The University of Kentucky Political Ecology Working Group invites you to 
participate in the fourth annual

DIMENSIONS OF POLITICAL ECOLOGY:
CONFERENCE ON NATURE/SOCIETY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

February 27 - March 1, 2014
University of Kentucky | Lexington, Kentucky, USA



Friday 28th February Keynote Address: Dr. Laura Pulido (Professor of American 
Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California)

Saturday 1st March Keynote Address: Dr. Bruce Braun (Professor of Geography, 
University of Minnesota)

CALL FOR SESSIONS: Fourth Annual Dimensions of Political Ecology Conference on 
Nature/Society at the University of Kentucky

February 27 - March 1, 2014, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky

This year, the UK Political Ecology Working Group invites YOU to organize 
sessions for the upcoming Dimensions of Political Ecology (DOPE) Conference!  
We hope that having participants organize sessions will make the conference 
more reflective of the wide range of cutting edge research currently taking 
place in political ecology.

As a reminder, online registration will open October 1st and cost $20 for 
students and $40 for faculty (there is no fee for undergraduate participants). 
The registration deadline is December 2nd.

Please scroll down for more conference highlights and registration 
instructions, including how to submit a paper abstract that you would like the 
conference organizing committee to attempt to place in a suitable session if 
you are unable to find/organize an appropriate organized session.

Organizing your own session is encouraged and a great way to meet colleagues 
who share your interests and to develop fruitful collaborations. Best of all, 
we can help! It's simple:

1.           Draft a Call for Papers (CFP). For guidance, reference the wide 
variety of CFPs currently circulating for the AAG or other disciplinary 
conferences and check out the program from last year's DoPE 
Conference<https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B-c_uGiCHm2TRks5YWEzeWdMWDA/edit>.

2.           Email your CFP to PEWG at 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>  We'll help publicize your CFP on our 
newly redesigned 
website,<http://www.politicalecology.org/#%212014-conference/cdaa> on facebook 
and via our twitter feed, but you should also distribute it among your 
colleagues and to relevant listservs, perhaps including:

Cultural and Political Ecology<http://www2.stetson.edu/cape/>
Crit-geog<https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A0=crit-geog-forum>
eanth<https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A0=crit-geog-forum>
envirosoc<http://envirosoc.org/>
h-environment<http://www.h-net.org/%7Eenviron/>
stsgrad<https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#%21forum/stsgrad>

AAG speciality groups<http://www.aag.org/cs/membership/specialty_groups>, such 
as:
culturalgeog<http://cultural.missouri.edu/Listserv.html>
urbgeog<http://listserv.arizona.edu/archives/urbgeog.html>

3.           Once responses to your CFP start rolling in, share your session 
participants and abstracts with us for inclusion in the conference program. 
Please also find someone to chair your session (i.e. keep time) and if 
possible, a discussant.

4.           Sessions will need to be submitted to the DOPE organizing 
committee (via the [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> email address) by 
December 2nd. Participants in your session will still need to register and pay 
the conference fee from October 1st.

That's it! PEWG will take care of the rest. There are no extra fees for 
organizing a session or reserving space.

All session proposals we have received to date are listed on our 
website<http://www.politicalecology.org/#%212014-conference/cdaa>. If you are 
thinking of submitting a paper but don't see a session it would fit into listed 
yet, please consider hosting your own session!

DOPE seeks to foster interdisciplinary discussions among a diverse group of 
scholars, and we welcome a wide variety of session topics. Possible topics 
might include rural social movements; urban food systems; complexity in 
ecological and social systems; decolonization, knowledge, and difference; 
neoliberal natures and climate justice; and feminist political ecologies. 
However, we encourage sessions with any topical, theoretical or methodological 
framework that brings together scholarship on the ecological dimensions of 
political, social, economic, or scientific research.

Also keep in mind that undergraduates are strongly encouraged to submit their 
papers to our annual Undergraduate Symposium. While students interested in 
participating in the Undergraduate Symposium will still need to register by the 
deadline, final papers will not be due until January (more details are 
forthcoming).

Please contact us if you have any questions or concerns about organization a 
session. We look forward to receiving your CFP!

CALL FOR PAPERS:

Conference Highlights and Instructions for Paper Abstracts:

This three-day conference provides an opportunity to critically examine 
perspectives on human-environment relationships in their varied manifestations 
and to foster discussions among a diverse group of scholars.  We encourage 
submissions from all individuals who are engaged in research on the ecological 
dimensions of political, economic, social, and scientific research regardless 
of their topical, theoretical, or methodological frameworks, including but not 
limited to:

Environmental justice
Cultural ecology
Ecological modernization
Environmental history
Environmental law
Restoration ecology
Political economy of nature
Genetic technology
Commons, enclosures, and land tenure
Environmental risk
Queer Ecology
Critical Race Theory
Eco-feminism
Resource management and conservation
Non-equilibrium ecology
Landscape studies
Infrastructure
Environmental discourse and policy
Feminist political ecology
Sustainability
Urban political ecology
Environmental sociology
Food security and sustainable agriculture
Knowledge production
Science and technology studies
Critical physical geography
Scholar/activist relationships

Conference Highlights:

Paper Sessions: These will include 3 or 4 presenters with a discussant or 5 
presenters without a discussant (each presenter will generally have 15 to 20 
minutes to present with time for discussion). We are especially interested in 
accepting organized sessions. Please contact us if you are interested in 
organizing a session (see below for details), but session organizers are also 
encouraged to circulate their own CFPs.

Panels on Scholar/Activist Collaboration: As part of an interest in developing 
stronger connections between scholars and activists, we will be sponsoring a 
series of panels dedicated to fostering collaborative research projects between 
researchers and activists.

Undergraduate Student Symposium and Paper Competition: This symposium provides 
undergraduate students with a forum to present their work, receive useful 
feedback, and connect with graduate students and faculty with similar research 
foci.

Field Trips: These trips will focus on contemporary issues related to political 
ecology in the greater bluegrass region and will provide opportunities to meet 
with local activists (as well as sample some of Kentucky's most famous 
agricultural output: bourbon).

Graduate Student Paper Competition: Please look for additional information to 
be emailed and posted on our website in the coming weeks for application 
instructions for each competition.

Submission of Abstracts and Registration:

Abstracts or proposals should be 200 - 300 words in length and include three to 
five keywords. Participants should include name, affiliation, and email address 
(please specify if you do not want your email included in the program).

All presenters must register online for the conference and pay the fee of $20 
for graduate students; $40 for faculty with no fee for undergraduate 
participants.

Please visit www.politicalecology.org<http://www.politicalecology.org/> to 
register from October 1st.

The deadline for abstract submissions is December 2nd 2013.

Please send any questions to the DOPE organizing committee at the email address 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.

--
Daniel Cockayne
PhD Student
University of Kentucky
Department of Geography
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
@insistondoubt

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