BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//STEPS Centre - ECPv6.15.18//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://steps-centre.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for STEPS Centre
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Europe/London
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:BST
DTSTART:20180325T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20181028T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:BST
DTSTART:20190331T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20191027T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:BST
DTSTART:20200329T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20201025T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:BST
DTSTART:20210328T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20211031T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:BST
DTSTART:20220327T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20221030T010000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Europe/Amsterdam
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20200329T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20201025T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20210328T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20211031T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20220327T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20221030T010000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Africa/Nairobi
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0300
TZOFFSETTO:+0300
TZNAME:EAT
DTSTART:20200101T000000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190703T153000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190705T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20181120T141745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200720T123952Z
UID:13418-1562167800-1562342400@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:The Politics of Uncertainty: Practical Challenges for Transformative Action
DESCRIPTION:This international academic symposium\, held at the Institute of Development Studies in the UK\, explored the theme of uncertainty – the STEPS Centre’s theme for 2019. \nBook | Blog series | Podcast | Video | Background info \n\nBook\nThe Politics of Uncertainty: Challenges of Transformation (Routledge\, July 2020) is an Open Access book which further explores the ideas discussed at the symposium. \nThe book features chapters by participants\, and an introduction by the editors (and symposium convenors)\, Ian Scoones and Andy Stirling. \nRead the book \n\nBlog series\nParticipants in the symposium reflect on the event in a series of blog posts. \n\nUncertain futures and the politics of uncertainty Richard Bronk\nUncertain superlatives Emery Roe\nWhen ignorance does more than you think Emery Roe\nSolidarity\, insurance\, emotions and uncertainty Mark Fenton-O’Creevy\nWhose risk? Whose responsibility? The politics and financialisation of uncertainty Nick Taylor\nEmbracing uncertainty: lessons from journeys and struggles Michele Nori\, Rose Cairns and Nathan Oxley\nInfrastructures of the imagination: uncertainty and the politics of prefiguration Martin Mahony and Silke Beck\nEnvisioning the future in the present: making sense of uncertainty Detlef Müller-Mahn\nHow can NGOs feel at home with uncertainty? Irene Guijt\n\nView the series \n\nPodcast\nThe STEPS Uncertainty Podcast is a series of four conversations recorded with participants after the symposium\, available as a podcast to stream or download. \nView/subscribe on iTunes \nEpisode #1: Finance & banking / insurance / governance\n \nWith Leon Wansleben (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies)\, Leigh Johnson (University of Oregon)\, Bernardo Rangoni (European University Institute)\, Ian Scoones (STEPS Centre) \n \nEpisode #2: Uncertainty in critical infrastructures / reliability / technology & innovation\n \nWith Patrick van Zwanenberg (CENIT\, Argentina)\, Emery Roe (University of California\, Berkeley)\, Andy Stirling (STEPS Centre) \n \nEpisode #3: Disease outbreaks / climate change / disasters\n \nWith Melissa Leach (Institute of Development Studies)\, Lyla Mehta (Institute of Development Studies)\, Mark Pelling (King’s College London)\, Marina Apgar (STEPS Centre) \n \nEpisode #4: Security & terrorism / migration\nWith Gabe Mythen (University of Liverpool)\, Dorte Thorsen (University of Sussex)\, Rose Cairns (STEPS Centre) \n \n\nVideo\nWatch a playlist of all videos from the symposium. \n[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/embed?listType=playlist&list=PLI8qkz1i11OQNKD34R5WJzu8bhYUuoa24[/embedyt]\n\nVideo clips\nWatch selected clips from the symposium at the links below. \nPanel contributions: ‘What is uncertainty\, and why does it matter?’ \n Silvio Funtowicz: What is uncertainty\, and why does it matter? \n Sheila Jasanoff: What is uncertainty\, and why does it matter? \n Dipak Gyawali: What is uncertainty\, and why does it matter? \nPanel contributions: ‘What happened to the Risk Society?’ \n Gabe Mythen: What happened to the Risk Society? \n Joy Zhang: What happened to the Risk Society? \n Dean Curran: What happened to the Risk Society? \nVideo of full sessions \n What is uncertainty\, and why does it matter? (panel + Q&A – 93 min) \n What happened to the Risk Society? (panel + Q&A – 96 min) \n Final discussion: fishbowl (reflections on the conference – 76 min) \n\nAbout the symposium\nThinking across diverse domains – from finance\, to climate\, to migration\, to disease\, to innovation\, to infrastructure\, to security – this symposium will explore the diverse ways incertitude is understood and responded to (or not). \nBy catalysing and developing richer and more nuanced understandings of incertitude\, the symposium aims to help enable more robust actions\, strategies and governance for these uncertain times. \nFor updates\, please subscribe to the STEPS Centre newsletter. \n\n \nFor more images from the event\, see the photo gallery on Flickr. \nSpeakers\nPlenary speakers include \n\nDean Curran\, University of Calgary\nSheila Jasanoff\, Harvard Kennedy School\nSilvio Funtowicz\, University of Bergen\nGabe Mythen\, University of Liverpool\nDipak Gyawali\, Nepal Academy of Science and Technology\nBrian Wynne\, Emeritus Professor\, University of Lancaster\nJoy Zhang\, University of Kent\nSilke Beck\, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research\nMelissa Leach\, Institute of Development Studies\nLyla Mehta\, Institute of Development Studies\n\n\nProgramme\n3 July \n15:00 Registration opens\n16:00 PLENARY 1: What is uncertainty\, and why does it matter? Sheila Jasanoff\, Silvio Funtowicz\, Dipak Gyawali\n18:00 Refreshments + publication ‘speed launches’\n19:00 Dinner \n4 July \n9:00 CLUSTER SESSION (parallel session\, each cluster meets in different rooms) – presentations from first two themes\n11:00 Tea & coffee\n11:30 CLUSTER SESSION – presentations from third theme\n12:30 Lunch\n14:00 CLUSTER SESSION – cross-theme discussion: How is uncertainty understood? New directions and challenges\n15:30 Tea & coffee\n16:00 PLENARY 2: What happened to the risk society: multiple modernities and a new politics of uncertainty? Joy Zhang\, Brian Wynne\, Dean Curran\, Gabe Mythen\n18:00 Dinner & drinks \n5 July \n9:00 CLUSTER SESSION – Synthesis: What have we learned? Big questions and challenges\n11:00 Tea & coffee\n11:30 Feedback from clusters\, summaries\, reflections\n13:30 Lunch\n14:30 PLENARY 3: Uncertainty and transformations\, challenges for science\, policy and politics Lyla Mehta\, Silke Beck\, Melissa Leach (+ reflections in ‘fishbowl’ format)\n16:00 Tea & coffee\, departures \n\nthemes and clusters\nThe symposium is organised into four Clusters. Each Cluster includes three themes\, convened by a researcher (the Theme Convenor) with expertise on that theme. \nIn each theme\, participants have been invited by the Theme Convenor to give presentations.  The document below gives abstracts for all 12 of the themes. \nDownload the  theme abstracts (PDF) \n– – \nCluster 1 \n\nFinance and banking (Leon Wansleben\, Max Plank Institute for the Study of Societies\, Cologne\, and Timo Walter\, University of Erfurt)\nInsurance and liability (Leigh Johnson\, University of Oregon)\nExperimental\, nodal\, adaptive governance (Bernardo Rangoni\, European University Institute\, Florence)\n\nDownload abstracts from Cluster 1 (PDF) \n– – \nCluster 2 \n\nTechnology policy\, regulation and precaution (Patrick van Zwanenberg\, CENIT\, Argentina)\nCritical infrastructures and reliability (Emery Roe\, UC Berkeley)\nExpanding cities (James Evans\, University of Manchester)\n\nDownload Abstracts from Cluster 2 (PDF) \n– – \nCluster 3 \n\nClimate change models and response (Lyla Mehta and Shilpi Srivastava\, Institute of Development Studies\, Sussex)\nDisease outbreaks and preparedness (Melissa Leach and Hayley MacGregor\, Institute of Development Studies\, Sussex)\nDisasters\, humanitarianism and emergencies (Mark Pelling\, King’s College London)\n\nDownload abstracts from Cluster 3 (PDF) \n– – \nCluster 4 \n\nMigration and mobility (Dorte Thorsen\, University of Sussex)\nConflict\, security\, terrorism and crime (Gabe Mythen\, University of Liverpool)\nCulture\, religion and perception (Rose Cairns\, SPRU\, University of Sussex)\n\nDownload abstracts from cluster 4 (PDF) \n\nBackground\nThis event is part of the STEPS Centre’s 2019 theme on Uncertainty. \nThinking across diverse domains – from finance\, to climate\, to migration\, to disease\, to innovation\, to infrastructure\, to security – this symposium will explore the diverse ways incertitude is understood and responded to (or not). \nBy catalysing and developing richer and more nuanced understandings of incertitude\, the symposium aims to help enable more robust actions\, strategies and governance for these uncertain times. In the ‘real world’ of policy and business\, the full depth and breadth of challenges presented by the unknown are rarely fully acknowledged – and virtually never embraced. But this does not stop them being a familiar aspect of the worlds of Nature\, politics and everyday life. \nDiverse framings\, degrees and contexts of ‘incertitude’ can be far more intractable and politically entangled than suggested by a technical language of ‘uncertainty’ or the reassuring methods around ‘risk’. \nWhen unfathomed dimensions and possibilities of ignorance are treated as neatly parameterised ‘uncertainty’\, then the resulting decisions can be seriously jeopardised by what has been excluded. When expectations are further closed down by the seductive aggregations of ’risk’ then the vulnerabilities are even more severe. There is no technical specialism