Archive for calls, February 2025

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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Royal Geographical Society IBG Annual Conference 2025 CfP - Relentless injustice: trauma, exhaustion and researching zombie problems (or banging your head against a wall)

Fri Feb 21 03:51:02 GMT 2025





Royal Geographical Society IBG Annual Conference 2025 CfP - Relentless injustice: trauma, exhaustion and researching zombie problems (or banging your head against a wall) Session Organisers: Elizabeth Gagen (Aberystwyth University), Sinéad O’Connor (Aberystwyth University), Yvonne Ehrstein (Aberystwyth University), Emma Sheppard (Aberystwyth University)

In this session, we invite papers that consider the challenges, traumas and exhaustion of conducting research on topics and problems that refuse to go away, despite relentless and repeated research programmes designed to foster change. The term ‘zombie statistics’ has been used to describe data that are known to be inaccurate but retain a mythic and immoveable place in the popular imaginary. We suggest that this idea of the 'zombie problem' can be applied to a number of research contexts in which communities subject to epistemic injustices continuously re-experience the trauma of being unheard, in part because of a broader refusal to shift entrenched prejudice (Fricker, 2013) while researchers endlessly critique logics that refuse to fade. We invite discussion of the emotional exhaustion of continuing to confront familiar research problems that fail to translate into tangible change, alongside the emotional exhaustion of research from a position of lived experience.
Examples might include:
- Following Nash and Pinto’s (2024) reflections on feminist exhaustion, how might feminist geographers draw on and critique logics of care to confront the entrenched crisis within the neo-liberal university? - How does the exhausting logic of misrecognition affect Trans research communities? - Following Doreen Massey’s (2001) claim that policy makers have failed to listen to geographers’ findings about regional inequalities, how and why have relations between geographical theory and policy shifted?- - How does black geographies continue to confront the trauma of continued racial violence and racial capitalism despite decades, if not centuries, of critical opposition? - How do researchers working in critical obesity studies remain energised when challenging discriminatory practices that rely on inaccurate and debunked data, when they continue to be accepted within healthcare settings. - Building on Sara Ahmed’s (2021) notion of complaint as feminist pedagogy, what is the value of complaining about ongoing power abuses in institutional and organisational settings? - How do researchers cope with gender fatigue, resulting from the belief that gender equality is achieved, when being continuously exposed to stark evidence of inequalities/discrimination across multiple social spheres?

This will be an in-person session only due to limited availability of hybrid sessions. We welcome creative formats or approaches that can fit in a standard paper session. Please email your abstract (max 250 words) to Sinéad O’Connor ( (sio13 /at/ aber.ac.uk)) and Yvonne Ehrstein ((yve /at/ aber.ac.uk)) by Friday February 28th.

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