Site icon Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility

Change in Motion: Environment, Migration, and Mobilities

Call for Papers: Workshop at the Pacific Regional Office of the German Historical Institute in Berkeley

Academics, journalists, NGOs, and institutions of global governance increasingly speak of ‘environmental migrants’ and ‘climate refugees.’ But what separates an environmental migrant or climate refugee from another migrant, refugee, or asylum-seeker? In international security discourse, anthropogenic climate change has been conceptualized as a threat multiplier, inextricably entangled with myriad push factors: floods, droughts, resource and border disputes, the spread of disease, increasingly extreme and unpredictable weather. Yet climate change can also be erased from migration narratives. Depending on one’s perspective, climate change is only ever an indirect cause or responsible for nearly all migration. 

We invite scholars from across disciplines to share work that explores the multifaceted interdependencies and entanglements between migration and environmental change. As such, we aim to challenge the assumptions and power relations often inadvertently or implicitly reproduced in research that reads the intersection of mobility and environmental change only in its most pronounced manifestations. By incorporating a variety of research foci and methods, we aim to shed light on how conceptions of climate, migration, and intersections thereof shift according to our scholarly perspectives: the temporal or geographic scale at which we consider a given crisis or migratory pattern, or whether we examine environmental change on a local, national, hemispheric, or planetary level.

This workshop convenes historians, anthropologists, sociologists, and geographers, as well as media, literary, and legal scholars. Contributors are welcome to explore any periodization that they deem appropriate; geographic area and theoretical approach are also open. We invite contributions that will engage with – but are not limited to – the following areas of inquiry:

Please upload a brief CV including your name, institutional affiliation, and email contact and a proposal of no more than 300 words by January 22, 2020 to GHI’s online portal. The organizers will cover basic expenses for travel and accommodation. Please contact Heike Friedman (friedman@ghi-dc.org) if you have any questions regarding the procedure of submitting your information online. For questions regarding the conference, please contact Sarah Earnshaw (searnshaw@berkeley.edu) or Samantha Fox (foxs1@newschool.edu).

Successful applicants will be notified by the end of January 2020.

We will ask accepted applicants to submit your previously unpublished paper (of about 4,000-5,000 words including references) by April 20, 2020, as we envision engagement with pre-circulated papers and aim to publish selected papers in a peer-reviewed venue.

Exit mobile version