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Dear all,

We are happy to share with you the following call for applications for
the* "Writing
workshop on 'green extractivism' and global commodity chains". *See details
of the call below.

*THEME: *

The extraction of natural resources — particularly rare earth elements and
other metals and minerals required to meet rising “clean” energy demand —
has been hailed in recent years as a means to transition to a future
low-carbon economy. This trend of "green" extractivism has led to the
expansion of new resource frontiers, oftentimes reproducing old patterns of
accumulation and dispossession. Big industries have aligned their
discourses with these environmental imperatives, playing the "green card"
as allies in the struggle against environmental problems, including climate
change debates. These “green” strategies risk creating new resource
dependencies and environmental inequalities based on the imposition of
specific models of “progress.” The growing demand for these 'green'
commodities has also led to new dynamics in global supply chains, with
countries in the global North emerging as suppliers of critical minerals
and metals.


*FORMAT**:*

This workshop gathers junior scholars from anthropology, history, and the
social sciences more broadly, whose research examines the paradoxes and
contradictions — past and present — inherent in environmentally-sound
supply chains of critical natural commodities. These disciplines have
recently undergone a "material turn", and the workshop brings together
research on the conundrums of contemporary “green” commodity chains from
historical and anthropological perspectives.

The workshop is designed as a writing and discussion meeting, where each
participant will be asked to briefly present their pre-circulated paper and
gather feedback from invited discussants and other participants.

The workshop will include a field visit to retired and possible future
mining sites in Norway, including copper and cobalt.


*ORGANIZERS:*

It is jointly organized by a Swiss-Norwegian team from the Norwegian
University of Science and Technology (NTNU) and the Geneva Graduate
Institute, under the auspices of the European Association of Social
Anthropologists' Mining network, with funding from EASA and the European
Research Council's Synthlives project (grant 950672).


*DATES AND **PLACE:*

The workshop will take place in Trondheim, Norway, from the *28**th** to *
*the **30**th of** September 2023*.



*APPLICATION:*

To apply, please *fill out the following *google form
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfQRGMkjP0PvTsjfSM00yRnuJQMwIIAIPOI7D9LkRlR29ZJdg/viewform?usp=sf_link>
. *The deadline is the 15th of June*. We welcome drafts of dissertation
chapters, MA theses, or book chapters (unpublished). Particularly PhD
candidates and young scholars are encouraged to apply. Only participants
who can join the full three days of the workshop will be considered.



*FUNDING:*

There is limited funding available for travel and accommodation, for
participants who cannot rely on funding from their institution to
participate.


*QUESTIONS:*

If you have questions that need to be addressed before submitting our
application please email them to: [log in to unmask],
otherwise you may note them in the google form.

-- 
Marianna Fernandes (she/her)
PhD candidate, Department of Anthropology and Sociology

Research assistant  for ERC project *Synthetic Lives: The Futures of
Mining *
<https://www.graduateinstitute.ch/research-centres/centre-international-environmental-studies/synthetic-lives-futures-mining>
Center for International Environmental Studies



graduateinstitute.ch

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