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Wednesday, December 4th, 20244:00 PM - 6:00 PM Student Union
UConn@COP Fellows and student Grantees of the Environmental and Social Sustainability Grants program will be presenting their insights on local and global climate issues at the annual Climate Change Cafe. Drop in any time between 4-6pm in SU 304. Refreshments provided. All are welcome.
Select students from ANTH 1010E will also be sharing posters on major climate change topics.
Thursday, December 5th, 20243:30 PM - Austin Building
From hatchet to seed: Grassroots-led intersectional feminist political ecology for transforming tree-based climate action
Hanson Nyantakyi-Frimpong
Department of Geography & the Environment, University of Denver
Abstract
Since its inception over four decades ago, a major shortcoming of political ecology has been its excessive focus on criticisms while offering few direct solutions. Political ecology research that aims at incisive criticism is often called a ‘hatchet,’ while work focusing directly on nurturing possibilities for social change is called ‘seed work.’ Thus far, how to do political ecology seed work has received relatively scant attention in the geographic literature. In this talk, I will highlight one potential way of doing seed work using a grassroots-led intersectional feminist political ecology approach. Drawing empirical material from a shade-grown cocoa and carbon offset project in West Africa, I will demonstrate the power and transformative nature of seed work. I will further reflect on the difficulty of doing political ecology seed work and argue that although it can be time-consuming and stressful, it is needed now more than ever to support ongoing struggles against social and environmental injustices. In addition to grassroots-led action research, this talk will highlight other approaches through which political ecologists have engaged in seed work and from which the field’s newcomers and current practitioners can learn from.
Wednesday, December 4th, 20244:00 PM - 6:00 PM Student Union
UConn@COP Fellows and student Grantees of the Environmental and Social Sustainability Grants program will be presenting their insights on local and global climate issues at the annual Climate Change Cafe. Drop in any time between 4-6pm in SU 304. Refreshments provided. All are welcome.
Select students from ANTH 1010E will also be sharing posters on major climate change topics.
Thursday, December 5th, 20243:30 PM - Austin Building
From hatchet to seed: Grassroots-led intersectional feminist political ecology for transforming tree-based climate action
Hanson Nyantakyi-Frimpong
Department of Geography & the Environment, University of Denver
Abstract
Since its inception over four decades ago, a major shortcoming of political ecology has been its excessive focus on criticisms while offering few direct solutions. Political ecology research that aims at incisive criticism is often called a ‘hatchet,’ while work focusing directly on nurturing possibilities for social change is called ‘seed work.’ Thus far, how to do political ecology seed work has received relatively scant attention in the geographic literature. In this talk, I will highlight one potential way of doing seed work using a grassroots-led intersectional feminist political ecology approach. Drawing empirical material from a shade-grown cocoa and carbon offset project in West Africa, I will demonstrate the power and transformative nature of seed work. I will further reflect on the difficulty of doing political ecology seed work and argue that although it can be time-consuming and stressful, it is needed now more than ever to support ongoing struggles against social and environmental injustices. In addition to grassroots-led action research, this talk will highlight other approaches through which political ecologists have engaged in seed work and from which the field’s newcomers and current practitioners can learn from.