Concept Note:
Slowly but surely, the contemporary world order is shifting – from
the West dominated unipolar order to a multipolar promise with its tilt
towards the Global South, especially Asia. This shift of centre of
geo-political gravity began primarily in the Asian Century and
necessitates a re-ordering of narratives, a re-writing of histories, an
acceptance of non-metropolitan perspectives, and invoking a backwash –
of voices formerly considered residual and irrelevant. . . One of the
formative moments of that hegemony began on a warship in 1941 when
Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt made their Joint Declaration
of “hopes for a better future of the world”, which would provide the
basis for the later Charter of the United Nations in 1945 and its grand
rhetoric of committing to the rights of “all the men in all the lands”.
The New World Order thus created fortified only the Anglo-American
alliance and the hold of imperial and proto-imperial powers that aimed
to rule the world as a post-colonial alibi, the Charter having provided
the legal basis for anticolonial and anti-imperial movements across the
Global South.
Coined in 1969 by Carl Ogelsby who argued that “the North’s dominance
over the global South . . . [has] converged . . . to produce an
intolerable social order” in relation to the Vietnam War, the term
“Global South” gained traction in 1974 with the United Nations
‘Declaration on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order’
and became synonymous with the Third World after the 1980 Brandt report
drew an imaginary line based on GDP per capita. The imaginary of the
Global South has had little to do with physical location and latitude.
India located in the northern hemisphere qualified for the “South” and
Australia and New Zealand located in the southern hemisphere became
honorary recruits to the “North”. While the term Third World went out of
favour post Cold War, the 134 countries strong Global South comprising a
conglomerate of postcolonial countries like India has since grown in
geo-political stature and constitutes today a diverse and distinct
coterie of countries having disparate interests and yet braided by
common motivations and interests, through their diverse identities. It
is such a Global South brand that India and Australia, among other
nations, have recently envisioned and aimed to collaborate in creating,
for instance through the first and second ‘Voice of Global South
Summit’(s) held in January and November 2023 respectively to materialise
the vision of a more equitable and inclusive global economy and
politics, based on sustainable development and economic growth with the
desire to create and sustain a more multipolar world order.
In the Introduction to The Global South Atlantic (2018), Joseph R.
Slaughter and Kerry Bystrom label the Global South as “a geopolitical
region … yet at the same time … also a vision, an ideal or aspiration of
solidarity and interconnection” (04) and a network of “transactions,
and systems of interchange and imagination that have historically
defined the South Atlantic (and that continue to drive its futures) but
are obscured or suppressed by the hegemonic North Atlantic orientation
of knowledge production and the division of disciplines tasked with
producing it” (Slaughter and Bystrom 04). While Nour Dados and Raewyn
Connell believe that the term critiques imperialism, neo-imperialism and
social inequity in a geopolitically divided world, having morphed into a
tool to problematize Eurocentric epistemologies post Industrial
revolution in international activism and academia, the publication of
Kenneth Pomeranz’s The Great Divergence (2000) led to the eruption
of non-Eurocentric literatures that have since aimed to redress the
history of capitalism across geographies.
Environmental colonialism, apparently rooted in positioning the
developing nations at the receiving end of the blame game, seems to
consider the environmental crisis to be an unprecedented phenomenon,
erasing centuries of resource exploitation initiated by the European
merchants and companies who steered the first phase of globalisation or
capitalist expansion of Immanuel Wallerstein’s “world system”. While
indigenous island peoples of oceanic islands like the Canary Islands
faced extinction, Richard Grove contends that forest clearances and
collapse of ecological balances in the Europe-desired “Edenic” islands
like Mauritius and St Helena led to the extinction of the dodo and to
humans becoming denatured. Ironically the exploitative colonial system
also established the first conservation protocols, propagated notions of
sustainability and espoused protection of fragile planetary
island-ecosystems for future generations. The narrative of environmental
colonialism, derived from Pierre Poivre’s theoretical linking of
deforestation in the islands to decline in rainfall and regional climate
change, and germinating from the 1764 Tobago Ordinance, argues that the
“historical lesson to be learned, perhaps, is that … global
environmental well-being is generally an accounting irrelevance.” (Grove
55). Contemporary environmentalism aimed to “save” Africa and bled the
neocolonial colour-characteristic of Western environmentalism.
Thus while settler colonialism has often unequivocally displaced
centuries-old indigenous entanglements with the environment, has the
apparent Western withdrawal post independence in such decolonised nation
spaces mitigated underdevelopment, exploitation and environmental
injustice? Aligned to Anne McClintock’s version of postcolonialism as a
“history of hopes postponed” (92), it is imperative that the
post-colonials find their voices -- not as a mere rejoinder or collage
of write-backs to colonialism but as one which retrieves and espouses
the centuries-old indigenous nous of the planet.
