Call for Papers:
Risk and Africa – Conceptualizing risk in the context of contemporary
Africa, International Symposium
27-29 November 2008, Bayreuth, Germany
Deadline for Abstracts: 30 June 2008
The relationship between risk and modernity has stimulated controversial
debates about the changing nature of risk and the dynamics of
contemporary society. While it is acknowledged that modern society,
through technological development, has been successful in using risk to
improve livelihoods, there is also widespread consensus over the costs
of such improvements in the form of ecological degradation, industrial
hazards and exaggerated societal expectations. Therefore, even though
the general assumption is that modern society has been largely
successful in dealing with risk it is still felt that the future of
modern societies depends on their ability to identify and adopt suitable
approaches to manage risk, deal with uncertainty and develop pathways
towards sustainability. However, it is important to note that the
current debate on the concepts of risk and "risk society" is heavily
skewed in favour of European historical experience.
By distinguishing between concepts of risk in modern to late-modern
societies and those in the rest of the world the debate drives a perhaps
unintended and possibly unwarranted epistemological wedge between North
and South. In other words, the debate would seem to suggest that the
concept of risk refers to fundamentally different empirical and
epistemological objects: "Here" we talk about manufactured technological
risks, environmental awareness and the social construction of risk as
symptoms of reflexive modernity. "There" the focus is on vulnerability,
natural hazards and coping strategies in the context of state failure,
desintegrating markets and (more or less) pre-modern societies. However,
this wedge can be questioned on two accounts. Firstly, increasing
awareness of technological hazards, pollution and climate change,
especially in urban Africa, as well as the introduction of new forms of
insurance and the restructuring of civil society are just some of the
recent developments that appear to invite us to be sceptical of
prevailing notions of risk and their (ir)relevance to and in Africa.
Secondly, the conceptualization of risk in Africa – just as in any
other parts of the South – cannot be done in isolation, for there is a
sense in which the success or failure of attempts at dealing with risk
elsewhere inheres with Africa. In other words, issues concerning uneven
development, increased economic exchange and cooperation as well as
environmental and developmental discourses need to be addressed in an
increasingly globalising world.
In exploring news ways of conceptualising risk in Africa the symposium
will seek to address the challenge of making theoretical and
methodological advances in risk research relevant to an understanding of
processes of social change in the continent. Contributions are invited
which explore this relevance in different fields (social, political,
environmental, etc.) and from different perspectives (geography,
sociology, economy, social anthropology, ecology, etc.). Research-based
contributions are particularly welcome, including studies of cases from
outside of the African continent for comparisons.
Papers are invited on one or several of the following topics:
Theories of risk and their relevance to the African context
Risk as a catalyst of social transformation
Risk, resilience and sustainability
Risk perception and communication
Risk, governance and power
Risk and environmental change in Africa
Development and risk production
Risk and uncertainty
A post-conference publication of selected papers is planned.
Organisers
The Symposium is organised by ZENEB, the Centre for Natural Risks and
Development. ZENEB is based at the Department of Population and Social
Geography
http://www.uni-bayreuth.de/departments/sozialgeographie/index.html at
the University of Bayreuth and serves as a social science oriented
research network on risks and disasters in developing countries.
The main objectives of ZENEB are: (i) to implement, promote and support
research in order to acquire scientific knowledge on disaster prevention
and disaster coping in developing countries, (ii) to link scientists
that do research in the field of disasters and development, (iii) to
provide an overview on German and international risk and disaster
related research in developing countries with a regional focus on
Africa, (iv) to advance innovative methods of integrated analysis of the
interactions between complex natural and social systems under the impact
of extreme events.
ZENEB will try to provide financial support for selected presenters from
Africa.
Download PDF:
Call for Papers: Risk in Africa
Deadline for abstracts: (up to 600 words): 30 June 2008.
Acceptance notifications will be emailed by mid July.
Further information and application:
Website:
http://www.zeneb.uni-bayreuth.de
Organizers:
Lena Bloemertz
Martin Doevenspeck
Elisio Macamo
Detlef Mueller-Mahn