Political Geography and the Environment
Jun 19, 2014
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University of Oregon
Eugene, OR
The theme of the conference will be Political Geography and the Environment. The meeting will consist of two days of sessions, followed by an optional day-long field trip to the Oregon coast on June 21.
One of the clearest obstacles to the effort to confront environmental problems is the fragmentation of the planet into political spaces, few of which are meaningful ecological units. The issue is not just that ecological and political boundaries do not coincide; the very roles that territorial states play in the international state system and the world economy frequently work against collective action in the interests of the environment. Building on a tradition of examining the relationship between spaces of governance and environmental geographies, this conference will explore the role political geographic arrangements and understandings play in the effort to address the myriad environmental challenges of our time.
Contributions are welcome addressing such issues as:
• Transnational regulation regimes and the special issues presented by environments that do not lie within the territories of individual states
• The political geographic dimensions of environmental security
• The geopolitical implications of environmental change
• Critical geopolitics and environmental discourse
• The geographical circumstances affecting the emergence and success of environmental movements
• The problems and prospects of collective resource management in different political contexts
• The use of environmental strategies in the pursuit of political-territorial objectives
• The implications of environmental change for theorizations of the relationship between space and politics