Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts

Monday, 4 July 2016

CFP: Chernobyl – Turning Point or Catalyst? Changing Practices, Structures and Perceptions in Environmental Policy and Politics (1970s-1990s)

Call For Papers

Chernobyl – Turning Point or Catalyst? Changing Practices, Structures and Perceptions in Environmental Policy and Politics (1970s-1990s)

International Conference, 2 - 3 December 2016

Heinrich-Boell-Foundation (HBS), Schumannstr. 8, D-10117 Berlin, Germany

Convenors: Christoph Becker-Schaum (Heinrich-Boell-Foundation), Jan-Henrik Meyer (Copenhagen/HoNESt) and Marianne Zepp (Heinrich-Boell-Foundation)

In cooperation with the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, Munich, HoNESt – History of Nuclear Energy and Society Project, and the Center for Metropolitan Studies (TU Berlin).

Does Chernobyl constitute a turning point in the history of environmental policy and politics? Around the world environmental policy was introduced in the early 1970s as a new policy area and arena of political and societal conflict. However, from mid-1970s onwards, as a result of the oil crisis, the new policy came to be increasingly challenged, and considered an obstacle to traditional economic growth objectives. Notably in West Germany, environmental policy’s great leap forward only happened in the 1980s. The debate about the dying forests led to the introduction of new filter technologies and catalytic converters to stop acid rain from killing trees and harming people. It was the shock of Chernobyl, however, that convinced the West German government to eventually establish a separate ministry of the environment at the federal level.

This conference has two aims:

First, it seeks to assess change in environmental politics and policy making – from its beginnings around 1970 until the 1990s, when the Rio Conference definitely lifted environmental issues to a global scale with the breakthrough of the sustainability agenda and the increasing dominance of the climate change issue. While the early phase of environmental policy is increasingly well-covered by environmental history, we know very little about the subsequent development of the policy.

Against this backdrop, we seek to examine to what extent and how environmental policy and politics changed during the first thirty years of their existence. Transformations may have concerned political, administrative, societal, and media practices and structures as well as problem perceptions. The conference’s goal is to uncover, in particular, the conditions for change, ruptures, intercepted developments and roads not taken.

Secondly, the conference aims at re-assessing the importance of the Chernobyl nuclear accident for change in environmental policy and politics. Did Chernobyl actually constitute a turning point? Did Chernobyl really strengthen environmental policy, by bringing environmental issues back to the centre of political attention? What were the consequences of Chernobyl for the perception of environmental policies? What was the impact on political and societal action, mobilisation and structures? Did Chernobyl offer new windows of opportunity for environmental policy makers.

We will also discuss an alternative interpretation: Is it more appropriate to consider Chernobyl rather as a catalyst where the different environmental debates, growing environmental consciousness and ecological concerns of the 1980s came together to accelerate and strengthen environmental policy. Next to the lasting conflict about nuclear power this included concerns about the visible environmental problems such as dying forests and polluted water, and increasingly also invisible and global concerns about the hole in the ozone layer and climate change. We will look beyond national borders: How does the West German response compare to other European countries – a question that seems relevant with a view to the German phase-out after Fukushima?

The conference seeks to focus on the different actors that shaped environmental policy:

(1) Political parties,
(2) Courts of law, government administrations and bureaucracies, and scientific experts,
(3) environmental movements,
(4) business groups, utilities and industry and
(5) media.

All of these different actors did not only discuss environmental issues from their respective perspectives. They also interpreted environmental problems differently and offered divergent solutions. These include, for instance, the growing interest in market solutions and ideas about green growth and ecological modernisation. These actors engaged in environmental policy at – but routinely also across - different levels – the local, regional, national, but also at the European and international levels.

The starting point of the debate will be the experience in the Federal Republic of Germany, which however needs to be understood in its European and international context, involving transnational linkages and experiences from other countries in a comparative perspective.
Conference languages are both German and English (simultaneous translation is provided). The event is open to the public.

The aim of the conference is to prepare for a tightly integrated publication. Thus all contributors are invited to explicitly address both questions outlined above. We suggest analysing the role of one or several actors in order to cover the issue of change in environmental policy in a broader perspective in a first part. In a second part, contributors may zoom in on the impact and consequences of Chernobyl on the policy and the responses and reactions of their respective actors.

Please submit your proposal (title, abstract [150 - 200 words], biographical note [150 words]) to

becker-schaum@boell.de; j.h.meyer@hum.ku.dk; zepp@boell.de

by 31 July 2016.

Travel and accommodation costs for speakers will be covered by HBS.

