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  • 1.  Adapting to Climate Change; Notre Dame, April 28-May 1, 2017

    Posted 05-31-2016 11:59
    Call for Papers

    A workshop on
    "ADAPTING TO CLIMATE CHANGE: ACTIONS, IMPLEMENTATIONS, and OUTCOMES"

    University of Notre Dame
    April 28-May 1, 2017

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Organizers

    Debra Javeline, University of Notre Dame (javeline@nd.edu)
    Nives Dolsak, University of Washington, Seattle (nives@uw.edu)
    Aseem Prakash, University of Washington, Seattle (aseem@uw.edu)

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Sponsored by

    University of Notre Dame
    Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, Henkels Lecture Series
    Keough School of Global Affairs
    ND-GAIN with the Environmental Change Initiative
    Global Commons Initiative
    Center for Sustainable Energy at Notre Dame (ND Energy)
    Department of Political Science

    University of Washington, Seattle
    Center for Environmental Politics

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Workshop Objectives

    The scientific and moral case for climate change mitigation is a powerful one. However, even in a best case scenario where the Paris agreement is implemented and where countries take multilateral and unilateral actions to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, the world will still need to adapt. The greenhouse gases already emitted into the atmosphere “commit” the planet to further warming and the oceans to centuries of thermal expansion. Mitigation efforts will hopefully succeed in reducing the harmful impacts of global temperature increases, but the world needs to prepare for the impacts that will inevitably materialize and, in many cases, are already materializing.

    Adaptation is the reduction of vulnerability to climate change. It involves changes in business-as-usual approaches and policies so that we better protect our coasts, cities, communities, water supply, food supply, public health, ecosystems, and infrastructure. Because of continued warming, adaptation is widely seen as a crucial accompaniment of mitigation efforts.

    This workshop will showcase cutting edge social science research on climate change adaptation. Specifically, we want to see the climate adaptation scholarship move beyond intentions and plans and focus on policy implementation, policy change, policy outputs, and if possible, policy outcomes. The papers can examine the efforts of countries, subnational units, cities, rural communities, or firms to adapt to climate change. Papers that thoughtfully analyze when and why adaptation “works” will be given priority. Which of the world’s people, cities, property, and ecosystems are better protected thanks to deliberate intervention, and what kinds of interventions are proving most successful? These interventions could manifest through different types of mechanisms including new governmental policies, multi-stakeholder initiatives, and voluntary approaches. We encourage interested participants to explore variations in adaptation approaches, policies, or outcomes, either across units or over time within a given unit. Papers based on case studies of specific countries or other geopolitical units should critically analyze the relevance to other cases.

    Importantly, we also welcome papers that examine the issues of maladaptation, spillovers, and other unintended consequences of adaptation. An intervention to raise the river bank may create a moral hazard problem by encouraging homeowners to build houses in the flood plain. Politicians might push through an expensive infrastructure project under the guise of adaptation which does very little to improve resilience or reduce vulnerability to climate change. International donors might seek to join the adaptation bandwagon by committing funds but reduce their appropriations for other types of development activities. Thus, we need to carefully explore what policies are actually being implemented under the guise of adaptation and the extent to which these serve the intended goals.

    Finally, in some cases, countries or other geopolitical units do not label their efforts as “adaptation to climate change,” even if the intention and the anticipated end result are similar. Workshop papers could explore the politics of framing: why and how the adaptation agenda might be promoted under some other label and how a different label might influence its implementation and effectiveness in reducing vulnerability to climate change.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Logistics

    There is no conference fee. For one author per paper, conference organizers will cover participants’ travel costs (air and ground, economy class only), accommodation, and food expenses.

    Participants should plan to arrive in South Bend by late afternoon on Friday, April 28, 2017 and leave on the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017. Commitment to attend the conference for its entire duration is essential.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Submission Process

    Interested participants should email their proposal to envirpol@uw.edu as a Word document with a cover page listing authors, affiliations, and contact information; and a detailed abstract of 1,000 words that outlines the research question, theory, data, and methods along with the contributions to the field of climate change adaptation. We will consider work-in-progress only (papers under review are acceptable). Please DO NOT submit published, forthcoming, or accepted work.


