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Hi all,


I'm forwarding this CFP for AAG, which I imagine will be of interest to
some CRITters, on behalf of a colleague.


Cheers,
Eric Sarmiento, PhD
Department of Geography
Texas State University
[log in to unmask]

*AAG Annual Meeting in New Orleans*

*April 10-14, 2018*



*Paper session:*

Decommissioned places: Theorizing urban and rural shrinkage and
displacement in the era of deindustrialization and climate change



*Discussant:* Sara Safransky (Vanderbilt University)



*Session organizer: *Monica Barra (Graduate Center, City University of New
York)


*Session abstract:*

Amidst rising seas, record-breaking weather events, and the ongoing decline
of industrial cities, scholars across the social sciences are increasingly
interested in how urban and rural communities are confronting the cultural
and material shifts that accompany the un-development of shrinking and
retreating places. Post-industrial cities like Detroit where the population
has shrunk to a fraction of the inhabitants its spatial footprint was
designed to accommodate, planners struggle to rectify shrinking municipal
budgets and populations through scaling-back the overcapacity of
infrastructures and social services to increasingly abandoned, or at least
seemingly abandoned, areas of the city (Moss 2008, Safransky 2014). Rural
coastal areas in places like Louisiana and Alaska as well as coastal cities
like New York are struggling with similar choices as subsiding lands,
rising seas, and increasingly unprecedented weather events compel
policymakers and residents to take seriously the "case for retreat" (Koslov
2016) and transitioning landscapes as the fiscal and material burdens of
living in environmentally vulnerable areas become more acute (Marino 2012,
Maldonado et. al. 2013). Recent flood and hurricane events in major urban
centers in Texas and Florida have only further brought the question of
scaling-back urban development further into the spotlight. Scholars in
environmental and urban studies across geography and cognate disciplines
are frequently discussing these shared concerns in their subfields, but
rarely have the opportunity to consider the connections between urban and
rural environments that are similarly attempting to confront planned
shrinkage and de-growth/relocation in the face of persistent economic
downturns and environmental change.



What happens when we pull the literature on shrinkage in post-industrial
cities towards conversations about climate change induced retreat and
relocation (and vice versa)? How do these tracks of examining 'degrowth'
and out-migration converge and diverge? This paper session proposes to
bring together scholars working in rural and urban contexts within the US
and abroad to share their research and consider the synergies, as well as
key differences, between urban and rural communities confronting ongoing
and new forms of being decommissioned and abandoned. Topics for
consideration include:

   - How does the literature on urban shrinkage and planned degrowth
   converge and diverge with emerging research on climate change induced
   retreat and relocation?
   - What are the connections between urban and rural displacements and
   re-locations from different contexts in the US and abroad?
   - What are the economic, infrastructural, and cultural constraints to
   retreat and degrowth?
   - How have different communities framed their experiences and/or
   self-organized for alternative visions of displacement (or staying in
   place)?
   - What happens to communities that are forced to relocate or retreat,
   who become urban and rural 'refugees' of economic downturns and
   environmental crises?
   - What are the economic, environmental, or political forces at the helm
   of these cultural and material shifts? In what ways might they overlap
   between seemingly disparate geographies?
   - How do decommissioned landscapes change? Who or what moves in after
   portions of a city or abandoned rural villages are vacated?
   - Are there examples of urban and rural decommissioning processes that
   have produced positive (or at least more hopeful) social, environmental,
   and economic changes for displaced communities?

Please send paper abstracts by *October 20th, 2017* to
[log in to unmask]



*Works cited*

Koslov, L. (2016). The Case for Retreat. *Public Culture*, *28*(2 79),
359-387.

Maldonado, J. K., Shearer, C., Bronen, R., Peterson, K., & Lazrus, H.
(2013). The impact of climate change on tribal communities in the US:
displacement, relocation, and human rights. *Climatic Change*, *120*(3),
601-614.

Marino, E. (2012). The long history of environmental migration: Assessing
vulnerability construction and obstacles to successful relocation in
Shishmaref, Alaska. *Global environmental change*, *22*(2), 374-381.

Moss, T. (2008). ‘Cold spots’ of urban infrastructure: ‘Shrinking’
processes in eastern Germany and the modern infrastructural ideal.
*International
Journal of Urban and Regional Research*, *32*(2), 436-451.

Safransky, S. (2014). Greening the urban frontier: Race, property, and
resettlement in Detroit. *Geoforum*, *56*, 237-248.