so narrow that diverse equally expert views will not disagree\, generating pervasive ‘ambiguity’. \nBut highlighting these wilder and more unruly forms of incertitude is not just a counsel of fear. These conventional blinkers on the imagination can also obscure many positive hopes and possibilities. Surprises\, after all\, can be good as well as bad. Pervading economies\, societies\, environments and technologies\, the implications can be appreciated across a wide range of political cultures. \nThinking across diverse domains – from finance\, to climate\, to migration\, to disease\, to innovation\, to infrastructure\, to security – this symposium will explore the diverse ways incertitude is understood and responded to (or not). The aim is to catalyse and develop richer and more nuanced understandings of incertitude and so help enable more robust actions\, strategies and governance. \nIn particular\, the implications will be examined of complementing existing narrow ‘control-driven’\, managerialist frameworks\, with complementary ‘care-oriented’ approaches\, that are more open\, adaptive and responsive. Drawing on concepts and experiences from diverse disciplines and fields of practice\, attention will span implications equally for individual behaviours and organisational strategies\, as well as societal responses – with the politics of knowledge central throughout. \n\nThis symposium is the main event in the STEPS Centre’s Uncertainty theme in 2019. \nUncertainties can make it hard to plan ahead. But recognising them can help to reveal new questions and choices. What kinds of uncertainty are there\, why do they matter for sustainability\, and what ideas\, approaches and methods can help us to respond to them? \nFind out more about our theme for 2019 on our Uncertainty theme page.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/the-politics-of-uncertainty-practical-challenges-for-transformative-action/
LOCATION:Institute of Development Studies\, Library Road\, Falmer\, Brighton\, BN1 9RE\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Governance & policy,Understanding sustainability
ORGANIZER;CN="ESRC STEPS Centre":MAILTO:b.ayre@ids.ac.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191015T083000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191015T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20191002T132019Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210401T191150Z
UID:14121-1571128200-1571162400@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Transformation Laboratories as spaces for co-designing social-ecological transformation: learning from different contexts and approaches
DESCRIPTION:This event is part of the TransAction Pre-Conference Workshops at Transformations 2019 in Santiago\, Chile. \nExperimental spaces for supporting collective processes of deliberation and learning about sustainability challenges\, and testing possible solutions\, are of increasing interest. An example of these are T-Labs (‘transformation laboratories’)\, which are highly facilitated\, multi-stakeholder spaces of interaction and dialogue aimed at co-creating new visions and\npractices for social-ecological sustainability in specific settings. \nThree projects from the Transformations to Sustainability programme\, T-Learning\, Pathways and ACKnowl-EJ\, have experimented with and reframed T-Labs\, enriching our understanding of transformation itself\, and of specific\, complex social-ecological systems and their challenges in a wide range of contexts. This TransAction Workshop will bring together a wide range of participants to engage in dialogue\, exchange of experience and exploration of the T-Lab framework\, and to critically assess its potential to support processes of socialecological transformation. The framework and its methods will be applied to two cases related to extractive sectors in Latin America. The first case is mining\, drawing on the knowledge of the new T2S project Gold Matters. The second case is agriculture\, building upon Pathways experience. The use of T-Lab processes has great potential for exploring the role of extractive sectors in enabling and advancing transformations to sustainability in Latin America. \nThe workshop will propose tools not only to academics but also to policy makers\, practitioners\, activists and everyone who is interested in designing multi-stakeholder spaces of transformation in the context of sustainability challenges in general and in extractive sectors such as mining and agriculture in particular. The workshop will be carried out in Spanish. In the case that some participants do not speak Spanish\, it is expected that translation will be collaborative\, with the aid of participants both from the T2S projects and external attendants. \n\nCost: 50 USD\nRegistration is mandatory. To find our how to register\, click here.\nFor more information on the workshop\, click here.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/transformation-laboratories-as-spaces-for-co-designing-social-ecological-transformation-learning-from-different-contexts-and-approaches/
CATEGORIES:Research methods,Resource politics
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/4-crop.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191016T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191017T120000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20191002T133050Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191008T133153Z
UID:14122-1571221800-1571313600@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Negotiating Epistemological Frameworks and Normative Commitments Across a Transformative Knowledge Network
DESCRIPTION:This is a session organised by the Pathways network for the Transformations 2019 conference in Sanitago\, Chile. The session has two parts. \nPart 1\, in the FAU Auditorium\, will be on Wednesday 16 October\, 11:10 – 12:45 (GMT-3)\n1. Introduction. (Adrian Ely)\n2. Reflections on Theory\, Methods and Action – The Role(s) of Researchers in Transformations to Sustainability. (Adrian Ely)\n3. Bioleft: A Story of Emerging Change First Led by Academics but Now Co-Owned by a Complex Network of Actors. (Anabel Marin\, Patrick Van Zwanenberg\, Almendra Cremaschi)\n4. Mobilized Publics\, Contradictory Interests and Divergent Imaginations: CoProducing Knowledge and Practices for Sustainable Urban Water Management in Gurgaon\, India. (Pravin Kumar Kushwaha\, Dinesh Abrol\, Bikramaditya Chaudhary\, Prachi Jha) \nPart 2\, in room 2002\, Torre 15\, will be on Thursday 17 October\, 10:30-12:00 (GMT-3) \n1. Introduction. (Laura Pereira)\n2. Co-Producing Research and Action for Transformations to Sustainability in Argentina: Can Empowering Logics Also Be Instrumental? (Patrick Van Zwanenberg\, Anabel Marin\, Almendra Cremaschi)\n3. Exploring Collective Agency for Sustainability Transformations: A\nTransdisciplinary Process in the Xochimilco Social-Ecological System T-Lab. (Lakshmi Charli-Joseph\, Hallie Eakin\, J. Mario Siqueiros-García\, Beatriz Ruizpalacios\, David Manuel-Navarrete\, Rebecca Shelton)\n4. Understanding the Sustainable Development Prospects of Mobile-Enabled Solar Home Systems in Kenya. (Victoria Chengo)\n5. Social Impact of Environmental Policies and Economic Green Transitions in China – A Case Study of Hebei. (Lichao Yang) \nFor more information\, see the conference programme.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/negotiating-epistemological-frameworks-and-normative-commitments-across-a-transformative-knowledge-network/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/chile.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191016T111000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191016T124500
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20191002T134350Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191002T134350Z
UID:14125-1571224200-1571229900@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Relational and Psychological Dimensions of Agency
DESCRIPTION:This is a session organised with members of the STEPS Global Consortium for the Transformations 2019 conference in Sanitago\, Chile. \n\nThe Relationship Between Social Capital and System Transformation. (Esther Carmen)\nProcedural Fairness as an Enabler of Transformative Collaboration. (Gail Francis)\nLoss and Change: Emotional Roots in Transformation and Collective Action. (Hallie Eakin\, Rebecca Shelton\, Lakshmi Charli-Joseph\, Jesus Mario Siqueiros Garcia\, David Manuel-Navarrete\, Beatriz Ruizpalacios)\nSailing into Transformational Change: Making Safe Spaces for Leadership Development on Homeward Bound. (Deborah Anne O’Connell\, Sophie Adams\, Kylie Lewis\, Fern Hames)\nSeeds of Transformation: Change Strategies Towards More Sustainable Seed Systems. (Almendra Cremasachi\, Anabel Marin\, Patrick van Zwanenberg)
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/relational-and-psychological-dimensions-of-agency/
CATEGORIES:Understanding sustainability
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/chile.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191016T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191020T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20190920T134020Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191018T093332Z
UID:14067-1571227200-1571594400@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Exhibition: 'Hidden Paths'
DESCRIPTION:ONCA Gallery\n14 St George’s Place\, Brighton\, BN1 4GB\, UK\n12.00 – 18.00 daily\n16-20 October 2019\nFree entry\, donations to gallery welcome \nGlobal climate strikes are calling for ‘system change\, not climate change’\, but what does this mean? Extreme weather\, automation\, political instability\, inequality: these crises are connected in deep and often invisible ways. \nHidden Paths welcomes us inside the troubled systems that we live in to see how they could be transformed. Through a series of artworks\, this exhibition invites us to rethink our relationships with technology\, nature and each other. \nVisitors to Hidden Paths will navigate through 3 layers: Now\, Change and Possible. From a sonic waterfall to sculptures\, recipes\, film and video\, and an immersive VR experience\, the artworks explore how we imagine the future\, transformations in time\, money and work\, glimpses of new urban spaces\, community ownership and the commons\, and changed relationships to nature. \nIn a time of crises\, the exhibition provides a reflective space to think differently about the present and the future – with cultures of care\, collaboration and collective agency at its heart. \nThe Hidden Paths exhibition has been created by artists in the Brighton-based System Change Hive – emerging and established artists working with researchers\, communications experts\, VR technologists and local community groups\, to reveal hidden paths to brighter\, fairer and more sustainable futures. \nSince February 2019\, the Hive has been meeting regularly\, including group discussions from researchers affiliated to the STEPS Centre\, and others. \nThis event is part of the 2019 Brighton Digital Festival.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/exhibition-hidden-paths/