    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Time Line

    1. Proposal submission: October 1, 2016
    2. Notification of paper acceptance: November 1, 2016
    3. Paper submission: April 1, 2017
    4. Arrival in South Bend: the afternoon of Friday, April 28, 2017
    5. Conference begins: evening of April 28, 2017
    6. Organized panels: Saturday, April 29 and Sunday, April 30, 2017
    7. Departure: the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017




    ********************************************************************

    Aseem Prakash
    Professor, Department of Political Science
    Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
    Founding Director, UW Center for Environmental Politics
    39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
    University of Washington
    Seattle, WA 98195-3530

    http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/
    http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/


    _______________________________________________________________________

    To send a message to the list, send your email to SIM@aomlists.pace.edu

    _______________________________________________________________________

    Visit the SIM Division website at: http://sim.aomonline.org
    _______________________________________________________________________

    If you wish to unsubscribe from this list or change your delivery
    options, you can do so online at: http://aomlists.pace.edu/scripts/wa.exe?SUBED1=sim&A=1


  • 2.  Dysfunctional institutions? Toward a New Agenda in Governance Studies

    Posted 06-06-2016 20:17
    We are pleased to announce the publication of Regulation & Governance symposium on "Dysfunctional institutions? Toward a New Agenda in Governance Studies."

    Table of contents with URLs:


    1. Dysfunctional institutions? Toward a New Agenda in Governance Studies
    Aseem Prakash and Matthew Potoski
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/286449973_Dysfunctional_institutions_Toward_a_New_Agenda_in_Gove
    rnance_Studies


    2. Nonsectarian welfare statements
    Cass R. Sunstein
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rego.12102/abstract


    3. Accountability and global governance: The view from paternalism
    Michael Barnett
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rego.12083/abstract


    4. Dysfunctional state institutions, trust, and governance in areas of limited statehood
    Tanja A. Börzel and Thomas Risse
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rego.12100/abstract


    5. The challenges of fractionalized property rights in public-private hybrid organizations: The good, the
    bad, and the ugly
    Aidan R. Vining and David L. Weimer
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rego.12086/abstract


    6. Congressional dysfunction: An information processing perspective
    Jonathan Lewallen, Sean M. Theriault and Bryan D. Jones
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rego.12090/abstract



    ********************************************************************

    Aseem Prakash
    Professor, Department of Political Science
    Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
    Founding Director, UW Center for Environmental Politics
    39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
    University of Washington
    Seattle, WA 98195-3530

    http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/
    http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/



    _______________________________________________________________________

    To send a message to the list, send your email to SIM@aomlists.pace.edu

    _______________________________________________________________________

    Visit the SIM Division website at: http://sim.aomonline.org
    _______________________________________________________________________

    If you wish to unsubscribe from this list or change your delivery
    options, you can do so online at: http://aomlists.pace.edu/scripts/wa.exe?SUBED1=sim&A=1


  • 3.  Adapting to Climate Change; Notre Dame, April 28-May 1, 2017

    Posted 07-12-2016 05:32
    Call for Papers

    A fully funded workshop on
    "ADAPTING TO CLIMATE CHANGE: ACTIONS, IMPLEMENTATIONS, and OUTCOMES"

    University of Notre Dame
    April 28-May 1, 2017

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Organizers

    Debra Javeline, University of Notre Dame (javeline@nd.edu)
    Nives Dolsak, University of Washington, Seattle (nives@uw.edu)
    Aseem Prakash, University of Washington, Seattle (aseem@uw.edu)

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Sponsored by

    University of Notre Dame
    Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, Henkels Lecture Series
    Keough School of Global Affairs
    ND-GAIN with the Environmental Change Initiative
    Global Commons Initiative
    Center for Sustainable Energy at Notre Dame (ND Energy)
    Department of Political Science

    University of Washington, Seattle
    Center for Environmental Politics

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Workshop Objectives

    The scientific and moral case for climate change mitigation is a powerful one. However, even in a best case scenario where the Paris agreement is implemented and where countries take multilateral and unilateral actions to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, the world will still need to adapt. The greenhouse gases already emitted into the atmosphere “commit” the planet to further warming and the oceans to centuries of thermal expansion. Mitigation efforts will hopefully succeed in reducing the harmful impacts of global temperature increases, but the world needs to prepare for the impacts that will inevitably materialize and, in many cases, are already materializing.

