Call for Papers
WSF Conference 2015
Deadline for proposals is March 1, 2015
World Society, Planetary Natures: Crisis and Sustainability in the Capitalocene and Beyond
Download here: Call for Papers
Since 2008, a broad consensus has emerged among scholars of global change: ours is an era of “converging crises.” Popularly expressed in the language of “triple crisis” – climate, energy, and finance – there is considerable uncertainty as to how these crisis-tendencies fit together, and if they are nearly so independent as the language of convergence suggests. If many scholars view the unfolding turbulence of the 21st century as an era of multiple crises, others have turned towards a different way of seeing crisis. This emerging alternative seeks to unify dimensions of human and extra-human natures in the world history of the present – as in the distinctive approaches of the Anthropocene and world-ecology perspectives. Through this different way of seeing, a crucial question has taken shape: Are we living the Age of Humans (the Anthropocene) or the Age of Capital (Capitalocene)?
World Society, Planetary Natures seeks to bring together scholars of global social change and global environmental change in the pursuit of new syntheses of “political economy” and “political ecology,” broadly conceived. The conference therefore privileges a double engagement: 1) with the core concerns of world-historical and global studies; and 2) with a broader multi-disciplinary community focused on global environmental change, past and present.
The conference pursues three major goals. First, we encourage a serious intellectual cross-fertilization between scholars engaged in the study of global social change and those engaged in the study of global environmental change. Second, the conference will facilitate a sustained exploration of the relations unifying the differentiated moments of 21st century crisis. These include not only the “triple crisis” argument, but comprise a wide range of crisis tendencies – such as food, inequality, employment, and social reproduction – as well as to the emergent possibilities of “commoning.” Third, the conference welcomes creative elaborations of globalization – in its manifold historical and contemporary expressions – as “ways of organizing nature.” In contrast to seeing neoliberalism as acting upon global natures, this alternative encourages a view of globalization as developing through the web of life. Such an alternative rethinks aspects of recent (and longue durée) world history as new human-environment configurations in which humans make environments, and environments enter into the constitution of power, re/production, and inequality. This entails the socio-ecological reconstruction of taken for granted “social” phenomena, such as the Washington Consensus, financialization, the European Union, or the rise of the BRICS. To investigate, analyze, and narrate historical change as if nature matters – as producer no less than product of capital and power – implies a much more decisive shift than commonly recognized: in our theoretical frames, methodological choices, and narrative strategies.
We welcome papers, panels, and proposals related – but not restricted to – the following topics:
• The Financialization of Nature: Commodities, Carbon markets, Conservation, etc.
• One, Two, Many “Sovereignties”: Food, Land, Energy, and Beyond
• Planetary Urbanization
• Cheap Labor, Unpaid Work, and the Crisis of Human Natures
• Green Catastrophism and the Theory of Global Crisis
• Narratives of Nature, Crisis, and Capitalism
• Modernity and Climate Change
• Scientific Revolutions and Capitalist Natures
• Class Dynamics of Agro-Ecological Change, North and South
• Crises: Social, Ecological, or World-Ecological?
• Ecology and Imperialism
• The ‘Long’ Green Revolution: Renewal or Demise?
• Culture as Ecology
• Green Keynesianism and the Myth of Sustainability
• Industrialization and the Production of Nature
• Anthropocene or Capitalocene?
• New (and Old) Practices of Commoning
• World-Literature and World-Ecology
• Value, Nature, and Ontological Politics
• Environmental Histories of Capital, Empire, and Commodities
• Commodity Frontiers, Past and Present
• The Environment-Making State
• Markets, Trade, Investment: Does Nature Matter?
• Nature as Accumulation Strategy
• Crises of Social Reproduction
• Neoliberalism’s Crises… or Not?
• Surplus Humanities
• Climate and Capitalism: Two Crises or One?
• Nature and Hegemony
• Ecological Exhaustion and War
We welcome proposals for individual papers as well as paper sessions and panel discussions. Inquiries and proposals may be sent to: planetarynatures@gmail.com.
Venue
The conference will be held 9–11 July, 2015 at Binghamton University (USA).
Travel grants: The World Society Foundation sponsors a small number of travel grants for students and for participants from Africa, Asia, Latin-America and Eastern Europe (ISA country categories B and C). Travel grants will be allocated on the basis of a competitive assessment of full papers (of about 8.000 words) submitted. Deadline for submission of papers for travel grants is March 1, 2014; papers must be sent by e-mail to: planetarynatures@gmail.com. Applicants receiving travel grants will be notified before 15 April, 2015.
Publication: Outstanding conference papers will be published in a conference volume.
Conference Sponsorship
The main sponsor of the conference is the World Society Foundation (Zurich, Switzerland). In addition the conference is supported by the World-Ecology Research Network and the Department of Sociology of the University of Neuchâtel.