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*Call for Papers*



*Third Biennial Conference of the Political Ecology Network (POLLEN
<https://pollen2020.wordpress.com/>), Brighton, UK, 24-26 June 2020*




*Loss, damage and right to adaptation in the city: *

*Explorations in urban climate justice*



*Organizers: *

Ethemcan Turhan (Environmental Humanities Laboratory, Division of History
of Science, Technology and Environment, KTH Royal Institute of Technology,
Sweden)


 Özlem Çelik (Department of Development Studies, Helsinki Institute of
Sustainability Science, University of Helsinki, Finland)


Recent body of work on climate change adaptation increasingly refers to the
limits of adaptation, which denotes a cut-off line where tangible and
intangible loss and damage becomes inevitable. The notion of limits of
adaptation, according to Michael Watts (2015: 21), was the “very ground on
which political ecology emerged during the 1970s and 1980s”. Translating
the global debates on loss and damage as if people matter (Tschakert et al,
2017) therefore requires attention not only to national but also to local
scales and is positioned at the heart of critical political ecology inquiry
today (Roberts and Pelling, 2016). As per adaptation interventions, Watts
(2015: 20) reminds us that “what is on offer now is something unimaginable
until relatively recently: namely abrupt, radical life-threatening shifts
framed in the language of uncertainty, unpredictability, and contingency.”
Such uncertainty, unpredictability and contingency are arguably the
baseline of living dangerously in the age of planetary urbanization (Evans
and Reid, 2014). Consequently, exploring adaptation and resistance as the
building blocks of urban climate justice is tempting insofar as framing
equity and fairness in adaptation is a contested process embedded in urban
struggles.


This paper session invites contributions on the broadly defined field of
urban climate justice that dare to look beyond the myth of self-regulating
markets of private insurance schemes and liberal technocratic functionalism
of engineering interventions. It seeks to amplify grassroots voices from
the global South and global North alike on issues including but not limited
to radical adaptation (Dawson, 2017), bottom-up citizen initiatives (Shi et
al, 2016), heterotopias (Edwards and Bulkeley, 2018), climate
gentrification (Anguelovski et al, 2016), humans and other species (Gillard
et al, 2016), co-production of socionatures (Nightingale et al, 2019),
hybrid, creative and cosmopolitical experiments as well as transformational
radical practices (Steele et al, 2015). Notably, contributions from
underrepresented geographies and societal groups with attention to power,
possibility and prefiguration are most welcome.


Please send abstracts of maximum *250 words* with your affiliation to *Ethemcan
Turhan* ([log in to unmask]) and *Özlem Çelik* ([log in to unmask]) the
latest by *26 October 2019*.


*References*

Anguelovski, I., et al. (2016). Equity impacts of urban land use planning
for climate adaptation: Critical perspectives from the global north and
south. *Journal of Planning Education and Research*, *36*(3), 333-348.


Dawson, A. (2017). *Extreme cities: The peril and promise of urban life in
the age of climate change*. Verso Books.


Edwards, G. A., & Bulkeley, H. (2018). Heterotopia and the urban politics
of climate change experimentation. *Environment and Planning D: Society and
Space*, *36*(2), 350-369.


Evans, B., & Reid, J. (2014). *Resilient life: The art of living
dangerously*. John Wiley & Sons.


Gillard, R., et al. (2016). Transformational responses to climate change:
beyond a systems perspective of social change in mitigation and
adaptation. *Wiley
Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change*, *7*(2), 251-265.


Nightingale, A. J., et al. (2019). Beyond Technical Fixes: climate
solutions and the great derangement. *Climate and Development*, 1-10.


Shi, L., et al. (2016). Roadmap towards justice in urban climate adaptation
research. *Nature Climate Change*, *6*(2), 131.


Steele, W., et al. (2015). Urban climate justice: creating sustainable
pathways for humans and other species. *Current Opinion in Environmental
Sustainability*, *14*, 121-126.


Tschakert, P., et al. (2017). Climate change and loss, as if people
mattered: values, places, and experiences. *Wiley Interdisciplinary
Reviews: Climate Change*, *8*(5), e476.


Watts, M. J. (2015). The origins of political ecology and the rebirth of
adaptation as a form of thought. *pg. *19-50, in Perreault, T., Bridge, G.,
& McCarthy, J. (Eds.). *The Routledge Handbook of Political Ecology*.
Routledge.

-- 
Dr. Özlem Çelik
Helsinki University
Department of Development Studies
HELSUS
Postdoc Research Fellow
ozlem.celik@ <[log in to unmask]>helsinki.fi


https://www.keg.lu.se/en/ozlem-celik
http://ces.metu.edu.tr/people/ces-affiliates/ozlem-celik

http://fessud.eu/

Latest publications:

Celik, Ö. (2018)  ‘Yeni Konut Kampanyaları ile Tanışın: Fedakâr
Borçluluk’, *Ayrinti
Dergisi, *28,
http://ayrintidergi.com.tr/yeni-konut-kampanyalari-ile-tanisin-fedakar-borcluluk/

Topal, A., Celik, O. Yalman, G. (2018) ‘Housing Finance in Ankara: State
Policies and Rent Creation in Urban Development: Three Mass *Housing
Projects’, Journal of Urban Affairs, *DOI: 10.1080/07352166.2018.1533378
<https://doi.org/10.1080/07352166.2018.1533378>

Celik, Ö. & Ergenc, C. (2018) Gezi Sonrası Mahalleye Çekilmek: Ankara’da
Mahalle Forumları Pratiği,* Iktisat Dergisi*, 539: 81-95.
Çelik, Ö. (2017) Kent Hakkından Müştereklerimize Kentsel Muhalefet
Tartışmaları: Sınırlar ve İmkanlar, *Megaron, *
http://www.megaronjournal.com/tr/jvi.aspx?pdir=megaron&plng=tur&un=MEGARON-86619

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