    Adaptation is the reduction of vulnerability to climate change. It involves changes in business-as-usual approaches and policies so that we better protect our coasts, cities, communities, water supply, food supply, public health, ecosystems, and infrastructure. Because of continued warming, adaptation is widely seen as a crucial accompaniment of mitigation efforts.

    This workshop will showcase cutting edge social science research on climate change adaptation. Specifically, we want to see the climate adaptation scholarship move beyond intentions and plans and focus on policy implementation, policy change, policy outputs, and if possible, policy outcomes. The papers can examine the efforts of countries, subnational units, cities, rural communities, or firms to adapt to climate change. Papers that thoughtfully analyze when and why adaptation “works” will be given priority. Which of the world’s people, cities, property, and ecosystems are better protected thanks to deliberate intervention, and what kinds of interventions are proving most successful? These interventions could manifest through different types of mechanisms including new governmental policies, multi-stakeholder initiatives, and voluntary approaches. We encourage interested participants
    to explore variations in adaptation approaches, policies, or outcomes, either across units or over time within a given unit. Papers based on case studies of specific countries or other geopolitical units should critically analyze the relevance to other cases.

    Importantly, we also welcome papers that examine the issues of maladaptation, spillovers, and other unintended consequences of adaptation. An intervention to raise the river bank may create a moral hazard problem by encouraging homeowners to build houses in the flood plain. Politicians might push through an expensive infrastructure project under the guise of adaptation which does very little to improve resilience or reduce vulnerability to climate change. International donors might seek to join the adaptation bandwagon by committing funds but reduce their appropriations for other types of development activities. Thus, we need to carefully explore what policies are actually being implemented under the guise of adaptation and the extent to which these serve the intended goals.

    Finally, in some cases, countries or other geopolitical units do not label their efforts as “adaptation to climate change,” even if the intention and the anticipated end result are similar. Workshop papers could explore the politics of framing: why and how the adaptation agenda might be promoted under some other label and how a different label might influence its implementation and effectiveness in reducing vulnerability to climate change.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Logistics

    There is no conference fee. For one author per paper, conference organizers will cover participants’ travel costs (air and ground, economy class only), accommodation, and food expenses.

    Participants should plan to arrive in South Bend by late afternoon on Friday, April 28, 2017 and leave on the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017. Commitment to attend the conference for its entire duration is essential.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Submission Process

    Interested participants should email their proposal to envirpol@uw.edu as a Word document with a cover page listing authors, affiliations, and contact information; and a detailed abstract of 1,000 words that outlines the research question, theory, data, and methods along with the contributions to the field of climate change adaptation. We will consider work-in-progress only (papers under review are acceptable). Please DO NOT submit published, forthcoming, or accepted work.


    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Time Line

    1. Proposal submission: October 1, 2016
    2. Notification of paper acceptance: November 1, 2016
    3. Paper submission: April 1, 2017
    4. Arrival in South Bend: the afternoon of Friday, April 28, 2017
    5. Conference begins: evening of April 28, 2017
    6. Organized panels: Saturday, April 29 and Sunday, April 30, 2017
    7. Departure: the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017




    ********************************************************************

    Aseem Prakash
    Professor, Department of Political Science
    Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
    Founding Director, UW Center for Environmental Politics
    39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
    University of Washington
    Seattle, WA 98195-3530

    http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/
    http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/


    _______________________________________________________________________

    To send a message to the list, send your email to SIM@aomlists.pace.edu

    _______________________________________________________________________

    Visit the SIM Division website at: http://sim.aomonline.org
    _______________________________________________________________________

    If you wish to unsubscribe from this list or change your delivery
    options, you can do so online at: http://aomlists.pace.edu/scripts/wa.exe?SUBED1=sim&A=1


