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[Commlist] CFP Biodiversity and Climate Change Conference: ECREA's Science and Environment Communication Section
Tue Jun 06 11:50:56 GMT 2023
CFP: Biodiversity and climate change
Call for abstracts ECREA Science & Environmental Communication Section
Dates: 16-17. October 2023 Hosted by: Segovia Campus of the University
of Valladolid, Spain Location: Segovia (Spain) and online (hybrid)
Organised by: Mette Marie Roslyng, Aalborg University, Denmark Miguel
Vicente Mariño, University of Valladolid, Spain Mikkel Fugl Eskjær,
Aalborg University, Denmark Biodiversity and climate change –
communicating interlocking dimensions of the ecological crisis
The current ecological crisis is a crisis of biodiversity and climate
change. Both topics have surpassed the safe limits of our planetary
boundaries. However, biodiversity and climate change are also
inextricably connected. Climate change accelerates the loss of
biodiversity and natural habitats while biodiversity and healthy
ecosystems improve resilience to climate change. Despite the obvious
links between biodiversity and climate change, biodiversity often seems
to slip under the radar compared to global climate change. Some studies
suggest that climate change gets up to eight times more media attention
compared to the biodiversity crisis.
In recent years, there have been a few noteworthy exceptions to this
general pattern. The 2019 rapport by the Intergovernmental
Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES)
concluded that we are facing an alarming increase in the human caused
extinction rate of species and natural habitats. The publication
triggered considerable media attention and renewed public concern for
biodiversity and habitat loss. The 2022 UN Biodiversity Conference in
Montreal (COP15) which led to the 30-by-30 agreement (protection of 30%
of Earth’s land and ocean by 2030) had a similar effect. Both events
momentarily changed the discourse on the ecological crisis by turning
the attention to the deterioration of ecosystems and its consequences
for climate change. However, with the publication of IPCC’s 6th
Assessment Report on climate change (2022-23) global media has once
again turned their attention away from biodiversity and ecosystem
services. This suggests that the risks of climate change may be easier
to grasp and communicate than the decline in biodiversity. As a recent
report concluded: “the scale of the threats to the biosphere and all its
lifeforms—including humanity—is in fact so great that it is difficult to
grasp for even well-informed experts”. This raises questions about the
dynamics behind media attention to climate change and biodiversity. What
are the mechanisms governing the two agendas? When and where do they
differ? And why do media report less on biodiversity compared to climate
change? It also raises wider communicative questions about global and
national environmental policies from key actors that relate to
biodiversity and climate change as well as possible scientific
controversies underlining the issue.
The ECREA Science and Environment Communication Section’s interim
conference intends to investigate the full range of biodiversity
communication. Both as a topic on its own, but also in relation to
climate change and the wider ecological crisis. We wish to explore how
we communicate on biodiversity in the press and digital media. How can
communication on biodiversity help raise awareness and encourage public
engagement? How do the media communicate the complexities of ecosystem
services. And how are habitat loss and the need to rebuild ecosystems
visualized. We invite papers that address issues relating broadly to
biodiversity communication. We welcome contributions from Environmental
and Science Communication, Political Communication, Strategic
Communications, Environmental Humanities, or other related fields, as
well as papers adopting diverse methodological approaches.
Topics for submission include, but are not limited to:
• Biodiversity as media agenda • Biodiversity as risk in the
Anthropocene • Crises of biodiversity and climate change: connections
and disconnections? • The politicisation and de-politicisation of
biodiversity on global, local, and national agendas • Scientific
conflicts and controversies pertaining to biodiversity • Biodiversity
and issues of inequality and environmental justice • Biodiversity and
more-than-human communication • Educational communication and biodiversity
Abstracts, including title, name, affiliation, and email of
presenter(s), should be no longer than 400 words (excl. references)
outlining research questions, methodology and the expected contributions
of the presentation. Please indicate if you plan to participate on site
or on-line. Submission should be sent to Mette Marie Roslyng on the
following email (mmroslyng /at/ ikp.aau.dk) before June 30th, 2023.
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