Eurograd message

Message posted on 16/12/2024

CfP workshop on algorithmic carbon governance

Dear all,

Sophia Maalsen (The University of Sydney, Australia) and Sung-Yueh Perng (National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, Taiwan) are organising a workshop entitled Algorithmic carbon governance: Climate, computation, cities and beyond in April, 2025. We invite you to send in an abstract if you are working on related topics and interested in writing up your work as part of a special issue or an edited book. The workshop will be on 10 and 11 April 2025 in Sydney with remote participation possibilities. Please see below for further details.

Call for paper

Seminar title Algorithmic Carbon governance: Climate, Computation, Cities and beyond

Seminar rationale Cities, accounting for over 70% of global emissions, have begun to set decarbonisation goals and policies, with smart technology positioned as a key enabler. In Australia, the Federal Government’s 2022 Long-Term Emissions Reduction Plan firmly focuses on technology, with the “Technology Investment Roadmap” being central to the plan (DCCEEW 2021). In Sydney, the Resilient Sydney Platform has been tasked with ‘measuring and reporting on environmental performance’ and ‘supports more strategic and evidence-based planning and decision making’. Among Asian cities, Tokyo, much like the central government, published a comprehensive plan in 2019 to outline its aims and strategies for reducing emissions and the adoption of AI and IoTs to facilitate carbon reduction. Taipei published its white paper on Taipei’s net zero actions, including using intelligent technologies in architecture, public transportation and traffic management. As illustrated, climate actions now rely on innovation powered by artificial intelligence (AI) and high computing capabilities to know, plan and facilitate carbon reduction measures, or ‘algorithmic decarbonisation’.

However, amidst government strategies and science and engineering research that feature ‘computing for net zero’ (The Royal Society, 2020), there is a clear need to unpick techno-solutionist approaches that can produce negative consequences at both local and global scales. As Crawford (2021) demonstrates, data and digital technologies can be harmful, have unintended consequences or maintain and amplify structural inequalities. Further, the process of digitalisation itself is highly extractive and resource intensive, relying heavily on rare earth minerals, and requiring significant energy to run associated technologies and cloud computing infrastructures.

There is also an implicit assumption that technological innovation and social innovation sit in separate domains and therefore can be planned and pursued independently. But technology has long been known as sites of political struggles and contestations. Neglecting the politics of digital innovation and its entanglement with urban, environmental and political processes can severely jeopardise transition progresses. Additionally, a just decarbonisation is crucial, but justice is differently perceived, articulated and enacted in different urban, environmental, economic and cultural conditions, leading to pressing questions concerning how non-western perspectives and experiences can be recognised.

This seminar invites participants to examine the potential impact of algorithmic decarbonisation on our cities, regions and states. As a site of both global emission generation and decarbonisation, cities are at the centre of climate response. But as highlighted above algorithmic decarbonisation is complex and produces environmental, social, and political implications. Contributions are therefore invited to consider the practices, knowledges, imaginaries and infrastructures; critically reflect upon the mode of governance that enrols algorithms and computational processes; and explore how algorithmic decarbonisation has led to reconfigurations of human and nonhuman lives in different places.

The seminar will be an in-person event on 10 and 11 April 2025 in Sydney. The accommodation cost for one night will be covered by the Henry Halloran Research Trust, The University of Sydney. A special issue or a book proposal will be developed based on the contributions of the event. We particularly encourage contributors from the Global South and emerging scholars to express their interests. A timeline for submission and special issue proposal is detailed below.

Timeline: Abstract deadline (300 words): 17 January 2025 Notification of acceptance: 3 February 2025 Draft (4000 words) deadline: 22 March 2025 Special issue / book proposal: June 2025

If you are interested and would like to discuss your ideas about developing an abstract, or have other questions, please do not hesitate to contact Sophia Maalsen (sophia.maalsen@sydney.edu.au) and Sung-Yueh Perng ( syperng@nycu.edu.tw).

We look forward to hearing from you.

Best wishes, Sophia and Sung-Yueh


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