Download the English and German Version of the CFP: https://www.academia.edu/26367688/CFP_Chernobyl_Turning_Point_or_Catalyst_Changing_Practic...

Article published by Jan-Henrik Meyer on H-Net on Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Wednesday, 25 May 2016

European Society for Environmental History: Call for Papers for 2017 Conference

The next biennial conference of the European Society for Environmental History (ESEH) will be held in Zagreb, Croatia, on 28 June to 2 July 2017.

The conference announcement and call for papers (deadline 1 October 2016) has just been posted on the ESEH website.

http://eseh.org/event/next-conference/

Monday, 11 January 2016

More outputs from conference "Natural Resources, Landscapes and Climate in Russia and Neighbouring Countries"

Natural Resources, Landscapes and Climate in Russia and Neighbouring Countries

26-28 November 2015

at the National Research University Higher School of Economics, St. Petersburg

This conference was organised jointly by the National Research University Higher School of Economics, St. Petersburg, and the Leverhulme Network "Exploring Russia's Environmental History and Natural Resources".

The following documents are available on the Network website:

Conference programme (final version 24.11.15) conference_programme_natural_resources_final (MS Word  , 28kb)

Conference abstract (translated into English by David Moon) conference_abstract (MS Word  , 14kb)

Conference Report (in Russian) http://sh.spb.hse.ru/chr/news/170851899.html

Reflections of the conference by David Moon (in English) conference_reflections (MS Word  , 16kb)



Student Conference "Useable Pasts" 4-5 Feb, St Petersburg

The Second History Student Conference of Higher School of Economics

USABLE PASTS

February 4-5, 2016

National Research University Higher School of Economics, Saint Petersburg

deadline for registrations 15 January

History undergraduate and graduate students  are welcome to submit paper proposals for the International History Student Conference ‘Usable Pasts’, organized by Department of History,  National Research University Higher School of Economics, Saint Petersburg.  It is a part of International Students Forum to be held in NRU HSE, Saint Petersburg on 4-5 February 2016.

The conference aims at exploring the dynamic field of history featuring both the efforts of various disciplines in dealing with the pasts and interdisciplinary approaches within the discipline of history.  The conference embraces a broad variety of research themes, which deal with material objects in history and their meanings within the framework of heritage and memory studies on the one hand, and the politics of circulation of historically formed discourses of identity and legitimacy in present-day society, on the other hand.

-- historical memory and historically-informed discourses of public politics, identity politics nationalism, cultural heritage and nationalization of the past,

-- comparative history of the imperial pasts, imperial diversity and imperial legacy;

-- symbolic representations of history in post-imperial and post-colonial societies,

-- studies of collective trauma and historical justice,

-- cultural, natural and industrial heritage, including public museums, media space, use of nature in
historical narratives and memory;

-- history in interaction with other disciplines: environmental history, history of science, technological history, urban history, economic history, history and law.

The conference will take place in Saint Petersburg on February 4-5, 2016.

The working language of the conference is English.
 
The application should be in English and consists of an extended abstract of the paper (no more than 800 words including references) and an application form.

You can register for the conference, fill the form, and load extended abstract of your paper here:
http://www.hse.ru/pasts/expresspolls/poll/166849955.html
before January 15, 2016
 
You are very welcome to ask questions, sending your queries to the address:
usable.pasts2016@gmail.com
and to Alexandra Bekasova (abekasova@hse.ru)

Wednesday, 6 January 2016

Conference Report - Natural Resources, Landscapes and Climate in Russia and Neighbouring Countries

A report (in Russian) is now available from the conference

 

Natural Resources, Landscapes and Climate in Russia and Neighbouring Countries


which was held in St Petersburg 26-28 November 2015 and jointly organised by the National Research University Higher School of Economics, St. Petersburg, and the Network.

http://sh.spb.hse.ru/chr/news/1708518https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=4774445939931750905#editor/target=post;postID=263479237229677136099.html

Wednesday, 25 November 2015

Network conference in St Petersburg 26-28 November 2015

The Network is organising a joint conference together with the National Research University Higher School of Economics, St. Petersburg, on 26-28 November 2015, entitled:

Natural Resources, Landscapes and Climate in Russia and Neighbouring Countries

View the Conference programme

Wednesday, 4 November 2015

Conference Report "The Environmental History of Northern Siberia: Future Directions of Research"

A report (English translation) and accompanying documents (in Russian) are now available from the following recent conference:

The Environmental History of Northern Siberia: Future Directions of Research

Conference held at Surgut State Pedagogical University, Surgut, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Region, Russia, 15-16 October 2015

Wednesday, 2 September 2015

Russian environmental history at ESEH, Versailles, 2015

Russian environmental history at the 8th Conference of the European Society for Environmental History (ESEH, Versailles, France, 30 June – 3 July 2015.