LOCATION:ONCA Gallery\, 14 St George’s Place\, Brighton\, BN1 4GB\, United Kingdom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/SCH-ONCA-feat.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191017T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191017T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20191003T143926Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210401T190828Z
UID:14129-1571329800-1571335200@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Applying Technologies of the Self in Transformation Labs to Mobilize Agency
DESCRIPTION:This is a presentation from members of the Pathways network  as part of the Parallel T-Practice Sessions at the Transformations 2019 conference in Sanitago\, Chile. \nPresenters: \nDavid Manuel-Navarrete\nLakshmi Charli-Joseph\nHallie Eakin\nMario Siqueiros García\nAdrian Ely
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/applying-technologies-of-the-self-in-transformation-labs-to-mobilize-agency/
CATEGORIES:Research methods
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/chile.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191114T161500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191114T174500
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20191112T131646Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191127T165725Z
UID:14201-1573748100-1573753500@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Why embracing uncertainty means rethinking development and reimagining the future
DESCRIPTION:CRC Future Rural Africa Lecture Series\nUniversität Bonn\, GIUB \nLecture by Ian Scoones\, Institute of Development Studies/ESRC STEPS Centre/ERC PASTRES project \nThis talk makes the argument for putting uncertainty at the centre of thinking and practice in development. This means rejecting a linear\, technocratic framing and embracing the implications of uncertainty for today’s complex\, dynamic world. Through a number of examples – from the fields of banking\, critical infrastructures and disease control – the elements of new thinking on uncertainty and development are explored. \nThe talk argues\, however\, that those who live with and from uncertainty day-to-day are best placed to innovate and help refashion development more broadly. Examples from pastoralism from around the world are offered to demonstrate the importance of learning from the margins. The talk concludes with a reflection on new directions for development that take uncertainty seriously and help refashion the way we imagine the future. \n\nTime: 16:15 – 17:45 / Venue: Geographisches Institut der Universität Bonn\, Meckenheimer Allee 166\, Alfred-Philippson-Hörsaal\, 53115 Bonn\, Germany \nFor full information\, visit the Future Rural Africa website.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/why-embracing-uncertainty-means-rethinking-development-and-reimagining-the-future/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200511T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200522T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20191023T141342Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200416T152202Z
UID:14178-1589184000-1590166800@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:[Postponed] STEPS Summer School 2020
DESCRIPTION:The ninth and final STEPS Summer School on Pathways to Sustainability was due to take place on 11-22 May 2020\, but has been postponed until the following year due to the coronavirus pandemic. \nParticipants will explore the theme of pathways to sustainability through a mixture of workshops\, lectures\, outdoor events and focused interaction with STEPS Centre members. The Summer School takes place on the University of Sussex campus\, near Brighton\, UK\, where STEPS is co-hosted by the Institute of Development Studies and the Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU). \nFor more information\, please visit the STEPS Summer School web page.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/steps-summer-school-2020/
LOCATION:Institute of Development Studies\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Research methods,Resource politics,Understanding sustainability
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/summer14.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200512T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200512T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20191017T151644Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200318T091719Z
UID:14159-1589304600-1589310000@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:*Postponed* STEPS Annual Lecture: Andrea J Nightingale
DESCRIPTION:* UPDATE\, 18 MARCH 2020 *\nWe are sorry that this event has been indefinitely postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. \n\nBounding unruly landscapes: future imaginaries and socioenvironmental change \n2020 STEPS Annual Lecture \nAndrea J Nightingale\nProfessor in the Department of Sociology and Human Geography\, University of Oslo \nFulton A Lecture Theatre\nUniversity of Sussex\nFalmer\, Brighton \nThis event will be open to the public and includes a drinks reception after the lecture. It is the only public event of the STEPS Summer School on Pathways to Sustainability. \n\nAbout the lecture\nAmidst anxieties about rapid rate environmental change and the best pathways to transformation\, the unruliness of life reasserts itself. Not only can environments collapse unexpectedly\, others persist despite intense pressures. Meanwhile\, new governance mechanisms exceed expectations\, while others become avenues for older relationships and practices of exploitation to re-emerge. Such dynamics point to the need for better conceptualisations of change if we are to confront the 21st century challenges of climate and environmental change. \nThrough examples from the Himalayas\, I focus on boundary un/making as a creative approach to the continuous (re)configurations of humans and non-humans that transpire in any attempts at governing. The complex\, often unpredictable political\, social\, cultural and ecological terrains that emerge in environmental governance offer insights into the dynamics of change. Drawing from scholars of science and political ecologists who have long pointed out that knowing is not somehow separate from the worlds we create\, and feminist work on power and recognition\, this lecture will look at how boundary-making reflects the operation of power across scales\, suggesting new approaches to tackling environmental issues. \nSpeaking through case studies from Nepal and elsewhere\, the lecture will work through the entanglements of forests\, user-groups\, geopolitics and efforts at responding to predictions of calamitous change to show how they are complicit in producing the dilemmas we face. It will show how environmental change programmes are caught up in the riotous\, inadvertent contradictions of environmental governance. Action\, imagination\, naming\, and everyday practices create lasting connections; they bring the world into being in a continuous and dynamic manner; in turn demanding that we take account of the more-than-human within our governing logics if global environmental challenges are to be confronted. \n\nAbout Andrea J Nightingale\nAndrea J. Nightingale is Professor of Human Geography\, University of Oslo and Senior Researcher at the University of Agricultural Sciences. Her interests cross between climate change adaptation and transformation debates; collective action and state formation; the nature-society nexus; political violence in natural resource governance; and feminist work on emotion and subjectivity in relation to development\, transformation\, collective action and cooperation. She has over 30 years of experience on natural resource governance in Nepal and a current research collaboration focused on state formation and climate change. She has also done research on in-shore fisheries management in Scotland. Her recent book is Environment and Sustainability in a Globalizing World\, Routledge\, 2019.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/steps-annual-lecture-andrea-j-nightingale/
LOCATION:Fulton A Lecture Theatre\, University of Sussex\, Falmer\, Brighton\, BN1 9RH\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Research methods,Resource politics,Understanding sustainability
ORGANIZER;CN="ESRC STEPS Centre":MAILTO:b.ayre@ids.ac.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200701T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200701T123000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20200608T134257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200706T093356Z
UID:14596-1593601200-1593606600@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:ONLINE SEMINAR: Sango Mahanty - 'Rupture: Conceptualising Nature-Society Transformation'
