FALL SERIES 2022
Cultivating ‘Care’ for the Climate: From the Intimate to the Planetary
The current state of ecological, political and public health crises unfolding across the globe calls for a renewed attention to ‘care.’ In their recent ‘Care Manifesto,’ the Care Collective – an interdisciplinary group of scholars – articulate ‘care’ as “a social capacity and activity involving the nurturing of all that is necessary for the welfare and flourishing of life. Above all, to put care centre stage means recognising and embracing our interdependencies (2020).” Our current time demands, they argue, a radical rethinking of ‘care’ and a moral and political recognition of our responsibility to one another, other species, and the Earth.
Faced with the prospect of increasingly unliveable environments, the question of how ‘one ought to live’ (Laidlaw, 2002: 316), is particularly resonant. The turn in the humanities and social sciences to the ‘ethical’ (Fassin 2013; Laidlaw 2002) requires that we move beyond ‘matters of concern’ (Latour 2004) to ‘matters of care’ (Puig de la Bellacasa 2017); it demands of us as scholars (and citizens) to move from states of examination to active practices of care.
This Weather Matters series hopes to explore how the lens of ‘care’ can be useful in bringing forward a ‘relational politics’ (Massey 2005) that acknowledges our interdependent fates and opens the possibility of an alternative ecological contract premised on the flourishing of all life forms.
Read full CFP here
Care in the Concrete: New Soil for the City | By Cymene Howe, Alejandra Osejo-Varona and Keren Reichler
Caring for Country: A Reciprocal Ecology of Care | By Sarah Thomson and Delta Lucille Freedman
Youth at Climate COPs: an Exercise in (suboptimal) Planetary Care? | By Dr. Laura Bullón-Cassis
Lessons from Crossbones Graveyard: a more-than-individuated Ethics of Care | By Hannah Reeves
In Situ Conservation of Native Andean Potatoes, Involution and Care | By Ingrid Hall
The Green and Gold Garden: Growing Gratitude | By Dr. Cynthia Zutter and Ashley Stoltz
Eat for change? Household Food Practices as Caring Practices Facing Climate Change | By Suse Brettin and Dr. Meike Brückner