  • 4.  Adapting to Climate Change; Notre Dame, April 28-May 1, 2017

    Posted 08-22-2016 19:08
    Call for Papers

    A fully funded workshop on
    "ADAPTING TO CLIMATE CHANGE: ACTIONS, IMPLEMENTATIONS, and OUTCOMES"

    University of Notre Dame
    April 28-May 1, 2017

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Organizers

    Debra Javeline, University of Notre Dame (javeline@nd.edu)
    Nives Dolsak, University of Washington, Seattle (nives@uw.edu)
    Aseem Prakash, University of Washington, Seattle (aseem@uw.edu)

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Sponsored by

    University of Notre Dame
    Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, Henkels Lecture Series
    Keough School of Global Affairs
    ND-GAIN with the Environmental Change Initiative
    Global Commons Initiative
    Center for Sustainable Energy at Notre Dame (ND Energy)
    Department of Political Science

    University of Washington, Seattle
    Center for Environmental Politics

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Workshop Objectives

    The scientific and moral case for climate change mitigation is a powerful one.
    However, even in a best case scenario where the Paris agreement is implemented
    and where countries take multilateral and unilateral actions to reduce
    emissions of greenhouse gases, the world will still need to adapt. The
    greenhouse gases already emitted into the atmosphere “commit” the planet to
    further warming and the oceans to centuries of thermal expansion. Mitigation
    efforts will hopefully succeed in reducing the harmful impacts of global
    temperature increases, but the world needs to prepare for the impacts that will
    inevitably materialize and, in many cases, are already materializing.

    Adaptation is the reduction of vulnerability to climate change. It involves
    changes in business-as-usual approaches and policies so that we better protect
    our coasts, cities, communities, water supply, food supply, public health,
    ecosystems, and infrastructure. Because of continued warming, adaptation is
    widely seen as a crucial accompaniment of mitigation efforts.

    This workshop will showcase cutting edge social science research on climate
    change adaptation. Specifically, we want to see the climate adaptation
    scholarship move beyond intentions and plans and focus on policy
    implementation, policy change, policy outputs, and if possible, policy
    outcomes. The papers can examine the efforts of countries, subnational units,
    cities, rural communities, or firms to adapt to climate change. Papers that
    thoughtfully analyze when and why adaptation “works” will be given priority.
    Which of the world’s people, cities, property, and ecosystems are better
    protected thanks to deliberate intervention, and what kinds of interventions
    are proving most successful? These interventions could manifest through
    different types of mechanisms including new governmental policies,
    multi-stakeholder initiatives, and voluntary approaches. We encourage
    interested participants to explore variations in adaptation approaches,
    policies, or outcomes, either across units or over time within a given unit.
    Papers based on case studies of specific countries or other geopolitical units
    should critically analyze the relevance to other cases.

    Importantly, we also welcome papers that examine the issues of maladaptation,
    spillovers, and other unintended consequences of adaptation. An intervention
    to raise the river bank may create a moral hazard problem by encouraging
    homeowners to build houses in the flood plain. Politicians might push through
    an expensive infrastructure project under the guise of adaptation which does
    very little to improve resilience or reduce vulnerability to climate change.
    International donors might seek to join the adaptation bandwagon by committing
    funds but reduce their appropriations for other types of development
    activities. Thus, we need to carefully explore what policies are actually being
    implemented under the guise of adaptation and the extent to which these serve
    the intended goals.

    Finally, in some cases, countries or other geopolitical units do not label
    their efforts as “adaptation to climate change,” even if the intention and the
    anticipated end result are similar. Workshop papers could explore the politics
    of framing: why and how the adaptation agenda might be promoted under some
    other label and how a different label might influence its implementation and
    effectiveness in reducing vulnerability to climate change.

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Logistics

    There is no conference fee. For one author per paper, conference organizers
    will cover participants’ travel costs (air and ground, economy class only),
    accommodation, and food expenses.