DESCRIPTION:This event is the first in a series of online talks on the STEPS Centre’s ‘Natures’ theme. \nVideo\n \n\nAbout this event\n \nRupture: Conceptualising Nature-Society Transformation* \nSango Mahanty\nResources\, Environment and Development Program\, Crawford School of Public Policy\, The Australian National University \n*Based on a forthcoming paper with Sarah Milne\, Keith Barney\, Phuc Xuan To\, Philip Hirsch and Wolfram Dressler \nThis webinar will present a forthcoming paper from our collaborative project on Rupture. Christian Lund (2016) used the concept of rupture to describe moments of sudden institutional change\, such as conflict and colonisation\, which he suggested were fertile spaces to observe processes of state making\, new material and political claims\, social actions and resistance. \nWe took this analytical lens to the Mekong region\, where mega infrastructure projects such as hydro-electric dams are dramatically transforming nature and society. The framing of rupture allows us to unravel certain complexities around these developments. Here\, rupture does not represent a discrete “moment\,” as Lund described\, but rather a process that unfolds over time. The social and material transformations associated with these dams interact with historical and ongoing changes. They have cascading and generative effects that connect across scales. \nIn bringing the rupture lens to these cases\, we develop and integrate four analytical themes that have broader relevance in understanding nature-society transformation: interactivity between transformative processes; cross-scale interactions; temporality\, and agency. The talk will elaborate on these themes with reference to our empirical research\, and discuss how they build upon existing perspectives on nature-society transformation. \n* Lund\, C. 2016. Rule and Rupture: state formation through the production of property and citizenship. Development and Change. 47 (6): 1199–1228.\n\nAbout the speaker\nSango Mahanty is a human geographer who studies the politics of social and environmental change. Her current research examines how communities and civil society cope with dramatic processes of nature-society disruption or ‘rupture’. This work explores how communities are able to gain agency in fragmented settings through their community and civil society networks\, and their engagements with government. \nSango has explored similar questions of local agency and network formation at sites of intense market development in the Cambodia-Vietnam borderland. She also has a long engagement with research on green economy interventions\, especially their labour arrangements and their implications for equity and social conflict. Sango’s early research centred on participatory resource management\, community development and processes of social learning in Australia\, the South Pacific and South Asia. She currently leads the Resources\, Environment & Development Program in ANU’s Crawford School of Public Policy (see her profile page). \n\nNATURES: Our theme for 2020\nNature is all around us\, but there are many ways of seeing different kinds of ‘natures’\, and many efforts to involve it in forms of control or domination.  \nHow is talk of crisis shaping nature and people’s views of it? How can colonial forms of knowledge\, technology and power be challenged\, and what might it mean to ‘decolonize’ the study of environmental change? What do alternatives look like\, and how can we explore\, nurture\, imagine and live the relationships we might want for the future?  \nFind out more about our theme for 2020 on our Natures theme page.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/online-seminar-sango-mahanty-rupture-conceptualising-nature-society-transformation/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200716T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200716T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20200702T104008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200730T154820Z
UID:14636-1594900800-1594906200@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Webinar: Transformations in and beyond Covid-19 in India and Bangladesh
DESCRIPTION:11.00 UTC · 12.00 UK · 16.30 India · 17.00 Bangladesh \nVideo\n \n\nAbout this event\nFlyer (PDF)\nThis event is convened by the TAPESTRY project. \nThe coronavirus outbreak has disrupted almost all aspects of life in India and Bangladesh. Apart from the immediate impacts on victims of the virus\, the lockdowns imposed by governments have affected the mobility\, income\, food security\, and livelihoods of millions. \nFor people in so-called ‘marginal’ environments\, in coastal and dryland areas\, Covid-19 adds to a set of existing uncertainties and challenges. Recent weather events such as Cyclone Amphan have compounded the problems faced in some regions. But people in these areas are not passive recipients of unpredictable change. They are responding through alliances\, often driven from the grassroots but sometimes in collaboration with other people and agencies. \nThis webinar explores the implications of the Covid-19 pandemic for bottom-up transformations to sustainability. \nFor a more detailed description\, see the registration page. \n\nSpeakers\n\nD.Parthasarathy\, IIT Bombay / TAPESTRY project\nSeema Kulkarni\, Society for Promoting Participative Ecosystem Management (SOPPECOM) / Transformations to Groundwater Sustainability project\nAmitava Roy\, Lokamata Rani Rashmoni Mission\, Sundarbans\nSaleemul Huq\, International Centre for Climate Change and Development (ICCCAD)\, Bangladesh\nSandeep Virmani\, Hunnarshala Foundation\nShilpi Srivastava\, IDS/TAPESTRY\nDiscussant: Mihir Bhatt\, All-India Disaster Mitigation Institute / TAPESTRY\nChair: Lyla Mehta\, Institute of Development Studies / Norwegian University of Life Sciences / TAPESTRY\n\n\nNATURES: Our theme for 2020\nNature is all around us\, but there are many ways of seeing different kinds of ‘natures’\, and many efforts to involve it in forms of control or domination.  \nHow is talk of crisis shaping nature and people’s views of it? How can colonial forms of knowledge\, technology and power be challenged\, and what might it mean to ‘decolonize’ the study of environmental change? What do alternatives look like\, and how can we explore\, nurture\, imagine and live the relationships we might want for the future?  \nFind out more about our theme for 2020 on our Natures theme page.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/webinar-transformations-in-and-beyond-covid-19-in-india-and-bangladesh/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200922T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200922T080000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20190809T152932Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201026T170545Z
UID:13964-1600761600-1600761600@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Contested Natures: POLLEN 2020 conference
DESCRIPTION:Contested Natures: Power\, Possibility\, Prefiguration\nThird Biennial Conference of the Political Ecology Network (POLLEN)\n22-25 September 2020\nBrighton\, UK\n#POLLEN20 \n \nThe Third Biennial Conference of the Political Ecology Network\, Contested Natures: Power\, Politics\, Prefiguration\, was held online from 22 – 25 September 2020. \nVisit the conference platform \n\nVideo: Keynote sessions\nUse the playlist below to browse video of the keynote sessions at the conference. \n \n\nProgramme\nYou can now view the programme for POLLEN20 at a glance. Most sessions are only open to registered participants. \nView the programme \n\nKeynote sessions\nKEYNOTE 1: POLITICAL ECOLOGIES OF COVID-19\n22 September at 16.00-18.00 BST (UK time)\, Hummingbird Stage \nRoundtable with Melissa Leach\, Patricia Lopez and Abigail Neely\, Jonathan Thurston\, Claudia Puerta Silva\, Jeff Rose and Rahul Muralidharan\nModerators: Dr Libby Lunstrum and Dr Amber Huff \nKEYNOTE 2: ON BLACK ECOLOGIES\n23 September at 16.00-18.00 BST (UK time)\, Hummingbird Stage \nRoundtable with Danielle Purifoy\, Jillean McCommons\, Justin Hosbey\, Hilda Lloréns and Carlos G. García-Quijano\nChair: JT Roane \nKEYNOTE 3: CONSERVATION FUTURES\n24 September at 9.00-11.00 BST (UK time)\, Hummingbird Stage \nPanel with Carina Wyborn\, Mathew Bukhi Mabele\, Anh Vu and Hannah Dickinson\nChairs: Rosaleen Duffy and George Iordăchescu \nKEYNOTE 4: TROUBLING NATURE AND POLITICAL ECOLOGY: FEMINISTS IN THE CAPITALOCENE\n24 September at 16.30-18.30 BST (UK time)\, Hummingbird Stage \nRoundtable with Helene Ahlborg\, Seema Arora-Jonsson\, Wendy Harcourt\, Jessica Lehman and Sherilyn MacGregor.\nChairs: Rebecca Elmhirst and Andrea Nightingale \n\nBackground to POLLEN2020\nPOLLEN2020 was the centrepiece of the STEPS Centre’s annual theme on Natures. \nNature is all around us\, but there are many ways of seeing different kinds of ‘natures’\, and many efforts to involve it in forms of control or domination. How is talk of crisis shaping nature and people’s views of it? How can colonial forms of knowledge\, technology and power be challenged\, and what might it mean to decolonize the study of environmental change? What do alternatives look like\, and how can we explore\, nurture\, imagine and live the relationships we might want for the future? \nNatures: browse resources \n\nThe event was co-organized by the ESRC STEPS Centre (IDS/SPRU\, University of Sussex) and the Political Ecology Network (POLLEN) Secretariat (currently based at the University of Copenhagen 2019 – 2021). \nThe conference is co-hosted by Radical Futures at the University of Brighton and the Institute of Development Studies. \nEvent website – Background info
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/contested-natures-pollen-2020-conference/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20201103T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20201103T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20201030T121431Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201030T132030Z
UID:14805-1604404800-1604410200@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Politics of Nature reading group: Indigenous Climate Change Studies
DESCRIPTION:Join us for an online discussion on readings related to the politics of nature. \nThis month\, the readings are: \nIndigenous Climate Change Studies: Indigenizing Futures\, Decolonizing the Anthropocene\nby Kyle Whyte \nRead this article (PDF) \nDecolonization is not a metaphor\nby Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang \nRead this article (PDF) \nHow to join\nTo join the PoN email list and / or get access to the Zoom links and readings for this group\, please send an email to Andrea Brock(a.brock@sussex.ac.uk) or Amber Huff (a.huff@ids.ac.uk). \n\nThis event relates to our 2020 theme of Natures. \nExplore the Natures theme
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/politics-of-nature-reading-group-3-nov-2020/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20201112T123000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20201112T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20201014T140844Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201124T142723Z
UID:14790-1605184200-1605186000@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Communities\, technologies and democratic innovation
DESCRIPTION:Fusebox director Phil Jones interviewed Prof Andy Stirling and Prof Adrian Smith in a roundtable discussion. They talked about the importance and challenges around democratising innovation\, and how people around the world are already practicing new forms of innovation and demanding better from existing innovation institutions. \nThey explored why technology and the kinds of digital futures explored at Fusebox and elsewhere\, are deeply social matters\, and how the politics of such innovation demands democratic approaches in technology. Andy and Adrian drew on their ESRC social science research and particularly the work done in the STEPS Centre. \n\nAbout\nThe event is a joint University of Sussex and Wired Sussex event\, as part of the ESRC Festival of Social Science 2020. It was made possible thanks to funding from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC).
