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title | date | host | duration |
---|---|---|---|
What is the temporality of climate change activism | 2018-04-19T16:00:00+00:00 | University of Leeds | 7776000 |
I'm really pleased to be contributing to this forum on Religion and Climate Change Adaptation at the University of Leeds (Hillary Place G.18, University of leeds) on Thursday 19 April 2018 from 2-5pm.
My paper/presentation will be titled "What is the temporality of climate change activism - some reflections on place attachment and the politics of nostalgia"
Here's the official blurb including my own preentation:
Thursday 19 April 2018, 2-5pm
Venue: Hillary Place G.18, University of leeds
The role of religions in shaping public responses to climate change today should be taken seriously by civil society and policy makers. This is true for the question of how to adapt to a warming world as much as it is for how to prevent it. But the complexities and diverse interpretations of both those phenomena (religion and climate change) mean that the answers are far from simple, or unified. In this research panel we will hear from three scholars working on different aspects of religion and climate change, with the aim of provoking and deepening the public debate.
Dr Evan Berry (Philosophy and Religious Studies, American University) will report from a project exploring the complexity of the relationship between religion and the environment. Diverse global case studies will both highlight possibilities of synergy, and remind us of how religious commitments can also run at cross purposes to ecological sustainability.
Dr Jeremy Kidwell (Christian Ethics, Birmingham University) will present work in progress on the temporality of (climate) activism. Exploring in particular the power of place, attachment and ‘nostalgia’, and combining social scientific and philosophical research with years of field work in the UK climate activism scene.
Dr Stefan Skrimshire (Theology and Religious Studies, University of Leeds) will present some work in progress on religion and the ‘sixth mass extinction’. He will explore Christian approaches to mortality and immortality as a critique of the politics of extinction: that is, attempts to globally manage, engineer, and master death and life in response to climate change.
Panel presentations will be followed by responses from two members of CRPL: Professor Emma Tomalin (Religions and Global Development, University of Leeds) and Dr Rachel Muers (Christian Studies, University of Leeds), before opening up to discussion.