By Andrei Vinogradov, Elabuga Institute, Kazan’ Federal University


(translated by David Moon)


In 2003, John McNeill in one of his articles characterized Russia as a region with much to offer environmental historians, but little studied by them. In fact, for a long time, the advance of environmental history in Russia encountered a range of obstacles, including insufficiently developed communications between Russian and foreign scholars and hostility to environmental questions in conservative historical circles. 

An indication of the changes which have taken place was the latest conference of the European Society for Environmental History, held at the University of Versailles from 30 June to 3 July 2015. The conference is held every two years and is one of the most important academic events in the historical world. In comparison with previous conferences, there were significantly more reports on Russian environmental history: 17 paper presentations, 5 posters and 4 entire panels.

On the first day of the conference a panel was held on ‘Forestry specialists in the long 19th century and their understanding of forest ecology’. Anastasiya Fedotova (Russian Academy of Sciences) and senior lecturer Marina Loskutova of the National Research University-Higher School of Economics (HSE), St Petersburg, focused on the development of scientific understandings of the causes and consequences of deforestation and on the work of scientific organizations. They showed that, at a time when the close mutual relationship between many processes occurring in the environment had not yet been studied in depth, scientific knowledge became one of the main factors that was bringing about the interconnection between humans and nature.

Discussion of Russian environmental history continued at a panel ‘Good or evil? The environmental history of dictatorships. The case of the Soviet Union’. Papers were presented by Stephen Brain (Mississippi State University, USA) and Simo Laakkonen (University of Turku, Finland). Brain spoke about the experience of agricultural reform in the Soviet Union necessary because of environmental factors. The introduction of new methods of farming and the restructuring of networks of settlements led to a marked growth in economic indexes. It is interesting that this became grounds for closing programmes, as it was inadmissible in Soviet ideology for peasants to receive commercial income from their work. Laakkonen showed that the ideological direction of the Soviet state on primacy of the development of the military-industrial complex had a negative impact on the environment of the Lithuanian SSR.

Stephen Brain's presentation
On 1 July a panel put together by the conference organisational committee on ‘The environmental history of Russia’ was chaired by David Moon, professor at the University of York (UK). A wide range of questions were examined, including the formation of ‘transport landscapes’ in Russia before the appearance of railways (Alexandra Bekasova, HSE, St Petersburg), the utilization of water resources in industrial centres of the Russian Empire (Aidar Kalimullin, Kazan’ Federal University), environmental education in kindergartens in post-Soviet Yakutia (Carole Ferret, Centre national de la recherché scientifique, Paris), and also environmental aspects of Russian colonization of the territory of the Khanate of Kazan’ (Andrei Vinogradov, Kazan’ Federal University). 

Although the aforementioned researches were carried out on the basis of Russian materials, they shed light on a wide range of questions in a global context. Evidence for this is the interest shown by conference participants in posters dedicated to the Soviet conquest of the Arctic (Ekaterina Kalemeneva), methods for reconstructing paleolandscapes (Maxim Vinarskii) and others. David Moon in his poster demonstrated that Russian scientific thought of the 19th century had significant influence on understanding of ecological problems in the Great Plains of the USA. It is clear that in this connection, studying the environmental history of the Russian state assists in deepening our understanding of global historical and environmental processes.  

In the confines of a short report it is not possible to give a detailed account of all the reports that attracted interest. Special attention is deserved for the research of Olga Malinova‐Tziafeta, and Georgios Tziafetas. A large amount of work in researching Russian environmental history has been carried out by the Centre d'études des mondes russe, caucasien et centre-européen (CERCEC) in France, and also by the project ‘EcoGlobReg’ with the participation of Klaus Gestwa, Laurent Coumel and their colleagues and by other scholars taking part in the conference. A number of actual issues of Russia's environmental history were discussed at the roundtable dedicated to the BRICS countries and organized by Julia Lajus (HSE, St Petersburg).

During the conference a meeting of the members of the society was held at which they elected officers to a new Board. Dolly Jørgensen was re-elected almost unanimously to the post of president of the ESEH. Among her many achievements during her previous term has been a significant increase in activity in the field of environmental history in Eastern Europe and Russia. With the support of the ESEH a range of events have been held, including a conference at Elabuga Institute of Kazan’ Federal University on 13-15 November 2014. Two smaller conferences in Zaporizhe, Ukraine, and Surgut in Siberia are taking place this year with the support of the society. 

