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[Commlist] 100 Sec to Midnight CFP
Sat Apr 29 09:30:07 GMT 2023
Title: 100 Seconds to Midnight: Media, Conflict and the Climate Crisis
Deadline Extended to 31 May, 2023
In January 2020, the Doomsday Clock moved to 100 seconds to midnight - a
stark warning that the world is closer than it has ever been to
cataclysmic devastation. The accompanying statement in the Bulletin of
Atomic Scientists identifies nuclear weapons, misuse of information
technologies and climate change as the three most critical threats to
the planet. As the Bulletin implies, conflict, media and climate change
are at the epicentre of the current crisis, highlighted by events in
Ukraine, yet the entanglements between these three elements have never
been fully explored. This is an urgent call to address that gap.
There have, of course, been investigations into aspects of various
combinations of relationships between these three elements.News media
around the globe have been addressing climate change in various ways
since the middle of the last century and how news media address, or fail
to address, the climate crisis has been the focus of much academic
attention (Boykoff 2008, 2009; Lester and Cottle 2009).There has been
interest in how the climate crisis is playing out in documentary films
(Hughes 2012; Aaltonen 2014; Huggan 2015; Bieniek-Tobasco et al 2019),
and the role played by fiction film in representing climate issues has
also received some attention (von Burg 2011; Skallari 2015;Manzo
2017).However, investigations into how the relationship between violence
and climate change has been represented in film are thin on the ground
(Hobbs-Morgan 2017), and more research is needed into how videogames are
responding to the intersections between conflict and climate change, and
into how televisual narratives are engaging with these issues.
Meanwhile Defence Departments around the world – in the U.S., the U.K.,
India, France, New Zealand and China, to name a few – have all
identified climate change as a non-traditional security challenge and
are in the process of developing strategies and measures to address
it.Much of the discourse around climate change and armed conflict,
however, in academia and in the military, is concerned with attempting
to prove, or disprove, causal links between the two (Hsiang et al 2013;
Selby et al 2017; Adams et al 2018; Nordqvist and Krampe 2018) or with
identifying climate change as a threat multiplier (Brown, Hammill,
MCleman 2007 Huntjens and Nachbar 2015).How conflict itself has
contributed to climate change, not only through the damage caused by
armed engagements past and present, but also through the carbon
bootprint of military activities, has received less attention in the
media and in academia.Other forms of conflict emerging from climate
change - such as that between human and non-human for resources, for
example – and their relationship to media, have also not been fully
investigated.
This special issue addresses the urgent need to investigate the
intersections between media, conflict and climate change, and the
challenges and/or opportunities that emerge from their
entanglements.Potential topics include, but are not restricted to, the
following:
* What are the implications and extent of the use of martial terms in
the discourse in relation to climate – eg. “war on the planet”,
#waronourfuture, “climate wars”
* How are different forms of conflict related to climate change
reported and represented in both traditional forms of media and
other media forms around the world?
* In what ways do the media of different countries address
climate-related migrations and their relationship to conflict?
* In what ways do non-fictional media forms (film, television, digital
games) inflect the understanding of the relationship between
conflict and climate change?
* How has the coverage of war (such as the recent war in Ukraine)
represented/obscured the environmental cost of warfare?
* What media strategies are militaries around the world adopting in
relation to their role in responding to the climate crisis?
* How is the impact of the climate crisis on the international
security landscape playing out in media?
* How have the long-term environmental legacies of conflict been
addressed or ignored in media?
* Are some countries able to negotiate climate change without
conflict? What role does media play in such countries? What can
be learned from them?
* How are environmental wars mis/understood and represented in media?
* Why has Hollywood ignored climate change?
* In what ways are video games, especially those with war-themed
settings, addressing the relationship between conflict and climate?
* How are other forms of conflict and their relationship to climate
change – between human and non-human, for example – being ignored or
addressed in media?
We particularly welcome papers that cover previously under-represented
countries and regions in debates about these issues – Pakistan, Myanmar
and Afghanistan, South Asia, South East Asia, for example – as well as
papers addressing the recent war in the Ukraine.
*Please send abstracts of 200-300 words for articles of 8,000 words,
intended for a special issue of the/Media, War and Conflict/journal
<https://journals.sagepub.com/home/mwc>to: *
Dr. Debra Ramsay : (d.ramsay /at/ exeter.ac.uk)
Dr. Martin Robson: (m.robson /at/ exeter.ac.uk)
*Please use the subject line: 100 Sec to Midnight Abstract *
*Deadline for submission of abstracts: 30 April 2023 – extended to 31
May 2023. *
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