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/communities-technologies-and-democratic-innovation/
CATEGORIES:Technology & innovation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20201112T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20201112T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20201030T103858Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201113T144023Z
UID:14804-1605200400-1605204000@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Covid-19 and development: the politics of uncertainty
DESCRIPTION:This event was part of the Sussex Development Lectures. \nWhy is uncertainty so important to politics today? From finance and technology to climate change\, pandemics\, migration and security\, what the future holds feels increasingly uncertain and demands alternative approaches. If hopes of much-needed progressive transformations are to be realised\, then current blinkered understandings of uncertainty need to be met with renewed democratic struggle. \nExploring how uncertainties are experienced in the context of marginalisation and precarity\, Andy Stirling in conversation with Sobia Ahmad Kaker\, will look at how we can advance a more collective politics of responsibility and care. \nRecording\n \nBook: The Politics of Uncertainty\nThe conversation draws on the book The Politics of Uncertainty: Challenges for Transformation\, of which both speakers are co-authors. \nThe book was published by Routledge in 2020 as part of the STEPS Centre’s Pathways to Sustainability book series. \n\n\nThis event is part of the Sussex Development Lecture series on Covid-19 and development – building back better? \nSussex Development Lectures are jointly run by the Institute of Development Studies (IDS)\, the School of Global Studies \, the Science Policy and Research Unit (SPRU) and the Centre for International Education (CIE)\, based at the University of Sussex. \n\nUncertainties can make it hard to plan ahead. But recognising them can help to reveal new questions and choices. What kinds of uncertainty are there\, why do they matter for sustainability\, and what ideas\, approaches and methods can help us to respond to them? \nFind out more about this topic on our theme page.\n \nUncertainty
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/covid-19-and-development-the-politics-of-uncertainty/
CATEGORIES:Health & disease
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20201125T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20201125T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20201030T131911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201030T131911Z
UID:14809-1606305600-1606311000@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Politics of Nature reading group: Infrastructural Brutalism
DESCRIPTION:Join us for an online discussion on readings related to the politics of nature. \nThis month\, the reading is \nInfrastructural Brutalism: Art and the Necropolitics of Infrastructure\nby Michael Truscello \nMore about this book \n\nHow to join\nTo join the PoN email list and / or get access to the Zoom links and readings for this group\, please send an email to Andrea Brock(a.brock@sussex.ac.uk) or Amber Huff (a.huff@ids.ac.uk). \n\nThis event relates to our 2020 theme of Natures. \nExplore the Natures theme
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/politics-of-nature-reading-group-infrastructural-brutalism/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20201130T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20201130T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20201111T105809Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201201T093135Z
UID:14827-1606741200-1606748400@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Enchanting nature: tentacular storytelling in the Great African Kelp Forest
DESCRIPTION:Roundtable with My Octopus Teacher director Pippa Ehrlich and others from the Sea Change Project \n\nVideo recording\n \n\nAbout this event\nThere is a forest beneath the waves off the western coast of South Africa that is as biologically rich as a tropical rainforest. Few people have experienced the Great African Kelp Forest like the members of the Sea Change Project\, a small group of journalists\, scientists\, photographers and filmmakers who have developed a unique methodology for exploring and learning about\, from and with nature called ‘underwater tracking’. \nThe Sea Change Project has spent thousands of hours exploring these wild ‘algal gardens’ and the creatures that live in them\, skin- and breath-hold diving in the frigid waters of South Africa’s Cape Peninsula. The group has identified new species and learned to read subtle signs and that give insight into lives\, deaths and relationships of the kelp forest’s creatures\, a process one member describes as delving deep into ‘the biological mind of the forest’. \nThe acclaimed Netflix documentary My Octopus Teacher is one example of the project’s approach to ‘multispecies storytelling’ (Haraway\, 2016). This is an affective\, aesthetic and sensorial approach that focuses on connections\, embodied experience and interspecies learning to help people see\, experience and value the Great African Kelp Forest in new ways. \nIn this Q&A Roundtable with the film’s director\, Pippa Ehrlich\, and Sea Change project members Swati Foster\, Carina Frankal and Faine Loubser\, we explored questions about Sea Change’s approach to exploring\, researching and communicating about the ‘forest beneath the waves’. The conversation was moderated by Amber Huff (STEPS Centre) and Adrian Nel (University of KwaZulu-Natal). \nHow does the project’s approach diverge from dominant approaches in ecology and marine conservation in terms of underlying assumptions\, practices\, values and objectives? Can embracing ecological alterity and developing meaningful intimacies with the hidden\, ‘alien’ and ‘weird’ aspects of nature nourish new ‘kinships’ and new ways of ‘commoning’ of our relations with others? What are the impacts of such an approach on public awareness and attitudes towards this marine ecology on one level\, and on discourses and practice of conservation? Can learning from these approaches help to inform and transform conservation more broadly? \n\nThis event is part of the ESRC STEPS Centre’s theme on Natures. It is organized in partnership with the Political Ecology Network (POLLEN)\, the University of KwaZulu-Natal and the Sea Change Project.  \n\nAbout Our theme for 2020: Natures\nNature is all around us\, but there are many ways of seeing different kinds of ‘natures’\, and many efforts to involve it in forms of control or domination.  \nHow is talk of crisis shaping nature and people’s views of it? How can colonial forms of knowledge\, technology and power be challenged\, and what might it mean to ‘decolonize’ the study of environmental change? What do alternatives look like\, and how can we explore\, nurture\, imagine and live the relationships we might want for the future?  \nFind out more about our theme for 2020 on our Natures theme page.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/enchanting-nature-tentacular-storytelling-in-the-great-african-kelp-forest/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20201211T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20201211T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20201030T132655Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201030T132655Z
UID:14810-1607702400-1607706000@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Politics of Nature reading group: Hope Against Hope
DESCRIPTION:Join us for an online discussion on readings related to the politics of nature. \nThe reading for this session is the book by the Out of the Woods Collective\, Hope Against Hope: Writings on Ecological Crisis. \n\nHow to join\nTo join the PoN email list and / or get access to the Zoom links and readings for this group\, please send an email to Andrea Brock(a.brock@sussex.ac.uk) or Amber Huff (a.huff@ids.ac.uk). \n\nThis event relates to our 2020 theme of Natures. \nExplore the Natures theme
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/politics-of-nature-reading-group-hope-against-hope/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20201215T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20201215T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20201203T214705Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201215T170938Z
UID:14857-1608037200-1608044400@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:The Truth About Nature: Environmental politics in a post-truth\, digital world
DESCRIPTION:A presentation by Bram Büscher\, author of The Truth about Nature: Environmentalism in the Era of Post-Truth Politics and Platform Capitalism\, followed by roundtable discussion with Elizabeth Havice and Max Ritts. Moderator: Amber Huff \n\nWatch the video\nVideo (120 minutes) of the whole discussion is available. \n \n\nAbout this event\nHow should we share the truth about the environmental crisis? At a moment when even the most basic facts about ecology and the climate face contestation and contempt\, environmental advocates are at an impasse. Many have turned to social media and digital technologies to shift the tide—but what if their strategy is not only flawed\, but dangerous? \nBram Büscher’s new book The Truth about Nature follows environmental actors as they turn to the internet to save nature. It documents how conservation efforts are transformed through the political economy of platforms and the algorithmic feeds that have been instrumental to the rise of post-truth politics. \nThe book will be out on 15 December 2020 and can be ordered online from University of California Press. \n\nEvent info\nThis event is the last in a series on the theme of Natures organised by the ESRC STEPS Centre in 2020. \n \nNature is all around us\, but there are many ways of seeing different kinds of ‘natures’\, and many efforts to involve it in forms of control or domination. How is talk of crisis shaping nature and people’s views of it? How can colonial forms of knowledge\, technology and power be challenged\, and what might it mean to decolonize the study of environmental change? What do alternatives look like\, and how can we explore\, nurture\, imagine and live the relationships we might want for the future? \nNatures: browse resources \n\nAbout the speakers\nBram Büscher is Professor and Chair of the Sociology of Development and Change group at Wageningen University and holds visiting positions at the University of Johannesburg and Stellenbosch University. Bram has published widely on the relations between nature\, development and politics and is the author of ‘Transforming the Frontier. Peace Parks and the Politics of Neoliberal Conservation in Southern Africa’ (Duke University Press\, 2013) and co-author\, together with Robert Fletcher\, of ‘The Conservation Revolution: Radical Ideas for Saving Nature Beyond the Anthropocene’ (Verso\, 2020). Bram is one of the senior editors of Conservation & Society. \nElizabeth Havice is associate professor of geography at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She uses the lens of governance to explore distributional outcomes in marine resources sectors and spaces\, food systems\, global value chains and is presently examining the intersection of big data and oceans governance. Current projects include co-editing (with Matt Himley and Gabriela Valdivia) the forthcoming Handbook of Critical Resource Geography and the co-founding (with Lisa Campbell) of the Digital Oceans Governance Lab. \nMax Ritts is an environmental geographer and postdoctoral fellow at the Swedish University of Agricultural Science (SLU). His work operates at the intersection of political ecology\, sound studies and critical indigenous studies — themes brought together in his book project\, A Resonant Ecology (Under Contract at Duke University Press). Current research projects include the relation of bioacoustics to corporate audio-surveillance practices\, the elaboration of “smart” marine governance schemes\, and Adorno’s relevance for studies of the irrational in the contemporary politics of nature.  \nModerator: Amber Huff. Amber is convenor of the STEPS Centre’s 2020 theme of Natures. She is a social anthropologist and political ecologist. Her primary areas of focus include politics of conservation\, resource struggles and conflict\, environmental policy\, rural livelihoods and human adaptability and the politics of indigeneity and autochthony within resource struggles in southern Africa. Amber is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies\, where she is co-convenor of the Resource Politics Cluster\, and a member of the ESRC STEPS Centre.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/the-truth-about-nature-environmental-politics-in-a-post-truth-digital-world/