As the 8th Conference of the ESEH showed, the historical-environmental approach has taken significant strides in its development in recent years. Interest in Russia among foreign scholars has grown considerably, which inspires hope of further dynamic growth in this area of research in the future.

Thursday, 14 May 2015

Last chance CfP "Disaster, Environment and Property: historical approaches, 19th-20th centuries"

CfP: Disaster, Environment and Property: historical approaches, 19th-20th centuries. 

Conference in Paris, December 2-3, 2015


The call is on h-net.

Wednesday, 6 May 2015

CfP Ukraine : Underground Space: Development, Exploration, Secondary Use

CALL FOR PAPERS

Underground Space: Development, Exploration, Secondary Use 
Vasylivka-Zaporizhia, Ukraine, 25-26th September 2015

View the full document in English, Russian or Ukrainian

Friday, 13 March 2015

CFP: Scientific Seminar on "Environmental History of the Siberian North : Promising Research Directions"

Dear Colleagues

On 15-16 October 2015, Surgut State Pedagogical University will be holding a scientific seminar on 

"Environmental History of the Siberian North : Promising Research Directions"


Environmental historians from the USA and Europe consider Russia to be a great country with unique natural conditions, particularly interesting as it is little known. This is particularly true of the Siberian North which was only recently, and rapidly, developed. At the start of this development the main need was to relate the amount of resources extracted to the needs of industrial development with environmental protection as necessary. These factors make this region interesting for historical-ecology researches both in theoretical and also practical fields.

The main goal of the seminar is to discuss the results of existing research on the environmental history of the Siberian North, both theoretical and methodological, and explore the possibilities for new historical research on the origins and evolution of contradictions between people and nature in this region. We aim to develop a professional dialogue discussing the main theoretical and methodological problems of environmental history.

The program will include members’ reports and roundtables, as well as a cultural program.

The working languages are Russian and English.

The Conference Committee proposes the following themes for roundtables:
  • Historical experience of nature management in the Siberian North: «experience of history» and «experience of historian»,
  • The history of regional environmental policy in the Russian Empire and Soviet Union: the «north variant».
  • Natural resources, natural management and natural protection in the North of Siberia in the historical past;
  • Models of interaction between society and nature in the North of Siberia in the 17th – 20th century.
To take part in the conference, please send a request (details of information to include below) and the text of your article (3 000 - 5 000 words) not later 31 August 2015 to the e-mail: surgut.envhist@gmail.com.  

The requirements for the article’s format are also given below.

The seminar proceedings will be published. 

The Conference Committee maintain the right to reject requests and articles proposed for publication.
Travel, accommodation and subsistence to be paid for by the participant.

Any questions, please contact the Conference Committee by e-mail: reiseleiter@mail.ru or tel. +7(982) 188 1736/ +7 (913) 143 6440 (Maksim Mostovenko).

Please provide the following information with your request:
  1. Name and Family name, academic rank, work position, place of work
  2. Contact tel. and e-mail
  3. Theme of article
  4. Curriculum Vitae including your scientific field and main research themes. (Please send this as a MS Word or pdf file in a separate attachment)
  5. Text of article
Please send your article in the following format:

Format – А4. Field 2 sm. Type – Times New Roman, size of type – 14, line interval 1,5, indention 1,25, annealing of text – on width.

A list of references should be given at the end of the article. The references in the text should be given in square brackets  [1, p 20].

Articles may be published in Russian or English

The text of the article must include an abstract (not more 250 words) and a list of key words (5-10 words).

The first page must have :

  • name and family name of the author on the first line,
  • place of work on the second line
  • theme of the article on the third line 
  • text of article on the fourth line
Example:


John Mill

Surgut State Pedagogical University

Theme of article

     Abstract. An abstract in English.

     Key words. Key words in English

     Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article. Text of article…

Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Call for Papers "Resistance, protest and criticism in the name of nature: USSR and post-Soviet states, 1950-2010"

Call for Papers
Resistance, protest and criticism in the name of nature: USSR and post-Soviet states, 1950-2010
Conference in Moscow, 8-9 October 2015

This conference will look at resistance in the name of nature against industrialist and transformist projects in the Soviet and post-Soviet space from the 1950s to the present. How did people at local and regional levels mobilize nature in their practices of discontent (open protests, passive resistance, lawsuits and others) when confronting industrial interests, state projects and rampant transformations that impacted their lifestyle and violated their conception of a proper environment? 

