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Call for Papers: Critical and Imaginative Restoration Ecologies



Dimensions of Political Ecology (DOPE) Conference

February 21-13, 2019, University of Kentucky



Organized by Robert Anderson (Geography, UW Seattle) and Cleo
Woelfle-Erskine (School of Marine and Environmental Affairs and Comparative
History of Ideas, UW Seattle)

What does it mean to restore nature, and what are practitioners and policy
makers doing when they set out to improve degraded ecosystems? Ecological
restoration is state and federal policy, tribal strategy for upholding
treaty rights, grassroots effort, green jobs initiative, profitable private
enterprise, and more. Restoration critics note that it can reify the trope
of pristine, unadulterated Nature (Robbins and Moore 2013) and reiterate
settler ideas of perfecting and controlling natural processes (Katz 2012).
Ecological restoration can also be a speculative, hopeful action for the
continuance of life in the face of anthropogenic damage (Hobbs 2013), a
critical response to capitalist and colonial extractivism and domination, a
gesture of inter-species solidarity aimed at creating “abundant futures”
(Collard et al. 2015), and a practice of moral repair for damaged
human-environment relations (Almassi 2017). To this end, restoration needs
to be critically challenged—and re-imagined, in all its relations and
perspectives.

We welcome papers in a range of genres including speculative fictions and
artistic works (e.g. Simpson 2017), ethnographic studies of restoration
sites or endeavors (e.g. Fox et al. 2016), political ecologies of water,
land, and sea governance (e.g. Breslow 2014), and Indigenous and
environmental justice activist perspectives (e.g. Kimmerer 2013). We are
especially interested in submissions that move from critique to imagining
future modes of earth belonging and earth repair.

Possible themes:



   - Sociogeomorphology/sociobiogeography and co-production of landscapes
   - Critical race theory and restoration: theorizing human and non-human
   difference and belonging
   - Restoration as a tool in green gentrification/greenwashing
   - Commons and communing through, or in spite of, restoration
   - Decolonization ecologies: restoration as a decolonial practice
   - Speculative fiction and restoration: envisioning future ecological
   relations
   - Restoration as a practice of public art or performance



Please send abstracts to both organizers ([log in to unmask] and [log in to unmask])
by November 25, 2018. Authors of accepted abstracts will be notified by
December 5, 2018.



References and further reading:



Almassi, B. (2017). “Ecological Restorations as Practices of Moral
Repair.”Ethics and the Environment, 22(1), 19.



Breslow, S. J. (2014). Tribal Science and Farmers’ Resistance: A Political
Ecology of Salmon Habitat Restoration in the American Northwest.
Anthropological Quarterly, 87(3), 727–758.

Cantor, D. A. (2018). Speculations on the postnatural: Restoration,
accumulation, and sacrifice at the Salton Sea, 35.



Collard, R.-C., Dempsey, J., & Sundberg, J. (2015). A Manifesto for
Abundant Futures. Annals of the Association of American Geographers,
105(2), 322–330.



Fox, C. A., Magilligan, F. J., & Sneddon, C. S. (2016). “You kill the dam,
you are killing a part of me”: Dam removal and the environmental politics
of river restoration. *Geoforum*, *70*, 93–104.
<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2016.02.013>



Hobbs, R. J. (2013). Grieving for the Past and Hoping for the Future:
Balancing Polarizing Perspectives in Conservation and Restoration: Grief
and Hope in Restoration. *Restoration Ecology*, *21*(2), 145–148.
<https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.12014>



Karuk UC Berkeley Collaborative (n.d.). Practicing Píkyav: A Guiding Policy
for Collaborative Projects and Research Initiatives with the Karuk Tribe


https://nature.berkeley.edu/karuk-collaborative/?page_id=165



Katz, E. (2012). Further Adventures in the Case against Restoration:
*Environmental
Ethics*, *34*(1), 67–97. <https://doi.org/10.5840/enviroethics20123416>



Kimmerer, R. W. (2013). Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific
Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants. Minneapolis, Minn: Milkweed
Editions.



Mastnak, T., Elyachar, J., & Boellstorff, T. (2014). Botanical
decolonization: Rethinking native plants. *Environment and Planning D:
Society and Space*, *32*(2), 363–380. <https://doi.org/10.1068/d13006p>



Robbins, P., & Moore, S. A. (2013). Ecological anxiety disorder: diagnosing
the politics of the Anthropocene. Cultural Geographies, 20(1), 3–19.



Simpson, Leanne Betasamosake. (2017). *This Accident of Being Lost: Songs
and Stories*. Toronto, ON: House of Anansi Press.

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