CATEGORIES:Resource politics
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210118T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210118T120000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210114T105854Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210127T113721Z
UID:14997-1610964000-1610971200@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Transforming Environments from the Bottom Up - Examples from Marginal Environments in India
DESCRIPTION:This is the first of two virtual sessions convened by the TAPESTRY project at the Gobeshona Conference on Locally Led Adaptation Action. \n\n \n\nSpeakers:  \n\nKetaki Bhadgaonkar (Bombay 61)\nJai Bhadgaonkar (Bombay 61)\nHans Nicolai Adam (NIVA)\nRanit Chatterjee (Kyoto University)\nRohit Jha (Kyoto University)\nMihir Bhatt (AIDMI)\nLyla Mehta (IDS)\n\nChair: Terry Cannon (IDS) \n\nAbout the session\nThis is the first of two sessions on the TAPESTRY project (‘Transformation as Praxis: Exploring Socially Just and Transdisciplinary Pathways to Sustainability in Marginal Environments’). (See details of the second session.) \nClimate-related uncertainties have tended to be defined by experts and bureaucrats (the ‘above’)\, mostly ignoring local perspectives and knowledge. Living in landscapes characterised by climate-related uncertainties creates anxieties. \nCan uncertainty also open up exploring alternative pathways? How people from ‘below’ understand and deal with uncertainty is helped by knowing how it affects their sense of place\, identity and wellbeing. This can be a first step for fostering transformative change. \nTransformative action requires reframing nature-society relations\, knowledge\, and value systems\, and a reconfiguration of institutions and frameworks. It involves fostering alliances between communities\, NGOs\, scientists and state agencies to co-produce new knowledge and ideas for more robust livelihoods. This can give rise to ‘patches of transformation’ that can be scaled up and out. \nThese issues are assessed for three sites in south Asia: \n\nthe coastal megacity of Mumbai\, where a fishing community on the outskirts is struggling against existing problems magnified by climate change\nthe dryland areas of Kutch in Gujarat\, where pastoralists struggle for their livelihoods\nthe Sundarbans (in both West Bengal and Bangladesh)\n\nThis session will focus on the first two sites (Mumbai and Kutch)\, while a second session will focus on the Sundarbans. \n\nPresentations in this session\nTransformation from ‘below’ : Praxis\, patches and politics \nLyla Mehta\, Shilpi Srivastava \, Lars Otto Naess (IDS)\, Synne Movik (NMBU)\, D. Parthasarathy and Lalatendu Kesari Das (IITB) \, Hans Adam (NIVA)\, Nobu Ohte (Kyoto University) \nThis presentation discusses how the notion of transformation can be conceptualized from ‘below’ in marginal environments that are marked by climate change induced uncertainties. Climate-related uncertainties in so-called marginal coastals environments have tended to be defined by experts and bureaucrats (the ‘above’)\, mostly ignoring local perspectives and knowledge. Living in coastal landscapes characterised by climate-related uncertainties such as droughts\, floods and sea level rise can give rise to anxieties and fears. But can uncertainty also open up spaces for exploring alternative pathways? Insight into how people from ‘below’ understand and deal with uncertainty is helped by knowing how it affects their sense of place\, identity and wellbeing. This can be a first step for fostering transformative change. Starting with people’s lived experiences\, we conceive of transformation as emphasizing agency and practice (praxis). Transformative action requires the reframing of nature-society relations\, knowledge\, and value systems\, and a reconfiguration of institutions and frameworks. It involves fostering alliances between communities\, NGOs\, scientists and state agencies to co-produce new knowledge and ideas for more robust livelihoods. This can give rising to ‘patches of transformation’ that can be scaled up and out. This paper provides the conceptual and methodological framings for such a normative and political approach to transformation from below. It will be followed by empirical studies from two sites across India (Kutch and Mumbai in western India). \nArresting Environmental Collapse\, Restoring Resource-based Livelihoods: Transforming Koli Fisherfolk in and with Mumbai \nKetaki Bhadgaonkar\, Jai Bhadgaonkar (Bombay 61); D. Parthasarathy and Lalatendu Kesari Das (IITB) \, Hans Nicolai Adam (NIVA)\, Synne Movik (NMBU) \nThe Mumbai Metropolitan Region is frequently cited as among the most vulnerable urban agglomerations to climate change impacts. Recent predictions by climate scientists have warned that by 2050\, parts of the city will be submerged due to sea level rise. Extreme precipitation events will cause frequent flooding ravaging its population\, economy\, livelihoods\, and fragile ecosystems. The Mumbai region\, like many other urban agglomerations are characterized by coastal wetlands\, mangroves\, salt pans\, forests\, and marine biodiversity\, all of which are under threat by climate change related impacts including sea level rise\, ocean acidification\, coastal erosion\, and monsoon extremes. In addition\, rapid degradation and encroachment on coastal ecosystems due to urban development\, pollution\, and coastal infrastructure projects\, threaten more damage as these ecosystems have historically acted as flood barriers\, and have provided ecosystem services. Through a collaborative project involving fisherfolk in one of the city’s koliwadas (fishing villages)\, a local NGO\, researchers\, and local leaders\, an attempt is made to co-produce hybrid knowledge combining indigenous understandings of ecosystem changes and climate impacts with science based risk scenarios. The team will then design and implement a transformative plan with potential to arrest further environmental collapse\, restore resource based livelihoods\, and provide greater autonomy in local level environmental governance to the Koliwada. This paper\, while documenting these efforts\, will critique ongoing urban planning processes and visions\, and showcase the ways in which the health of urban ecosystems and livelihoods is crucial for disaster risk reduction\, climate risk mitigation\, and sustainable urban design. \nCo-production to facilitate bottom-up adaptation: insights from co-learning with the Jat herders in Kutch \nRanit Chatterjee and Rohit Jha (Kyoto University); Shilpi Srivastava\, Lyla Mehta (IDS); Pankaj Joshi and Mahendra Bhanani (Sahjeevan) \nThe dryland of Kutch counts among the world’s most variable and unpredictable environments where local Jat and Rabari herder communities have learnt how to live with and harness this variability to support sustainable and productive economies and ecosystems by drawing on and developing their indigenous knowledge systems. Although pastoralism in Kutch can be regarded as a drought insurance cover\, state policies have systematically ignored the particular dynamics around variability\, uncertainty and water scarcity\, thus displaying ‘dryland blindness’ and relegating these landscapes as marginal and degraded. We show how the synergistic links between the Mangroves\, Mal (livestock)\, and Maldharis (pastoralists) are crucial to responding to climate induced uncertainties. In this presentation\, we focus on the importance of knowledge co-production for developing locally led\, bottom-up adaptation pathways. We discuss the case of the Jat herders who share a unique relationship with the ‘swimming’ kharai camels and mangrove habitats\, and demonstrate how various stakeholders have come together to work towards preservation of this unique ecosystem as we stay attendant to the manifold power relations within the pastoral community as well as across the stakeholders.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/transforming-environments-from-the-bottom-up-examples-from-marginal-environments-in-india/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210118T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210118T144500
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210114T110628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210127T113738Z
UID:14998-1610974800-1610981100@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Sundarbans without boundaries
DESCRIPTION:The second of two virtual sessions convened by the TAPESTRY project at the Gobeshona Conference on Locally Led Adaptation Action. \n\n \n\nSpeakers: \n\nShababa Haque (ICCCAD)\nUpasona Ghosh (Indian Institute of Public Health\, Bhubaneshwar)\nMahmuda Mity (ICCCAD)\nShibaji Bose (Researcher/communications professional)\nAnnu Jalais (National University of Singapore)\nAmites Mukhopadyay (Jadavpur University\, Kolkata)\nMd Nadiruzzaman (Hamburg University)\nLars Otto Naess (IDS)\nLyla Mehta (IDS)\n\nChair: Terry Cannon (IDS) \n\nSession description\nThis is the second session from the project ‘Transformation as Praxis: Exploring Socially Just and Transdisciplinary Pathways to Sustainability in Marginal Environments’ (TAPESTRY). (See details of the first session.) \nClimate-related uncertainties have tended to be defined by experts and bureaucrats (the ‘above’)\, mostly ignoring local perspectives and knowledge. Living in landscapes characterised by climate-related uncertainties creates anxieties and fears. \nInsight into how people from ‘below’ understand and deal with uncertainty is helped by knowing how it affects their sense of place\, identity and wellbeing. This can be a first step for fostering transformative change. Starting with people’s lived experiences\, we conceive of transformation as emphasizing agency and practice (praxis). \nTransformative action requires the reframing of nature-society relations\, knowledge\, and value systems\, and a reconfiguration of institutions and frameworks. It involves fostering alliances between communities\, NGOs\, scientists and state agencies to co-produce new knowledge and ideas for more robust livelihoods. This can give rising to ‘patches of transformation’ that can be scaled up and out. These issues are teased out through presentations on three sites in south Asia. The first two (Kutch and Mumbai) are dealt with in an earlier session. \nThis session is focused on the Sundarbans area in West Bengal and Bangladesh\, where islanders are battling sea level rise\, salinity intrusion and cyclones. \nThe session discusses the work being done by the TAPESTRY project in both West Bengal and Bangladesh among people and organizations on the edges of the Sundarbans forest\, where livelihoods are challenged by existing problems and magnified by climate change.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/sundarbans-without-boundaries/
CATEGORIES:Resource politics
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210127T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210127T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210111T140855Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210112T140920Z
UID:14991-1611748800-1611754200@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Webinar: What can we learn from the world of pastoralism for wider agrarian struggles?
