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Graeme Wynn and David Brownstein have been confirmed as the editors of the Canadian contribution to the World Forest History Series.

The volumes are intended to address inter alia the “rise of state and scientific forestry and the evolution of environmental land management practices, with a special focus on colonial forestry and its legacy,” and to ”feature a substantial section of primary sources related to the history of humans and forests.” Recognizing the scale and importance of forest history in Canada, the series editors, Gregory Barton and Brett Bennett have suggested two volumes on Canada, one of essays and the other of primary source documents. Wynn and Brownstein are developing outlines/ preferred emphases for the volumes, but would appreciate hearing from anyone interested in contributing at their earliest convenience.

This is also a formal call for proposed papers (of approximately 8-10000 words in length). Proposals (of 500 words or so) may be chronological, historiographical, thematic or regional in focus and should be sent to both wynn@geog.ubc.ca and david.brownstein@geog.ubc.ca by 1 May 2012.

Please consider the following:
1- the volumes should be readable and coherent for all readers, not just geographers and historians. This means, among other things, writing in plain language and avoiding overly partisan language. We hope to make the volumes specialized enough to draw audiences from the scholarly community but broad enough to interest non-scholarly readers.

2- we would like to involve foresters and scientists in this project, especially with a view to offering some current perspectives on forestry.

3- There should be some historiographical analysis, such as an overview of shifting interpretations of forest history.

4- The series seeks to integrate national histories into both imperial and world histories. This implies that contributions should attend, as appropriate, to the relations between Canada and the British Empire and the world.

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Ecocultures 2012: Transitions to Sustainability
A Conference to take place at the University of Essex, 17th -18th April 2012

Ecocultures are communities from whom we can learn the art and science of sustainable living.

The aim of Ecocultures 2012 is to advance knowledge of how communities adapt successfully to social-ecological change, maintain resilience and enhance well-being. The conference will present and synthesise the best, current, multi-disciplinary perspectives of the barriers and bridges encountered by Ecocultures and how they can contribute to a global transition to sustainability.

Context

In an emerging ‘perfect storm’ of pervasive and sometimes turbulent ecological, social and cultural change human communities will need to find ways to adapt creatively and sustainably. In doing so, we will need to learn how to mitigate emerging global threats such as climate change and resource degradation through changes in individual behaviour, community actions, state-level responses and international governance. We will need to adapt – psychologically, socially, economically, politically and culturally – to the new social and environmental conditions of the anthropocene. And finally, we will need make these adaptations creatively, in a way that maintains or improves well-being. The scope and urgency of these challenges require us to critically examine current efforts to live sustainably, and understand the nature and mechanisms of sustainability.

The Ecocultures research programme at the University of Essex examines how traditional and newly emerging communities across the world are already responding to these challenges relatively successfully. Designated as ‘Ecocultures’, these communities provide living examples of sustainability in resilient social-ecological systems. They offer us lessons on how sustainability looks, possible pathways for transition, and offer hope that high levels of ecological well-being are consistent with the flourishing of society and culture. In doing so, they provide hope that there is more than one way to develop and more than one way to be happy, whilst maintaining a commitment to environmental and societal well-being.

The Ecocultures 2012 conference will bring together members of these communities, researchers who work with them, policy makers interested in applying their lessons and development practitioners looking for innovative ways to enhance social-ecological well-being. Together, we will examine the principles and practices of ‘Ecocultures’ from multiple disciplinary perspectives and at every scale, from the individual to the community and beyond. The questions we will address will range from the deepest organising principles of alternative development paradigms (how do the members of Ecocultures view their place in the world and accord value to nature?) to the practicalities of their social and economic organisation. We invite submissions from across the spectrum of the social sciences and humanities; trans-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary submissions are particularly encouraged.

Conference Themes

We invite submissions from academics, policy makers and development practitioners engaged in work on resilience and sustainability. Papers could include (but are not limited to) the following themes:

* Case studies on communities successfully adapting to social-ecological change;
* Historic examples of highly resilient communities and their current status;
* Analyses of the ‘traditional’ practices contributing to sustainable lifestyles, the stresses to which these provide resilience, and the barriers and bridges to the continued practice of such traditional lifestyles in today’s world;
* The emergence of ‘new’ Ecocultures, such as cultural revitalisation initiatives, ‘back to the land’ initiatives and the transition movement; the barriers and bridges to sustainability within these initiatives, the potential for their spread, their contribution to well-being and to social-ecological resilience at community level and beyond;
* Critical analyses of current and alternative notions of ‘development’, ‘sustainability’ and ‘resilience’;
* Analyses of struggles for resources: how do, for example, the extractive industries and multi-national corporations affect the sustainability of communities;
* Conflicts between different notions and practices of ‘sustainability’;
* Meta-analyses of the social, economic, political and cultural barriers and bridges to sustainability;
* Analyses of the role played by current policies, economic and corporate initiatives for ‘sustainability’, including the potential for sustainable governance, the links between international trade and sustainable growth, and the potential role played by consumer awareness, environmental regulations, new methods of environmental valuation and corporate social responsibility initiatives.

Conference keynote address

One of the conference’s keynote addresses will be delivered by Professor Jules Pretty, Professor of Environment and Society at the University of Essex.

He is Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Sustainability and Resources), Pro-Vice-Chancellor responsible for the Faculty of Science and Engineering, and Deputy Vice-Chancellor. His books include This Luminous Coast (2011), Nature and Culture (co-authored, 2010), The Earth Only Endures (2007), Environment (4 vols, ed 2006), The Earthscan Reader in Sustainable Agriculture (2005, ed), The Pesticide Detox (2005, ed), Agri-Culture (2002) and Regenerating Agriculture (1995). He is a Fellow of the Society of Biology and the Royal Society of Arts, former Deputy-Chair of the Government’s Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment (ACRE), and has served on advisory committees for a number of government departments. He is currently member of the Lead Expert Group for the UK Government’s Foresight Global Food and Farming Futures Project, member of the Expert Panel for UK National Ecosystem Assessment and member of BBSRC’s Strategy Advisory Board. He received an OBE in 2006 for services to sustainable agriculture, and an honorary degree from Ohio State University in 2009.

