Sub-theme 17: Markets inside the Ecological Revolution
Call for Papers
At the time this subtheme abstract was being drafted, burning kerosene for academic purposes (e.g. getting to this conference
by plane) was still considered okay. Perhaps this is not the case anymore in the summer of 2011. We are waiting for a revolution
that is already happening, a truly global revolution, a revolution of people and things, a revolution of the earth, a revolution
that ought to affect the way democracy operates, the way business is done, the way innovation is considered and the way daily
life gets organized. In particular, this thing that we call the "market economy" will be put to the test by the ecological
revolution, perhaps violently.
Within the ecological revolution "shifting assemblies" and "shifting assemblages"
intermingle together. The organizing dynamics associated with markets inside the ecological revolution thus posits itself
as a most suitable topic for organizational inquiry and as a fine occasion for productive discussion in this colloquium. Assemblages
do shift as new experiments, new products, new actors, new value metrics, new institutions and new instruments struggle to
come into existence. The idea of "markets" is considered here in the wide sense of multiple, collective arrangements for economic
exchange and valuation. The notion of "ecological revolution" does also encompass an open variety of areas: climate change,
energy, green technology, natural resources, pollutants, food industry and agriculture, transportation, etc.
Researchers are called upon to think through these exceptional transformations in assemblages and shifts in agencies. Multiple
social-scientific perspectives are possible, and are all most welcome. But one thing is rather clear: as the ecological revolution
keeps on making it explicit, the materiality of collective existence cannot go unnoticed anymore within the social sciences.
Inquiry into human institutions and cognitive practices is to include, at its core, an examination of the material assemblages
that organize and disorganize them. Emphasis is put on case studies and empirical investigation, not on purely theoretical
disquisitions. Contributors are also expected to be familiar with discussions on the topic of "organizing markets" in economic
sociology, in new institutionalism, in science and technology studies, in innovation economics or in organization studies
at large.
How does the ecological revolution affect uncertainty in valuation? How is the value and the cost of
a new technology demonstrated? Is there something wrong with current value metrics? How is political concernment instilled
into markets? Is ecological militancy compatible with corporate interests? Is green consumer conduct a suitable object for
economic engineering? Are there viable experiments for a massive internalization of externalities? Do economic incentives
make sense as ecological devices? Is it the right time for liberalization? Is the ecological revolution an accounting revolution?
Is it a trading revolution? Can technological lock-in hold as a fair excuse against a political transformation of markets?
What are the costs of change, and how are they calculated? How are market problems and market solutions framed in the ecological
revolution? These and similar questions will be tackled through in-depth discussion of submitted contributions.