    Participants should plan to arrive in South Bend by late afternoon on Friday,
    April 28, 2017 and leave on the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017. Commitment to
    attend the conference for its entire duration is essential.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Submission Process

    Interested participants should email their proposal to envirpol@uw.edu as a
    Word document with a cover page listing authors, affiliations, and contact
    information; and a detailed abstract of 1,000 words that outlines the research
    question, theory, data, and methods along with the contributions to the field
    of climate change adaptation. We will consider work-in-progress only (papers
    under review are acceptable). Please DO NOT submit published, forthcoming, or
    accepted work.


    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Time Line

    1. Proposal submission: October 1, 2016
    2. Notification of paper acceptance: November 1, 2016
    3. Paper submission: April 1, 2017
    4. Arrival in South Bend: the afternoon of Friday, April 28, 2017
    5. Conference begins: evening of April 28, 2017
    6. Organized panels: Saturday, April 29 and Sunday, April 30, 2017
    7. Departure: the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017




    ********************************************************************

    Aseem Prakash
    Professor, Department of Political Science
    Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
    Founding Director, UW Center for Environmental Politics
    39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
    University of Washington
    Seattle, WA 98195-3530

    http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/
    http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/


    _______________________________________________________________________

    To send a message to the list, send your email to SIM@aomlists.pace.edu

    _______________________________________________________________________

    Visit the SIM Division website at: http://sim.aomonline.org
    _______________________________________________________________________

    If you wish to unsubscribe from this list or change your delivery
    options, you can do so online at: http://aomlists.pace.edu/scripts/wa.exe?SUBED1=sim&A=1


  • 5.  Adapting to Climate Change; Notre Dame, April 28-May 1, 2017

    Posted 09-22-2016 15:21
    DEADLINE: OCTOBER 1, 2016


    Call for Papers

    A fully funded workshop on
    "ADAPTING TO CLIMATE CHANGE: ACTIONS, IMPLEMENTATIONS, and OUTCOMES"

    University of Notre Dame
    April 28-May 1, 2017

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Organizers

    Debra Javeline, University of Notre Dame (javeline@nd.edu)
    Nives Dolsak, University of Washington, Seattle (nives@uw.edu)
    Aseem Prakash, University of Washington, Seattle (aseem@uw.edu)

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Sponsored by

    University of Notre Dame
    Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, Henkels Lecture Series
    Keough School of Global Affairs
    ND-GAIN with the Environmental Change Initiative
    Global Commons Initiative
    Center for Sustainable Energy at Notre Dame (ND Energy)
    Department of Political Science

    University of Washington, Seattle
    Center for Environmental Politics

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Workshop Objectives

    The scientific and moral case for climate change mitigation is a powerful one.
    However, even in a best case scenario where the Paris agreement is implemented
    and where countries take multilateral and unilateral actions to reduce
    emissions of greenhouse gases, the world will still need to adapt. The
    greenhouse gases already emitted into the atmosphere “commit” the planet to
    further warming and the oceans to centuries of thermal expansion. Mitigation
    efforts will hopefully succeed in reducing the harmful impacts of global
    temperature increases, but the world needs to prepare for the impacts that will
    inevitably materialize and, in many cases, are already materializing.

    Adaptation is the reduction of vulnerability to climate change. It involves
    changes in business-as-usual approaches and policies so that we better protect
    our coasts, cities, communities, water supply, food supply, public health,
    ecosystems, and infrastructure. Because of continued warming, adaptation is
    widely seen as a crucial accompaniment of mitigation efforts.

    This workshop will showcase cutting edge social science research on climate
    change adaptation. Specifically, we want to see the climate adaptation
    scholarship move beyond intentions and plans and focus on policy
    implementation, policy change, policy outputs, and if possible, policy
    outcomes. The papers can examine the efforts of countries, subnational units,
    cities, rural communities, or firms to adapt to climate change. Papers that
    thoughtfully analyze when and why adaptation “works” will be given priority.
    Which of the world’s people, cities, property, and ecosystems are better
    protected thanks to deliberate intervention, and what kinds of interventions
    are proving most successful? These interventions could manifest through
    different types of mechanisms including new governmental policies,
    multi-stakeholder initiatives, and voluntary approaches. We encourage
    interested participants to explore variations in adaptation approaches,
    policies, or outcomes, either across units or over time within a given unit.
    Papers based on case studies of specific countries or other geopolitical units
    should critically analyze the relevance to other cases.