In the environmental history of the Soviet Union we usually emphasize the unstoppable bulldozer of progress that turned the rivers into dam cascades, irrigated dry steppes, drained peat bogs, placed nuclear power stations and highly polluting industries near densely populated areas, and destroyed natural and traditional landscapes. Most of the time we present the productivist thrust of the Soviet state as advancing unchallenged, with the force of quasi-historical necessity. Although ecological activists from urban areas have been closely studied by historians (Weiner, Josephson), we have little research on the protest culture of the people affected by these transformations and how they confronted the risks and nuisances associated with them in the Soviet and post-Soviet world: peasants and landowners, indigenous peoples, nomad herders, workers at polluting plants, inhabitants of contaminated areas, hunters and fishermen, “unorganized” tourists and so on. 

We wish to put three groups of actors to the fore: first, we want to give a voice to those social actors who refused the obligatory direction of history toward the industrial control of nature (understood as natural resources) and cherished modes of interacting with their local or regional environment other than what “modernization” dictated, or more modestly tried to avoid the most disastrous transformations. How did they express their concerns and what alternative conceptions of nature did they defend?

Second, we study the interaction of state actors informed by visions of a tamed and useful nature with the people who felt directly concerned by their projects. How did Party leaders and state administrators take these challenges and checks into account if at all, whether crushing, ignoring, compensating or integrating them? What compromises in their initial plans were they prepared to make in the name of differing conceptions of the use of nature and a healthy environment?

Third, scientific and technical experts played an important mediating role between local people and decision-makers. How did they create, frame and advocate environmental issues? Or alternatively, how did they make environmental change appear acceptable and desirable to the people it affected?

By drawing attention to bottom-up resistance on behalf of nature from the 1950s and how it was suppressed, incorporated or bypassed in the USSR and its successor States, we hope to go some way in explaining the upsurge of environmental activism in the perestroika years and understanding the significance and limits of its decline in the post-Soviet period.

Here is a non-exhaustive list of possible topics:
·         What role did international contacts and globalized environmental concepts play in formulating ecological issues and mobilizing opinion around them?
·         How did industrial pollution impact workers and their families?
·         How did opposition to nuclear power and other industrial sites arise, up to the mass rallies of the 1980s?
·         How did usage conflicts develop, especially in the agricultural and tourist sectors (soils, forest, water, pasture)?
·         How did state actors take account of the risks of progress in planning?
·         How were nature and related concepts (landscape, life, environment, ecology) mobilized in the negotiations around industrial implantation and transformist projects?

 

Organization

The conference will be held on 8-9 October 2015 in Moscow (exact location will be announced later). Working languages will be Russian and English.

Abstracts (in Russian or English, no more than 400 words) should be submitted by email to in-the-name-of-nature@ecoglobreg.org by 15 March 2015. The organizers will respond by 15 May 2015. 

All queries should be sent to Melanie Arndt and Laurent Coumel.
The selected speakers will have their travel and accommodation expenses covered.

Papers will be requested by 15 September 2015 so as to be circulated among speakers in advance of the conference.

 

Institutional and financial support

The German Historical Institute (www.dhi-moskau.org) and the French-Russian Research Center (www.centre-fr.net) in Moscow contribute to financing the conference and provide essential organisational support.

 

Initiators

EcoGlobReg is a joint French-German historical research project financed by Agence National de la Recherche (ANR) and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG). It is devoted to understanding how ecological concerns shaped society and politics in the late Soviet Union and the post-Soviet space. We analyse the sometimes tumultuous processes associated with the ecologization and de-ecologization of politics and society in the last three decades of the 20th century. By “ecologization” we mean the social dissemination and deepening political use of scientific knowledge on the state of the environment. We isolate three main vectors for spreading ecological preoccupations in society and political discourse: social activism and protest for the protection of landscapes and life conditions; environmental disasters understood as catalysts of discontent and revealers of failed relationships between society and nature; and sensitization and popularization (in the media and education) of nature seen as threatened by economic development.

The project takes ecologization and de-ecologization to be essentially globalized processes. It shows how environmental issues acquired a global character at the turn of the 1960s-1970s and what role Soviet citizens played in this process. From there the project moves to asking whether the Soviet Union entered an “environmental turn” comparable to the one identified for capitalist countries. But transnational and globalizing trends are only one aspect of ecologization. The project pays attention to the regionalization of power dynamics: strengthened national and regional identities fired ecological mobilization in the perestroika years; well before that point in Soviet history, they played a major role in shaping environmental protest. Last, the apparent de-ecologization of public discourse in the post-Soviet era, marked by green activists withdrawing from the political scene, will be examined to see how environmental practices have evolved and taken on new forms.

EcoGlobReg’s Team:
Alexander Ananyev
Melanie Arndt
Laurent Coumel
Marc Elie
Klaus Gestwa
Raphael Schulte-Kellinghaus