On 9-10 November 2018, the Rhode Island School of Design is organizing the Climate Futures, Design and the Just Transition Symposium in Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
At a time when climate politics would seem to be stuck between a state of melancholic paralysis and passive nihilism, mobilizations occurring around just transitions stand as one of the few bright spots on the horizon. Discussions of just transitions are at different stages of development. They come with the usual bundle of issues, problems, controversies and setbacks. But they also come with potential and promise. In a bleak intellectual context, where the converging forces of climate destabilization and authoritarian populism would seem to be shrinking the ecopolitical imaginary to the propositions that we must either prepare for the worst or embrace a technocratic ecomodernist project to decarbonize the status quo, discussions circulating around just transitions are marked by a refreshing level of pragmatic concreteness and even a degree of hope.
Building on two previous meetings held at Brown and Northeastern by the Just Transitions Research Network in 2016 and 2017, this symposium will bring together a range of scholars and activists to map some of the different ways in which the search for just and rapid post-carbon transitions now animates all manner of interventions on the part of labor and climate justice activists, designers, architects, academics and artists and is opening up intersectional spaces across movements fighting for racial and gender justice. The event will explore the political, ideological, aesthetic, cultural and socio-technological barriers that stand in the way of just transitions in both the Global North and Global South.
Panel topics include:
- The Labour of Just Transitions - Class, Race, Gender and Energy Democracy
- Design, Creative Labor and the Just Transition
- Environmental Activism, Social Justice and the Just Transition
- Green Design and Global Supply Chains
- Political Aesthetics and Low Carbon Futures
- Just Transitions, Public Ownership, and Platform Cooperatives
- Long-term Visions: Degrowth? Left Ecomodernism? Decoloniality? Ecosocialism, or beyond?