Conference Arrangements

The conference will take place on the Colchester campus of the University of Essex from the morning of Tuesday, 17th April until the afternoon of Wednesday, 18th April 2012. Conference costs will be kept to a minimum and confirmed by the end of January 2012.

For maps and travel directions, see http://www.essex.ac.uk/about/getting_here/

Submissions and Contacts

Paper proposals, in the form of an abstract (400-700 words) and Panel proposals (max 1000 words), should be sent to Prof. Steffen Böhm (steffen@essex.ac.uk) and Zareen Bharucha (zpbhar@essex.ac.uk) by 16th January 2012. Please make reference to the conference in the subject line of your email by marking it ‘Ecocultures 2012’. Authors will be notified of acceptance by 30th January 2012.

For general inquiries, please email Zareen Bharucha (zpbhar@essex.ac.uk). A visa letter can be provided for delegates who will require it for travel to the UK. Please let us know if you need one.

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Theme Issue Call for Papers

Learning for sustainability through resource and environmental governance:
Lessons from Canadian experiences

Environments addresses people in their social, natural and built environments. The intent is to promote scholarship and discussion in a multidisciplinary and civic way, providing ideas and information that people might use to think effectively about the future.

The theme

Resource and environmental problems are often complex and controversial, and have uncertain impacts on social and ecological systems. They frequently involve numerous ecosystems, overlapping administrative jurisdictions, contested politics, many stakeholders and knowledge claims, and diverse economic interests. In response to such problems, there is a need for environmental governance to be adaptive and to reflect learning by people, groups, organizations and other governance actors. Learning from governance experiences helps participants gain insight into complex social and ecological systems, develop shared understandings of problems and potential solutions, make decisions under conditions of high uncertainty, and guide social and ecological systems along sustainable paths.

The editors invite contributions on the subject of learning for sustainability through environmental governance. Governance is viewed broadly, and includes policy making, regulation, planning, management, administration, assessment, monitoring and decision making. The focus of the special issue is lessons from Canadian experiences. Paper topics may include, but are not limited to:

  • education that facilitates learning in governance
  • institutions, organizational structures, and governance processes that enable or inhibit learning
  • informal or experiential learning by people, groups, organizations and other actors involved in governance
  • connections among individual, social, organizational and societal learning
  • promising theoretical, conceptual and methodological frameworks in the field
  • examples of community-based social marketing and learning for sustainability
  • the roles of behavioural change and social action in learning for sustainability
  • the policy learning cycle and adaptive policy making
  • learning outcomes that are consistent with sustainability objectives

Guest editors

Alan Diduck, Environmental Studies Program, The University of Winnipeg, a.diduck@uwinnipeg.ca

A. John Sinclair, Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, jsincla@ms.umanitoba.ca

Timing

Abstracts of 250 to 300 words should be submitted electronically to one of the guest editors by January 6, 2012. Authors of selected abstracts will be invited to submit papers, of no more than 6,000 words, by June 15, 2012, to achieve a Spring 2013 publication date. Detailed submission instructions and author guidelines for the papers may be found at http://www.environmentsjournal.ca/index.php/ejis/about/submissions.

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Nature Climate Change launched in April 2011. The new journal publishes original research across the physical and social sciences and strives to synthesize interdisciplinary research.

The editorial team welcomes manuscripts describing cutting-edge research in all areas of climate change including adaptation, anthropology, atmospheric science, biochemistry, communication, cryospheric science, ecology, economics, ethics, geography, hydrology, impacts and vulnerability, mitigation, modelling, oceanography, palaeoclimate, policy and governance, philosophy, psychology, sociology and sustainability and development.

Information on how to submit to Nature Climate Change can be viewed here:
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/authors/index.html?WT.mc_id=CC1109CX020

In addition to publishing original research, Nature Climate Change provides a forum for discussion among leading experts through the publication of opinion, analysis and review articles. It also highlights the most important developments in the field through Research Highlights and publishes original reporting from renowned science journalists in the form of feature articles.

Visit the website to find general information about the journal:
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/?WT.mc_id=CC1109CX020

Also, the first issue content is available free online:
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/archive/issue.html?year=2011&month=04

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Reminder: Call for Papers, ESAC Conference 2010


Environmental Studies Association of Canada (ESAC) / Association canadienne
d’études environnementales (ACEE)
Congrès 2010 Conference
Theme: “Sustainability in a Changing World²
Location: Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec
May 31st – June 1, 2010

Dear ESAC members and ESAC friends:

The ESAC conference is May 31st and June 1st in Concordia University in
Montreal, Canada. The theme of the conference is “Sustainability in a
Changing
World”.

I am writing to make you aware that the deadline for the call for
papers and panel proposals for the 2010 ESAC conference is December
21st, midnight. Please read the call for proposals attached here and submit
an individual paper or a panel.

I would also like to mention that two of our three keynote speakers
have been confirmed. Camilla Toulmin will speak on climate change in
Africa and Bina Agarwal will speak on gender in forest conservation in
Asia. For more information on these speakers, please consult our ESAC
website.

If you wish to propose a paper or a panel the forms are attached and
are available on the ESAC website.

If you are a student and
wish to apply for a travel grant, there is a separate form attached and also
on the  website.

Looking forward to hearing from you,

Shirley Thompson
ESAC/ACEE 2010 Conference Chair

Photobucket

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