that manifested itself in the financial crisis of 2008 shows no signs of ending. Recent falls in global commodity prices, panic on the Chinese stock market, and fears
over the health of the so-called emerging economies have further agitated mainstream economists already concerned that capitalism is entering a new ‘Great Depression’. The causes behind the ongoing stagnation are many and varied, but chief among them is the
failure over the last forty years or so of the neoliberal regime of accumulation to launch a productivity revolution capable of instigating a new long-wave of accumulation. Symptomatic here is the exhaustion of the Green Revolution model of agricultural development
and the failure of agro-biotechnology to deliver on its promises to reverse yield deceleration and improve food security. This productivity non-revolution has gone hand in hand with capital’s efforts to ratchet up the exploitation of its primary sources of
unpaid work/energy – women, nature, and the colonies (Mies) – in a bid to drive down its system-wide costs of production. Thus has the neoliberal era been one marked by ferocious new rounds of gender violence, ecological asset stripping and the renewed plundering
of extra-human nature, and new forms of imperialism in the global peripheries.
How are we to understand such phenomena not merely in relation to ‘environmental’ crises, but as themselves ecological projects unfolding in the web of life? How might the various forms of resistance
that have sprung up in response to capitalist imperialism’s renewed assaults on human and extra-human nature be similarly grasped as ecological struggles? In what ways are cultural forms or narratives constitutive of transformations in (and the possible unravelling)
of the capitalist world-ecology? How do we conceptualise the relation between world-culture and world-ecology?
World-Ecology & World-Culture aims
to tackle these and related questions in exploring the nature of crises, slumps, and revolutions through the optic of world-ecology. Building on the 2015 World
Society, Planetary Natures event
in Binghamton, this two-day conference in Durham will continue the work of bringing together scholars of global social change and global environmental change in the pursuit of new syntheses of “political economy” and “political ecology,” broadly conceived.
It seeks to explore the contours of the current crisis in its manifold expressions, from debt bubbles and deflation to climate change and soil erosion. It will also ask what it means – economically, environmentally, politically, socially, culturally: in short,
ecologically – to be mired in a prolonged global economic downturn.
Possible topics include:
Neoliberalism, Crisis and Revolution
Surplus Humanities
Green Revolutions, Food Regimes, and The Great Recession
Degrowth
The ‘Nature’ of the Current Crisis
Crisis, Revolution and Cultural Narratives
World-ecology and World-Culture
The End of Cheap Labour
Imagining the Future: Narratives of Environmental Catastrophe
The Financialization of Nature
Gender, Race and Ecology
Unpaid Work and the Crisis of Human Natures
Modernity and Climate Change
Industrialization and the Production of Nature
Revolutions in the Capitalist World-Ecology
Commodity Frontiers and Food Regimes
The Environment-Making State
Crises of Social Reproduction
We welcome proposals for individual papers as well as paper sessions and panel discussions. Inquiries and abstracts of approx. 250-300 words should be sent to:[log in to unmask].
DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS IS FEBRUARY 28, 2016
The conference will be held 15-16 July 2016 at Durham University, UK.
Andrew Baldwin
Department of Geography
Durham University
Sciences Site
South Road
Durham DH1 3LE
United Kingdom
Tel.: +44(0)191 334 1985
Recent work:
“Premediation and white affect: climate change and migration in critical perspective,”
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers; 41(1)
2016.
“Pluralising climate change and migration: an argument in favour of open futures,”
Geography Compass, 2014, 8(8), pp. 516-528.