Dear colleagues,
This is a friendly reminder that we are inviting abstracts for our
Winter Workshop on "Rethinking Wild Europe: European Perspectives on
Wilderness, Rewilding and Biodiversity Conservation", which will take
place on
7-8 February 2025,
here at the University of Vienna (in the NIG).
Keynotes: Dr. Martin Drenthen (Radboud University), Dr. Monica Vasile
(Maastricht University)
Deadline for abstracts: 31. October 2024
For more information, please see the CFA attached.
Best wishes,
Leonie
Am 09.09.2024 12:37, schrieb Leonie Bossert via Hermes:
Dear all,
We are inviting abstracts for our Winter Workshop on "Rethinking Wild
Europe: European Perspectives on Wilderness, Rewilding and
Biodiversity Conservation", organized by The International Society for
Environmental Ethics (ISEE) and the Center for Environmental and
Technology Ethics - Prague (CETE-P)
7-8 February 2025, University of Vienna
Call for Abstracts (Deadline: 31. October 2024)
The convergent climate change and biodiversity crises increasingly
remind humans about the importance and precarity of their
socio-ecological surroundings, thus shifting perspectives on nature,
wild(er)ness and nonhuman others. This shift includes a renewed
appreciation for ‘the wild’. New responses to climate change and
biodiversity loss such as rewilding, spearheaded by organisations like
Rewilding Europe and Rewilding Britain, are rapidly gaining popularity
in Europe. Simultaneously, conservationists applaud the recent return
of large predators in many European regions. Other novel approaches to
ecological restoration and biodiversity conservation reflect a similar
desire to respect and restore wildlife, and to facilitate different
human-animal or human-nature relations. Long associated with other
parts of the world, wildness and wilderness appear to have made a
come-back in the European landscape and imagination. But what is the
meaning of these concepts in a European context? How do they influence
the European approach to biodiversity conservation? Do Western and
Eastern European approaches differentiate, or are they relatively
similar?
This workshop will address the ethics and narratives surrounding
wilderness, wildness, rewilding, and ecological restoration in Europe.
We aim to assess the impact of these concepts and approaches on the
European landscape, which has historically been a hybrid mixture of
wildlife and human culture. The tension between, on the one hand, the
desire to welcome wild animals and wilderness (back) to Europe and, on
the other, preserving and rekindling cultural value and identity
animates the debate on rewilding, biodiversity conservation, and land
management. Wilderness, and more recently rewilding, have been
criticised as colonial, patriarchal, and anthropocentric concepts.
While much of this debate takes place in a North American context,
Europe has its own challenges to face: among them, human-wildlife
conflict; ongoing debates on land use, land access, and land
sovereignty; divergent views on wild(er)ness between conservationists
and local stakeholders; and concerns about animal welfare in rewilding
projects. The event will address these (and other) issues arising
within European conservation and rewilding.
Keynote speakers: Dr. Martin Drenthen, Associate professor in
Philosophy at Radboud University (NL); second keynote speaker TBA
We invite abstracts (300 words) for 15-minute presentations addressing
wild(erness) narratives and/or the ethics of rewilding, biodiversity,
wilderness and wild animal conservation, and ecological restoration,
with a primary focus on Europe. Possible topics may include (but are
not limited to):
o The distinct European approach to rewilding and conservation,
o Novel and critical approaches to conservation and rewilding (e.g.
place-based or community-led, decolonial, feminist, or compassionate
conservation approaches),
o Central and Eastern European perspectives,
o Conflicts of interests between local stakeholders and
conservationists,
o Coexistence with large carnivores,
o (Overcoming) colonialism and patriarchy in conservation,
o Indigenous perspectives on conservation and land use,
o Socio-ecological justice in a rewilding or conservation context,
o Wild animal ethics,
o The role of technology and AI in conservation and rewilding,
o Changing human-animal or human-nature relations,
o The concept of wilderness in European history and philosophy,
o Contemporary European representations and meanings of wild(er)ness,
o Comparative perspectives on European approaches and conservation
in other parts of the world.
300-word abstracts, prepared for double-blind review, should be sent
to rethinkingwildeurope(a)gmail.com by October 31, 2024.
Please remove all identifying information from your abstract. In a
separate document, send us a cover letter including your name, title,
institutional affiliation, and a very short bio (max. 100 words).
Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by November 30, 2024, at
the latest. There will be a registration fee of approximately between
50€ and 100€ for the event. A special issue in a leading
international journal is planned as a follow-up to the conference.
Organising team: Leonie Bossert (ISEE), Linde De Vroey (ISEE), Iwona
Janicka (CETE-P), Petr Urban (CETE-P).
_______________________________________________
Hermes mailing list -- hermes(a)lists.philo.at
To unsubscribe send an email to hermes-leave(a)lists.philo.at
_______________________________________________
Hermes mailing list -- hermes(a)lists.philo.at
To unsubscribe send an email to hermes-leave(a)lists.philo.at