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Dear all,

This might be of interest to sociologists and others on this list.
Apologies for cross postings.

I would like to invite abstracts for a session titled "Carbon
Capitalism, Climate Capitalism, Energy Democracy", which I'm
co-organizing for the ISA World Congress of Sociology that will take
place in Toronto, Canada, July 15-21, 2018. Details are below.

The deadline for abstract susmission is September 30th. Abstracts need
to be submitted online at:
https://isaconf.confex.com/isaconf/wc2018/webprogrampreliminary/Session8936.html


You can find more information about the conference here:
http://www.isa-sociology.org/en/conferences/world-congress/toronto-2018/

Please note that the session is under RC02 Economy and Society.

Also of potential interest to folks on this list, sessions for RC24
Environment and Society are listed here:
https://isaconf.confex.com/isaconf/wc2018/webprogrampreliminary/Symposium461.html

Thanks,

jp

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Carbon Capitalism, Climate Capitalism, Energy Democracy

World Congress of Sociology, July 15-21, 2018, Toronto

Session organizers: Bill Carroll and J. P. Sapinski


Abstract

Although the scientific consensus on causes and implication of global
warming is well established, the climate crisis has provoked three
distinct political-economic projects, rooted in differing class
fractions and social interests, which currently vie for hegemony at
different levels and regions of the world-system. /Carbon capitalism/ is
a project of ‘business as usual’ (in the Stern report’s terminology),
with efficiency improvements (and possible sunsetting of coal) but no
major changes to the political ecology of contemporary capitalism.
/Climate capitalism/ proposes the ecological modernization of the energy
base of capitalism, by redirecting flows of capital away from fossil
fuels, and toward more climatically benign sources of energy including
hydropower, solar, wind and nuclear. The first two projects are
capital-centric: they leave the class structure of capitalism untouched,
including the concentration of economic power in the hands of a
relatively small group of major investors, executives and corporate
directors. In contrast, /energy democracy/ finds its social base in
environmental and other progressive movements, including sections of the
labour movement. It mandates a dual power shift, from fossil-fuel power
to renewables (decarbonization) and from corporate oligarchy to public,
democratic control of economic decisions (democratization). This session
welcomes papers exploring the sociology of these projects, singly or in
combination, especially analyses that foreground issues of political
economy and political ecology.


--
J.P. Sapinski
Post-doctoral fellow
Department of Sociology
University of Victoria, BC

Email: [log in to unmask]
uvic.academia.edu/JPSapinski
www.researchgate.net/profile/Jean_Philippe_Sapinski