DESCRIPTION:27 January at 12-13.30 (UTC)\nSpeakers:\n-Ian Scoones\, PASTRES Programme\, Institute of Development Studies (IDS)\, Sussex\, U.K.\n-Maryam Rahmanian (IPES)\n-Rahma Hassan PhD Fellow\, University of Copenhagen and University of Nairobi \nRegister for this event \n\nPastoralists are some of the most marginalised people on the planet\, but they have much to teach us all. Pastoralists make a living from livestock on extensive dry and montane rangelands across the world\, continuously living with and from uncertainty. \nLike agrarian societies everywhere\, pastoralists are confronted by the incursions of neoliberal capitalism: once remote pastoral regions become sites for investment and pastoralists’ livelihoods are undermined. New relations of class\, gender and generation emerge\, with transformed practices of production\, labour and market engagement emerging across pastoral settings. \nHowever\, too often\, pastoralists and settled agriculturalists are viewed as separate and mobilisations and movements rarely cross over. Yet\, pastoralists’ responses to contemporary challenges highlight\, for example\, the importance of mobility\, common use of resources and collective\, networked social arrangements. \nGiven increasingly common agrarian struggles\, this first edition of Agrarian Conversations will explore the opportunities to learn from pastoralists\, and the importance of seeking greater engagement across agrarian movements. \nAgrarian Conversations is a collective initiative of CASAS\, TNI\, PLAAS\, ICAS\, YARA\, ERPI\, PASTRES\, RRUSHES-5 and the Journal of Peasant Studies. \nResources\nA Journal of Peasant Studies background paper for this webinar is available. \nRegister for this event \n  \n 
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/webinar-what-can-we-learn-from-the-world-of-pastoralism-for-wider-agrarian-struggles/
CATEGORIES:Pastoralism
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210204T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210204T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210111T170855Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210129T101947Z
UID:14992-1612458000-1612461600@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:The Politics of Uncertainty - webinar with Natalie Burns and Andy Stirling
DESCRIPTION:About this Event\nRegister online \n\n\nThis roundtable discussion is part of a project with the University of Sussex that looks beyond Silicon Valley to try and develop more effective and socially useful approaches to technology innovation. \nThe project links three digital entrepreneurs with three academics from the University of Sussex\, to discuss with tech innovators and purpose-driven communities how they might integrate approaches derived from university research into their practices. \n\n\nThe Politics of Uncertainty\nJoin Natalie Burns\, Strategy Director at United Us as she talks to STEPS co-director Professor Andy Stirling about his new book: The Politics of Uncertainty: Challenges of Transformation  \nClearly\, we live in uncertain times. But how do we respond? Current approaches see technology as an important way of controlling that uncertainty. But does that make assumptions about both the challenges we face and the way we think about tech innovation? \nLooking at examples from around the world\, Andy Stirling’s new book addresses these questions and comes to some very interesting conclusions\, and is particularly critical about the most popular models of innovation. \nAbout the speakers\n\nAndy Stirling is Professor of Science and Technology Policy in the Science Policy Research Unit at Sussex University and co-director of the STEPS Centre. His research includes work on democracy\, power and uncertainty in science and innovation. \nNatalie Burns is Strategy Director at UnitedUs a branding agency that unites people\, purpose and potential. \nJoin the event\nRegister online \n\nTheme: Uncertainty\n \nUncertainties can make it hard to plan ahead. But recognising them can help to reveal new questions and choices. What kinds of uncertainty are there\, why do they matter for sustainability\, and what ideas\, approaches and methods can help us to respond to them? \nExplore the theme
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/the-politics-of-uncertainty-webinar-with-natalie-burns-and-andy-stirling/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20210205T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20210205T164500
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210129T104603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210129T150815Z
UID:15013-1612533600-1612543500@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Webinar: Ethics of quantification
DESCRIPTION:14.00-16.45 CET\, online \nThis webinar features a panel including STEPS co-director Andy Stirling\, alongside Andrea Saltelli and Wendy Espeland. \nDetails & joining instructions \n\nAbout the event\nNumbers are at the core of the nexus between technoscience\, society and the new media. The potential of numbers to inflict harm is on par or superior to those of any other technologies\, when we consider both visible and invisible numbers\, e.g. the use of artificial intelligence and big data algorithms. And yet\, numbers are so deeply entrenched in our existence that we barely reflect on them critically any more. \nFollowing the publication of the Nature commentary last June on ‘Five ways to ensure that models serve society’\, which was focused on modelling\, we propose a broader discussion on the ethics and politics of quantification. How can we develop frameworks for observation\, critique and improvement of the social uses of quantification? \nChair: Ismael Rafols (CWTS\, Leiden Univ.) \nThis webinar is organized by CWTS Hub on Engagement and Responsibility in R&I. \nDetails & joining instructions
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/webinar-ethics-of-quantification/
CATEGORIES:Understanding sustainability
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210217T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210217T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210128T105628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210403T130012Z
UID:15007-1613570400-1613577600@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Challenging Research for sustainability: transdisciplinary methods\, relationships\, politics and praxis
DESCRIPTION:As the ESRC STEPS Centre enters its final year\, join us for the first in a series of virtual dialogues on methodologies\, exploring the theme of ‘Challenging Research’ for sustainability.   \nSubscribe to our Events newsletter \n\nIn this first event on 17 February\, we discuss the ideas and praxis involved in ‘opening up’ and ‘broadening out’ sustainability research. \nWhat does it mean to ‘open up’ research to enable plural knowledges and views to be included and considered? Why and how do we ‘broaden out’ to reveal potential pathways of development that could support diverse emancipatory futures? \nThis event brings together sustainability researchers from the STEPS global consortium and beyond to discuss and compare their ideas and experiences. The panel will reflect on their diverse transdisciplinary journeys\, and stimulate discussion about the kinds of methodological assemblages\, frameworks\, tools and associated ways of being that might enable us collectively to push our praxis towards transformation. \nVideo\n \n\nspeakers\nAndy Stirling (STEPS/University of Sussex); Anabel Marin (IDS); Lakshmi Charli-Joseph and Patricia Pérez-Belmont (LANCIS-IE-UNAM/Umbela); Joel Onyango and Joanes Atela (ACTS/ARIN) \nAndy Stirling is a co-director of the STEPS Centre and a professor in the Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex\, working on issues of power and uncertainty in research and innovation. \nAnabel Marin recently joined the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) as leader of the Research Cluster on Business\, Markets and the State\, and is also director of Bioleft. Until January 2021\, she was senior researcher in science\, technology and innovation policies at the National Council for Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET) in Argentina and director of the Research Center for Transformation (CENIT). \nLakshmi Charli-Joseph works at the National Laboratory for Sustainability Sciences (LANCIS-IE-UNAM) in research projects related to stakeholders’ engagement\, governance and transformations to sustainability in Mexico. She is part of the North America Hub of the PATHWAYS Network\, where she co-coordinated the T-Labs project in Mexico. She is also an academic advisor of the NGO Umbela – Transformaciones Sostenibles. \nPatricia Pérez-Belmont is director of the NGO Umbela – Transformaciones Sostenibles\, an organization that seeks to foster transformations to sustainability through innovation\, transdiscipline and capacity building. She is also a PhD candidate in the Sustainability Science program at UNAM. Her research focuses on the study of agrarian change in peri-urban contexts. \nJoel Onyango is a fellow at the Africa Research & Impact Network (ARIN) and the focal point for ARIN-ASH Summer School. He is also a research fellow at the African Centre for Technology Studies (ACTS) with a focus on science technology and innovation; climate change adaptation and mitigation; water and food security\, entrepreneurship and markets\, and sustainable development. \nJoanes Atela is the Convenor of the Africa Research and Impact Network (ARIN)\, a Senior Research Fellow and Head of Climate Resilient Economies Programme at the African Centre for Technology Studies (ACTS). He also coordinates the North-South research partnership for ACTS through the Africa Sustainability Hub\, and as part of his passion to spur research excellence and intellectual leadership in Africa\, Joanes founded the Africa Research and Impact Network (ARIN). \n\nAbout the Challenging Research series\nIn a series of events entitled Challenging Research\, we ask critical questions on the way we use and think about methodologies in sustainability research. \nFaced with multiple intersecting crises and long-term social and ecological problems\, sustainability research is called to challenge power\, revealing alternative pathways to diverse futures. But it is hampered by hidden assumptions about objective knowledge\, market forces and disciplinary silos\, an artificial boundary between action and knowledge\, and pressures for research to narrow down its questions and reach single answers or ‘solutions’. \nThe Challenging Research series critically examines the roles of methods and methodologies in addressing these problems\, through a series of conversations between researchers and others mobilising for change around the world. \nThe series includes events convened by the ESRC STEPS Centre (co-hosted by IDS and SPRU\, University of Sussex)\, ARIN (African Research and Impact Network)\, and events in Mexico coordinated by the NGO Umbela Transformaciones Sostenibles\, co-coordinated by LANCIS-IE-UNAM\, and in association with IIMAS-UNAM and the School of Sustainability at Arizona State University (these last three organisations comprise the North America Hub of the STEPS Global Consortium). \nTo be informed of future events\, sign up to the STEPS events e-newsletter. \n\nAbout Methods: OUR THEME FOR 2021\nMany methods offer ways to link knowledge and action for sustainability. But there are intense pressures to close down and narrow the way knowledge is produced and used for instrumental ends. \nWhat methodological assemblages\, frameworks\, tools and associated ways of being could help challenge these pressures\, open up to more perspectives and participation in research\, and allow us to pursue more plural pathways to sustainability? \nFind out more
