Call for Proposals: Global Legacies of Anti-Nuclear Activism
International Conference at the University of California, Santa Barbara on April 11-13, 2024
Conveners: Martin Klimke (New York University Abu Dhabi) and Amanda M. Nichols (University of California, Santa Barbara)
ABOUT
The detrimental effects of carbon-based fuel sources,
including and especially their contribution to anthropogenic climate change,
has motivated scientists to develop alternative renewable energy solutions.
Among those, nuclear power has been the most highly contested because of the associated
risks to the health and stability of ecological systems. Many scientists argue
that a carbon-neutral energy future is not feasible without the continued
development of nuclear power technologies.
Anti-nuclear activists, however, have long argued that the
potential associated dangers to the health and stability of ecological systems
make nuclear power an unnecessarily risky response to the global energy crisis.
They have expressed concerns, e.g., about the elevated risks of nuclear
contamination incidents as global sea levels rise and threaten a majority of
the world’s extant nuclear facilities and interim storage sites. Moreover,
activists are increasingly concerned about social and environmental justice
issues and the transgenerational effects of nuclear waste spills and radiation
incidents on both human and ecosystem health and viability.
The nuclear debate raises many complicated questions at the intersection of ethics and technological innovation of our time, including ‘What are the long-term social and environmental justice implications of nuclear technologies when we consider the effects on both human and non-human species?’
THEMES
The conference theme, “Global Legacies of Anti-Nuclear
Activism: Intersectional Perspectives” is a direct invitation to those
scholars working on the following:
- Historical
approaches that shed light on specific movements, individuals, groups,
actions, or research/discoveries that have made significant contributions
to the anti-nuclear movement, especially those from minority perspectives
and/or those with transnational or gender implications, and the reactions
they triggered in society, domestic and international politics, and
regulatory changes;
- Contemporary
approaches (impacted by specific politics of memory) that shape current
understandings and discourses about nuclear technologies and their
critics;
- Illuminating
and minimizing disparity, inequality, and inequity in the research,
development, and utilization of nuclear technologies;
- Inquiries
into the intersection of religion, gender, sexuality, and embodiment with
the construction of scientific and technological forms of knowledge and
the rhetoric of nuclear technologies;
- Ethical
critiques and compatibility of nuclear technologies (including nuclear
weapons, power, waste, and storage) with environmental and social justice,
indigenous rights perspectives, and religious/ethical or
secular/scientific perspectives;
- Public
education and empowerment of individuals and communities with the tools
and resources (e.g., political, social, environmental, economic, etc.)
necessary for protecting themselves and their environments;
- Approaches
that consider the effects of nuclear technologies on non-human species and
ecological and planetary systems;
- Intersections
with capitalism, extractivism, disposability, necropolitics, and
‘throw-away culture’;
- Emerging
nuclear technologies and approaches focused on creating resilient energy
futures based on recent climate science data and public resistance;
- Identifying
and understanding the intersectional effects and social and environmental
justice concerns of global energy transitions;
- Engagement
of nuclear technologies and post-truth technologies (social media,
misinformation, science denial, conspiracy);
- Artistic
expressions and other forms of cultural manifestations of the (anti-)
nuclear discourse, i.e., future visions and worldmaking, nuclear
technologies in science fiction, dystopia, utopia, apocalypticism,
Afro-futurism, Afro-pessimism, and promised, unrealized, and emerging
human and non-human futures;
- Nuclear
technologies and planetary boundaries, especially as they intersect with
matters of race, gender, and social and environmental justice.
We also invite other proposals that fit broadly within the
conference theme.
PROPOSALS
We welcome proposals from scholars working on intersectional
approaches to global anti-nuclear activism in historical and contemporary
perspective across the arts, humanities, sciences, and social sciences for a
multi-day conference and writer’s workshop which will be held at the University
of California, Santa Barbara in April 2024.
Selected participants will submit papers that will be
pre-circulated among participants of a workshop in Santa Barbara, where they
will engage with fellow participants and invited guest speakers and workshop
their contributions for a peer-reviewed edited volume published with a
university press.
TO APPLY
Please submit a 150-word abstract and a 500-1,000 word
proposal via our conference website www.antinuclearactivism.org by
June 15, 2023.
Decisions will be communicated to all applicants by August
31, 2023.
If you have further questions, please contact us at mail@antinuclearactivism.org
Contact Info:
Conveners:
- Martin Klimke (New York
University Abu Dhabi)
- Amanda M. Nichols (University
of California, Santa Barbara)