    Importantly, we also welcome papers that examine the issues of maladaptation,
    spillovers, and other unintended consequences of adaptation. An intervention
    to raise the river bank may create a moral hazard problem by encouraging
    homeowners to build houses in the flood plain. Politicians might push through
    an expensive infrastructure project under the guise of adaptation which does
    very little to improve resilience or reduce vulnerability to climate change.
    International donors might seek to join the adaptation bandwagon by committing
    funds but reduce their appropriations for other types of development
    activities. Thus, we need to carefully explore what policies are actually being
    implemented under the guise of adaptation and the extent to which these serve
    the intended goals.

    Finally, in some cases, countries or other geopolitical units do not label
    their efforts as “adaptation to climate change,” even if the intention and the
    anticipated end result are similar. Workshop papers could explore the politics
    of framing: why and how the adaptation agenda might be promoted under some
    other label and how a different label might influence its implementation and
    effectiveness in reducing vulnerability to climate change.

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Logistics

    There is no conference fee. For one author per paper, conference organizers
    will cover participants’ travel costs (air and ground, economy class only),
    accommodation, and food expenses.

    Participants should plan to arrive in South Bend by late afternoon on Friday,
    April 28, 2017 and leave on the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017. Commitment to
    attend the conference for its entire duration is essential.

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Submission Process

    Interested participants should email their proposal to envirpol@uw.edu as a
    Word document with a cover page listing authors, affiliations, and contact
    information; and a detailed abstract of 1,000 words that outlines the research
    question, theory, data, and methods along with the contributions to the field
    of climate change adaptation. We will consider work-in-progress only (papers
    under review are acceptable). Please DO NOT submit published, forthcoming, or
    accepted work.


    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Time Line

    1. Proposal submission: October 1, 2016
    2. Notification of paper acceptance: November 1, 2016
    3. Paper submission: April 1, 2017
    4. Arrival in South Bend: the afternoon of Friday, April 28, 2017
    5. Conference begins: evening of April 28, 2017
    6. Organized panels: Saturday, April 29 and Sunday, April 30, 2017
    7. Departure: the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017




    ********************************************************************

    Aseem Prakash
    Professor, Department of Political Science
    Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
    Founding Director, UW Center for Environmental Politics
    39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
    University of Washington
    Seattle, WA 98195-3530

    http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/
    http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/


    _______________________________________________________________________

    To send a message to the list, send your email to SIM@aomlists.pace.edu

    _______________________________________________________________________

    Visit the SIM Division website at: http://sim.aomonline.org
    _______________________________________________________________________

    If you wish to unsubscribe from this list or change your delivery
    options, you can do so online at: http://aomlists.pace.edu/scripts/wa.exe?SUBED1=sim&A=1


  • 6.  Adapting to Climate Change; Notre Dame, April 28-May 1, 2017

    Posted 09-28-2016 12:46
    LAST and FINAL CALL
    DEADLINE: OCTOBER 1, 2016


    Call for Papers

    A fully funded workshop on
    "ADAPTING TO CLIMATE CHANGE: ACTIONS, IMPLEMENTATIONS, and OUTCOMES"

    University of Notre Dame
    April 28-May 1, 2017

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Organizers

    Debra Javeline, University of Notre Dame (javeline@nd.edu)
    Nives Dolsak, University of Washington, Seattle (nives@uw.edu)
    Aseem Prakash, University of Washington, Seattle (aseem@uw.edu)

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Sponsored by

    University of Notre Dame
    Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, Henkels Lecture Series
    Keough School of Global Affairs
    ND-GAIN with the Environmental Change Initiative
    Global Commons Initiative
    Center for Sustainable Energy at Notre Dame (ND Energy)
    Department of Political Science

    University of Washington, Seattle
    Center for Environmental Politics

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Workshop Objectives

    The scientific and moral case for climate change mitigation is a powerful one.
    However, even in a best case scenario where the Paris agreement is implemented
    and where countries take multilateral and unilateral actions to reduce
    emissions of greenhouse gases, the world will still need to adapt. The
    greenhouse gases already emitted into the atmosphere “commit” the planet to
    further warming and the oceans to centuries of thermal expansion. Mitigation
    efforts will hopefully succeed in reducing the harmful impacts of global
    temperature increases, but the world needs to prepare for the impacts that will
    inevitably materialize and, in many cases, are already materializing.

