Flood data from 500 years: Rivers and climate change in Europe
- Published in News
2021 Conference of the International Society for the Study of Religion, Nature, and Culture
February 19-28, 2021
Hosted by Arizona State University
Tempe, Arizona
* Proposals Due: August 24, 2020 *
(Download a pdf version – revised CFP)
This is a year of pandemic, a year of disruption, a year in which struggles for racial and economic justice can no longer be ignored. In that spirit, and in the interest of protecting the health of our members, the ISSRNC is postponing its in-person conference until 2022. In the interim, in partnership with Arizona State University, we will hold a nearly-carbon neutral virtual conference in February 2021. As our first step toward our commitment to low carbon conferences, our 2021 gathering will feature numerous opportunities for networking and informal conversation among our members, in addition to a select group of virtual sessions. We look forward to continuing the networking and informal conversation, along with a full slate of paper sessions, in the full conference in 2022.
For our 2021 conference, the ISSRNC welcomes pre-arranged session proposals from all disciplines that address the intersections of religion, nature, and culture. We are especially interested in engaging questions of relationality: relations between human and other-than-human beings (including animals, spirits, gods, places, etc.), among cultural groups, among academic disciplines, etc. There is no unidimensional way to understand these troubled times: environmental crises are closely linked to social, racial and political inequities, and knowledge about the links between social systems and earth systems science is relevant to work in community organizing. Concepts of the human person as an interdependent element within complex systems of social and ecological relations are challenging the dominant norms in the social sciences and humanities. To meet the challenges we collectively face, we invite and encourage scholarly reflections on integrative, holistic, and radically plural ways of knowing.
Possible paper and panel proposals topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
Proposals and Deadlines
To sustain the kinds of active, thoughtful engagement that make ISSRNC conferences successful, and with hopes of having a full-sized, in-person conference in 2022, our upcoming conference will be smaller and more structured. This means that, with regret, we will not be accepting individual paper proposals for the online conference. We encourage you to use social media—including the ISSRNC Facebook page, the ISSRNC listserv, and the members’ forum on ISSRNC.org—to connect with other scholars and form engaging session collaborations. Additional information and inspiration for online conference participation can be found here:
For this fully online conference, the ISSRNC invites proposals for pre-arranged sessions. We welcome creative proposals for 90 minute sessions (45 minutes of which will be apportioned to any number of speakers and 45 minutes of which will be apportioned for audience participation and discussion). Sessions can feature any number of speakers in any configuration (e.g. traditional three paper panels, multispeaker roundtables, lightning round sessions with abbreviated papers from numerous speakers, debates, documentary shorts, etc.).
Some sessions will consist of pre-recorded presentations with live discussions between presenters and conference attendees. Other sessions will be fully live. All sessions will be recorded and posted online for continued conversation and exchange.
Session proposals will be submitted online. Requested materials include:
Timeline and logistics:
Presenters and session organizers are encouraged to submit their articles for publication, or their sessions for special issues, to the official publication of the ISSRNC, the Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature, and Culture. Further information about the society and journal can be found at www.issrnc.org. Please contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. if you have any questions.
Interested scholars are also encouraged to connect with us via social media:
In this heading we highlight some of the main Portuguese natural parks, valuing their contribution to the environmental heritage outreach.
This month – Montesinho Natural Park (Portugal)
The Montesinho Natural Park is located in the Upper Northeast of Trás-os-Montes, extending through the mountains of Montesinho and Coroa, and covering the northern region of Bragança and Vinhais. The Park's ground presents an altitude landscape, with great horizons and uses conditioned by the climate, with a mainly agricultural profile in the plains and alternating morass and black oak woods. Its classification is justified by the existence of animal populations representative of the Iberian and European fauna, still in relative abundance and stability, including many of the endangered species of Portuguese fauna, as well as a natural vegetation of great importance at national and world level.
More information at https://www.montesinho.com/oparque
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Nesta rubrica destacamos alguns dos principais parques naturais portugueses, valorizando o seu contributo para a divulgação do património ambiental.
Este mês – Parque Natural de Montesinho (Portugal)
O Parque Natural de Montesinho situa-se no Alto Nordeste transmontano, estende-se pelas serras de Montesinho e Coroa, e abarca a parte setentrional dos concelhos de Bragança e Vinhais. O território do Parque oferece uma paisagem de altitude, com grandes horizontes e usos condicionados pelo clima, com um perfil predominantemente agrícola nas zonas mais planas e alternando lameiros e matas de carvalho negral. A sua classificação assenta na existência de populações animais representativas da fauna ibérica e europeia ainda em relativa abundância e estabilidade, incluindo muitas das espécies ameaçadas da fauna portuguesa, bem como uma vegetação natural de grande importância a nível nacional e mundial.
Mais informação em https://www.montesinho.com/oparque.
This month – “What Will He Grow To” or the lessons of past pollution, by José Rafael Soares pdf.EN
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Este mês - “What Will He Grow To” ou as lições da poluição passada, por José Rafael Soares pdf.PT
José Rafael Soares, CICS.NOVA.UMinho - Grupo de Investigação: 3: Cidades, Ambiente e Desenvolvimento Regional
A HoST — Journal of History of Science and Technology é uma revista de acesso aberto com arbitragem científica, disponível em linha, publicada em inglês pela De Gruyter/Sciendo, em resultado de uma parceria de quatro unidades de investigação portuguesas (CIUHCT, CIDEHUS, Instituto de Ciências Sociais, e Instituto de História Contemporânea).
CONTEÚDOS DO NÚMERO 14.1
· Número temático “Standards: Taming Knowledge?”, com introdução pelos editores convidados Javier Ordóñez e Antonio Sánchez aos quatro artigos que o compõem. São estudos de caso que se debruçam sobre questões epistemológicas e institucionais do estabelecimento de standards no período contemporâneo desenvolvidos a partir da história e filosofia da matemática, história e cultura visual da biologia e história e filosofia da ciência e da tecnologia
· Um artigo adicional ao número temático publicado na HoST 13.1 “Before the Silent Spring: Pesticides in Twentieth-Century Europe”
· O artigo da Distinguished Lecture (CIUHCT) de David Pantalony, que discute a importância das colecções de artefactos científicos através da apresentação de exemplos do seu trabalho como Curador no Ingenium – Museu da Ciência e da Tecnologia do Canadá e da sua pesquisa recente noutras colecções (nomeadamente alemãs)
· Um “work in progress” do doutorando Breno Albuquerque B. Borges sobre o seu trabalho em curso, “A New Approach to the Concepts of Conservation to Identify and Evaluate Railway Heritage through Indicators”
· Três recensões de livros