In an era of intersections of contrapuntal relationships between
environment and humans, in which environmental justice paradigms seem
applicable only to indigenous and postcolonial communities who have been
and continue to be dependent on the use/exploitation of vulnerable
environments for their survival, the need of the hour seems to be
enfranchisement of transitional decolonised communities and nations of
the Global South and initiating discourses at global and glocal levels
in the Global South – to “write back” and repudiate the xenophobic,
economic and colonial inequalities often set as templates across
mainstream commercial, governmental and environmental
formulations. Since at least Tom Sawyer’s whitewashing of the fence,
whitewashing of histories and the past have became a favourite pastime
across geographies. But with every onward wave of colonialism from the
Global North and its subsequent whitewashing, a backwash has laid bare
both the reality and barely habitable truths of unsettled, indigenous
and island communities.This conference, scheduled a couple of months
after COP28 (UN Climate Change Conference - United Arab Emirates, 30 Nov
- 12 Dec 2023) aims to look at environmental colonialism, its
afterlives and postcolonials emergent from the Global South, climate
change and race and vulnerability, and explore the backwash.
“Postcolonials” could be thought of as a counter-category to
“universals”. The term “backwash” creates a susurrus – of waste and
residue in the aftermath of the colonial deluge, yet also an attempt to
turn the tide when it comes to alternative imaginings of the future
braiding the planet and its humans, limned sometimes in the
under-acknowledged positions of countries, territories in the Global
South surviving through resilience and adaptive capacity, and the
radical premise of alterity to the regime of “developments”.
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SUB THEMES:
• Climate Colonialism/ Environmental Colonialism
• Representations of Climate Colonialism / Environmental Colonialism in Literature
• Nature and Indigenous Communities
• Global Warming and Beyond
• Us and Climate Change
• Postcolonial Writings responding to Environment and Climate Change
• Global South and the Environment\
• Pollution
• The age of speed, and plastic
• 1.5 Stay Alive
• Propaganda and Denial of Climate Change
• Ecological Consciousness and Climate Change
• Climate Exodus, Climate Refugees
• Climate of Doubt
• Climate Change and Cultural Entropy
• Eco-literacy in the Global South
• Eco-literatures from the Global South
• Climate and Microclimates
• Climate Change and rural communities in the Global South
• Climate Change and grassroots activism
• Climate Blueprint
• Environmental Justice and the Global South
• Environmental Law and Climate Change
• “Backwash” in imagining Environmental Responses
• Climate Change and Ocean Peoples
Highlights of the Conference:
Key Note Address :
Dr Ruth Morgan
Associate Professor & Director, Centre for Environmental History,
School of History, ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences, The
Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
Plenary Address I:
Dr Paul Sharrad
Fellow of the University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia.
Plenary Address II:
Dr Helen Pringle
Associate Professor, School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts,
Design and Architecture, University of New South Wales, Sydney,
Australia.
Call for Papers:
Abstracts (not exceeding 250 words) may be emailed to:
centre_australianstudies@bankurauniv.ac.in
EXTENDED Deadline for sending of abstracts : 26 January, 2024
Selection of abstracts would be conveyed by : 29 January, 2024
Registration Fees: 2000 INR (Indian delegates)
1000 INR (Research Scholars)
500 INR (Postgraduate students)
50 USD (International delegates)
20 USD (International delegates presenting papers via video-link)
Accommodation:
The convenors have received approval of conference support from Indian Council of Social Science Research (ICSSR), Ministry of Education, New Delhi.
Hence, the conference team is happy to provide partial support for
both hotel accommodation (with breakfast & dinner) on a twin-sharing
basis for a stay of 2 nights at Bankura and transport between the
conference venue at Bankura University Main Campus and the hotel, to all
delegates.
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Registration Fees with accommodation:
2000 INR + 800 INR (Indian delegates)
1000 INR + 800 INR (Research Scholars)
If you need accommodation, please contact the conference team beforehand. Please drop a mail here with your requirements:
centre_australianstudies@bankurauniv.ac.in
Publication:
Selected papers will be published in a blind peer-reviewed Edited Volume / Conference proceedings by a reputed publisher.
Chief Patron of the Conference:
Professor Goutam Buddha Sural, Vice Chancellor (Acting), Bankura University
Convenors:
Professor Sarbojit Biswas,
PhD
Jt. Coordinator, Centre for Australian Studies & Head, Department of English, Bankura University, Bankura, WB, India. (sarbojitbiswas@bankurauniv.ac.in)
&
Dr Ipsita
Sengupta
Jt. Coordinator, Centre for Australian Studies &
Associate Professor, Department of English, Bankura University, Bankura,
WB, India. (ipsita444@gmail.com)