    Adaptation is the reduction of vulnerability to climate change. It involves
    changes in business-as-usual approaches and policies so that we better protect
    our coasts, cities, communities, water supply, food supply, public health,
    ecosystems, and infrastructure. Because of continued warming, adaptation is
    widely seen as a crucial accompaniment of mitigation efforts.

    This workshop will showcase cutting edge social science research on climate
    change adaptation. Specifically, we want to see the climate adaptation
    scholarship move beyond intentions and plans and focus on policy
    implementation, policy change, policy outputs, and if possible, policy
    outcomes. The papers can examine the efforts of countries, subnational units,
    cities, rural communities, or firms to adapt to climate change. Papers that
    thoughtfully analyze when and why adaptation “works” will be given priority.
    Which of the world’s people, cities, property, and ecosystems are better
    protected thanks to deliberate intervention, and what kinds of interventions
    are proving most successful? These interventions could manifest through
    different types of mechanisms including new governmental policies,
    multi-stakeholder initiatives, and voluntary approaches. We encourage
    interested participants to explore variations in adaptation approaches,
    policies, or outcomes, either across units or over time within a given unit.
    Papers based on case studies of specific countries or other geopolitical units
    should critically analyze the relevance to other cases.

    Importantly, we also welcome papers that examine the issues of maladaptation,
    spillovers, and other unintended consequences of adaptation. An intervention
    to raise the river bank may create a moral hazard problem by encouraging
    homeowners to build houses in the flood plain. Politicians might push through
    an expensive infrastructure project under the guise of adaptation which does
    very little to improve resilience or reduce vulnerability to climate change.
    International donors might seek to join the adaptation bandwagon by committing
    funds but reduce their appropriations for other types of development
    activities. Thus, we need to carefully explore what policies are actually being
    implemented under the guise of adaptation and the extent to which these serve
    the intended goals.

    Finally, in some cases, countries or other geopolitical units do not label
    their efforts as “adaptation to climate change,” even if the intention and the
    anticipated end result are similar. Workshop papers could explore the politics
    of framing: why and how the adaptation agenda might be promoted under some
    other label and how a different label might influence its implementation and
    effectiveness in reducing vulnerability to climate change.

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Logistics

    There is no conference fee. For one author per paper, conference organizers
    will cover participants’ travel costs (air and ground, economy class only),
    accommodation, and food expenses.

    Participants should plan to arrive in South Bend by late afternoon on Friday,
    April 28, 2017 and leave on the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017. Commitment to
    attend the conference for its entire duration is essential.

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Submission Process

    Interested participants should email their proposal to envirpol@uw.edu as a
    Word document with a cover page listing authors, affiliations, and contact
    information; and a detailed abstract of 1,000 words that outlines the research
    question, theory, data, and methods along with the contributions to the field
    of climate change adaptation. We will consider work-in-progress only (papers
    under review are acceptable). Please DO NOT submit published, forthcoming, or
    accepted work.


    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Time Line

    1. Proposal submission: October 1, 2016
    2. Notification of paper acceptance: November 1, 2016
    3. Paper submission: April 1, 2017
    4. Arrival in South Bend: the afternoon of Friday, April 28, 2017
    5. Conference begins: evening of April 28, 2017
    6. Organized panels: Saturday, April 29 and Sunday, April 30, 2017
    7. Departure: the morning of Monday, May 1, 2017




    ********************************************************************

    Aseem Prakash
    Professor, Department of Political Science
    Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences
    Founding Director, UW Center for Environmental Politics
    39 Gowen Hall, Box 353530
    University of Washington
    Seattle, WA 98195-3530

    http://faculty.washington.edu/aseem/
    http://depts.washington.edu/envirpol/


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