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[Commlist] CFP: Communicating climate hope: Countering eco-anxiety and climate doomism in research and practice
Fri Feb 16 17:40:36 GMT 2024
Call for papers
Communicating climate hope: Countering eco-anxiety and climate doomism
in research and practice
University of British Columbia and Tilburg University
Vancouver, BC, Canada; Tilburg, Netherlands, August 15-16, 2024
Website: https://www.climatehope2024.com
Abstract submission deadline: April 8, 2024
https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=cch2024
About the conference
As the impacts of the climate crisis rise, we are also seeing a rise in
eco-anxiety. Although experiencing such emotions may inspire some to
act, for many the result is doomism, and a resulting inability to act.
Therefore, the current Climate Hope event aims to explore the vital role
of effective communication in fostering hope and driving positive action
in the context of climate change.
The rise in eco-anxiety and doomism reflects a disconnect between
understanding the climate crisis and acting to affect positive change.
Communication plays a vital role in resolving this disconnect, aiming to
understand the ways in which people think and talk about the problem,
and to develop ways to promote beneficial framings and narratives that
can contribute to positive, collective change. We see that academics
across a range of disciplines are increasingly interested in studying
climate literacy, effective climate communication, and positive coping
mechanisms. However, for research to be truly impactful, it must be
applied to real-life issues. This can be difficult for a simple reason –
academics do not always talk to people outside the academic world, even
though they are probably working on similar questions. Therefore, the
current event aims to bring together scholars, communication
professionals, activists, artists and change-makers in a two-day
conference on the communication of climate hope.
Although we very much welcome participants from a wide range of
disciplines to the conference, we focus on the following disciplines in
this call for submissions: academics working on climate hope; artists
who produce art in this direction; and community-oriented activists
seeking to foster climate hope in the public sphere. We aim to organize
sessions where perspectives meet, to learn from each other, and to find
out how academia, art, and activism can strengthen each other. As can be
read below, the specific submission guidelines are different for
academics and artists/activists.
Venues
The Climate Hope conference has a “distributed-hybrid” design, which
means that it will be held in-person at two local hubs: one in Europe
(Tilburg University, the Netherlands), and one in North America
(University of British Columbia – Vancouver, Canada). This distributed
design allows for small group engagement and enables more sustainable
local travel. The hybrid design enables collaboration at-a-distance,
allowing real-time and asynchronous communication between hubs and with
remote participants. Participants can indicate in which location they
will attend the conference. At Tilburg the conference will be located
at Mindlabs and at UBC it will be at Green College.
Both local hubs will have a combination of plenary talks by invited
speakers; regular presentations (20 minutes + 10 minutes for
discussion); and academic poster presentations combined with
non-academic exhibitions.
Potential topics of the conference may include, but are not limited to:
• Building Climate Resilience through Communication
• Climate Art and Creativity
• Climate Hope and Resiliency in Literary Spaces
• Environmental Humanities
• Environmental Journalism
• Narratives and (Interactive) Storytelling
• Visual, Multimedia, and Multimodal Climate Messaging
• Climate Activism
• Science Communication and Public Understanding
• Climate Hope Campaigns and Initiatives
• Audience Characteristics and Inclusive Climate Communication
• Indigenous Perspectives on Climate Hope
• Social Media and Online Communities
• Psychology of Climate Doom, Eco-Anxiety, and Eco-Paralysis
• Linguistic Analysis of Climate Communication
• Ecolinguistics
Invited Speakers: University of British Columbia
• Teenie Matlock, University of California Merced, USA
• Naoko Ellis and Derek Gladwin, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, Canada
• Ashley Fairbanks, Creative Director, 100% Campaign, Minnesota, USA
Invited Speakers: Tilburg University
• Noëlle Aarts, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
• Reyer Gerlagh, Tilburg University, The Netherlands
• Jenny Pickerill, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom
Contact
General questions should be emailed to (contact /at/ climatehope2024.com).
Location-specific questions should be emailed
to (tilburg /at/ climatehope2024.com) for Tilburg University
or (ubc /at/ climatehope2024.com) for the University of British of Columbia.
Submission Guidelines: Academic Contributions
Submissions for academic contributions should be an anonymized abstract
(maximum 500 words, not including references), submitted as a PDF file.
Interdisciplinary, multi-authored submissions are highly welcomed.
Submissions must be written in English, and the abstracts will undergo a
peer-review process. After acceptance, abstracts will be published open
access on the conference website.
Submission Guidelines: Artwork and Activism Contributions
Artists and activists/community organizers can contribute to the Climate
Hope conference in three ways:
1 Artists can exhibit one or more pieces of climate art in a session
mixed with academic poster presentations and organization exhibitions,
where participants in the conference walk by and discuss with the
artists about their work.
2 Activists can exhibit their organization’s work in a session mixed
with academic poster presentations and artwork exhibitions, where
participants in the conference walk by and discuss with the activists
about their organization’s work.
3 They can apply for a regular presentation, where they do not only
exhibit one or more pieces of art and/or organizing stories, but also
explain the background of this work; the messages it wants to convey;
how it fits into their complete body of work; what inspires them as an
artist/activist; how they see the role of art/activism in the climate
crisis; etc.
Submission Instructions: Artwork Contributions
We define climate art broadly to include not only artwork, but also
works in design, craft, and illustration. The binding principle is that
the work is created primarily to contribute to the climate debate. Works
may include, but are not limited to: drawings, design, handcrafts,
illustrations, computer graphics, film, paintings, prints, sculptures,
and textiles. The selections of artworks will be determined by a panel
of artists.
All submissions should be made electronically via email to the local
conference email address
((tilburg /at/ climatehope2024.com) or (ubc /at/ climatehope2024.com)), along with
information about the artists name, contact details, the title of
artwork (if any), and a clear picture of the artwork. Images should be
JPEG files with a dimension of at least 1800 pixels and no more than
2400 pixels in the larger direction, saved with maximum quality within
these constraints. Should a URL be more convenient for submission than
an image, for example due to the nature of the artwork, please provide
this URL clearly in your submission e-mail.
Submission Instructions: Activism Contributions
Activists/community organizations interested in participating should
contact the conference organizers directly
at (tilburg /at/ climatehope2024.com) or (ubc /at/ climatehope2024.com) by the
submission deadline to discuss how their work can be best incorporated
into the conference.
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