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/challenging-research-for-sustainability-transdisciplinary-methods-relationships-politics-and-praxis/
CATEGORIES:Research methods
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Nairobi:20210305T143000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Nairobi:20210305T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210226T143501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220411T105032Z
UID:15051-1614954600-1614961800@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Power and Methods (ARIN webinar)
DESCRIPTION:14.30-16.30 (East Africa Time/Nairobi)\n5 March 2021\, online \nSubscribe to our Events newsletter \nDuring 2021\, the African Research and Impact Network (ARIN) are convening a series of events and engagements on Methods. The ARIN events explore the question of Decolonising Methodologies to Sustainability in Africa. \nIn the Global South\, ‘coloniality’ has long been associated with political rule over subordinated countries. Struggles for ‘decoloniality’ have evolved from the undoing of colonial rule to the even more fundamental challenge of freeing knowledge\, practice\, and culture from deeper worldwide concentrations of incumbent power. \nThis webinar\, on 5 March 2021\, focused on how larger theories about methodologies have been applied to engage\, challenge and shift power\, and rein in hierarchical authorities (coloniality) associated with methods in Africa. \nWatch video \n \n  \nClips from the Webinar: \nDr Joel Onyango: Overview of Decolonising Sustainability Research \nKennedy Mbeva reflects on how he has engaged with power and methods. \nDr Laura Pereira: has her work challenged power/reinforced the idea of coloniality over decoloniality \nDr Mathew Mabefam shares his experience on how he creates the space to decolonise through research \nDr Joanes Atela: Why are we talking about decoloniality? \nResson Kantai Duff and Irene Amoke: Conservation\, sustainability and decoloniality – how it looks in practice. \n\nThis event is linked to a series of events entitled Challenging Research\, as part of the STEPS Centre’s theme for 2021: Methods. \n\nAbout the Methods theme\nMany methods offer ways to link knowledge and action for sustainability. But there are intense pressures to close down and narrow the way knowledge is produced and used for instrumental ends. What methodological assemblages\, frameworks\, tools and associated ways of being could help challenge these pressures\, open up to more perspectives and participation in research\, and allow us to pursue more plural pathways to sustainability? \nOur resources on Methods explore the theme through a series of events\, real-life examples and publications. \nFind out more
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/power-and-methods-arin-webinar/
CATEGORIES:Research methods
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/power-and-methods.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Nairobi:20210415T143000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Nairobi:20210415T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210330T090705Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210513T094150Z
UID:15153-1618497000-1618504200@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Valuing Diversity in Methods - ARIN webinar
DESCRIPTION:April 15 @ 2:30 pm – 4:30 pm EAT (East African Time) \nOrganised by Africa Research and Impact Network (ARIN) \n \n\nIn 2021\, the Africa Research and Impact Network (ARIN) and partners (ACTS Kenya\, STEPS Centre UK\, Umbela Transformaciones Sostenibles and the Global Sustainability Hubs)\, are exploring what decoloniality would mean for research methods\, and policy (engagement\, co-creation\, etc) processes globally (with experiences in Africa\, North America\, and the UK). \nThe focus of ARIN in the project is on “Decolonising Methodologies to Sustainability in the Global South”. The project will include seminars\, and a book culminating in methods vignettes and video snippets\, and an invite-only ARIN-ASH Summer School. \nWebinar 3: Valuing Diversity in Methods \nThe third webinar in the series\, focuses on how methods have been used to open-up\, broaden-out\, and let-go. The webinar explored how concrete methods have been applied in different (geographical\, social\, political) settings to demonstrate diversity\, with multiple range inputs\, framings\, and voices. Central to this webinar was drawing on theories to illuminate practical examples and reflections. \n\nThis event is linked to our theme on Methods.
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/valuing-diversity-in-methods-arin-webinar/
CATEGORIES:Research methods
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210615T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210615T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210614T052349Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210614T082620Z
UID:15341-1623751200-1623754800@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:SRI 2021: Showing leadership in sustainability science - Lessons from the Global South and beyond the academy
DESCRIPTION:The upcoming 2021 Sustainability Research & Innovation Congress (SRI) is hosting a session on leadership in sustainability science\, narrowing in on what lessons can be drawn from the Global South. Among the session’s speakers are two STEPS Centre colleagues: D. Parthasarathy\, co project leader of the TAPESTRY Project\, and Joanes Atela of the STEPS Africa Sustainability Hub. \nThe event will commence Tuesday 15 June 10:00 – 11:00 AM GMT +1 / 4:00 – 5:00 AM CT/CDT \nSpeakers:\n\nAnupama Nair\nJoanes Atela\nDeborah Darko\nSylvia Croese\nGladman Thondhlana\nD. Parthasarathy\nSarah Moore\nKatsia Paulavets\n\nSummary\nThis session will facilitate learning from experience in the leadership of international sustainability research from the Global South. \nInternational research initiatives on and for sustainability are multiplying\, in response to the growing recognition of the global\, interconnected nature of the challenges of sustainability. There is simultaneously an increasing demand for sustainability research to be done in collaboration with stakeholders or members of society concerned by specific problems (in configurations called ‘transdisciplinary research’)\, to increase the legitimacy and relevance of the research as well as the likelihood of its eventual uptake into policy and action. \nThese new demands give rise to a number of questions: What are the unique benefits of sustainability research designed and led from the Global South\, and/or with societal stakeholders? What are the experiences of Global South and non-academic researchers with leading roles in international\, transdisciplinary research for sustainability? What have the academic establishment got to learn from the Global South and non-academics about doing research for sustainability? How can research funders avoid inadvertently perpetuating inequalities and inequities in the global science system? \nThe discussion will be kicked off by a representatives of international research teams in two pioneering research programmes of the International Science Council: Leading Integrated Research for Agenda 2030 in Africa (LIRA 2030) and the Transformations to Sustainability (T2S) programme (a joint programme with the Belmont Forum and NORFACE). The audience will be invited to share their own reflections on experiences of leadership or participation in international or national research initiatives. \nThe outcome of the session will be a rich collection of insights and suggestions for models for more progressive and inclusive organization and funding of internationally collaborative science for sustainability. \nVisit the session page
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/sri2021-showing-leadership-in-sustainability-science-lessons-from-the-global-south-and-beyond-the-academy/
CATEGORIES:Governance & policy,Understanding sustainability
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/14.06.2021_00.11.12_REC-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210617T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210617T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210518T090238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210527T040342Z
UID:15295-1623931200-1623934800@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Transformations conference: Transformative Responses to Climate Uncertainties in South Asia
DESCRIPTION:This session is open to registered participants at the Transformations Conference 2021. \nIn this session we present and open for debate experiences and challenges (methodological and conceptual) from carrying out project research on transformation from ‘below’ in marginal environments in South Asia marked by high levels of climate-related uncertainties and where transformative changes are being assembled and co-produced on the ground by hybrid and transformative alliances. \nPresentations: \n\nHans Adam: Arresting Environmental Collapse\, Restoring Resource-based Livelihoods: Transforming Koli Fisherfolk in and with Mumbai\nShilpi Srivastava: Dryland transformations: Reviving pastoralist livelihoods in Kutch\, India\nRanit Chatterjee: Integration of New and future Risks into Transformative Adaptation for Sustainability: Case of Milk Businesses in Kutch\nSynne Movik: Transformation as Praxis: Responding to climate change uncertainties in marginal environments in South Asia\n\nThis session is linked to the TAPESTRY project. \nView the Conference programme
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/transformations-conference-transformative-responses-to-climate-uncertainties-in-south-asia/
CATEGORIES:Climate change & energy,Pastoralism,Understanding sustainability
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210617T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210617T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T204040
CREATED:20210525T031434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220411T104701Z
UID:15306-1623956400-1623960000@steps-centre.org
SUMMARY:Transformations Conference: Theories and Perspectives of Transformations
DESCRIPTION:This session is open to registered participants at the Transformations Conference 2021. \nA live Q&A session with the authors of the presentations in this Interactive Session will take place at the scheduled time. Registered participants can watch the pre-recorded presentations from 7/06/2021 until 31/08/2021. \nSpeakers: \n\nBruce Goldstein\nCristina Costa Salavedra\nNeha Mungekar\nPaulina Aldunce\nAndy Stirling\nRose Cairns\n\nThis session is linked to the STEPS Centre’s theme for 2021: Methods \nView Conference Programme
URL:https://steps-centre.org/event/transformations-conference-theories-and-perspectives-of-transformations/
CATEGORIES:Climate change & energy,Research methods,Understanding sustainability
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://steps-centre.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/change-slider.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR