Sessions

Sessions

Beyond crisis/Beyond normal banner

Beyond crisis/Beyond normal

 A social science and humanities conference on sustainability

Organized by NTNU Energy Team Society


   27 and 28 September 2023 |    DIGS (pdf), Trondheim |
   Registration deadline: 15 August

Thematic sessions<a name="thematic"></a>

Thematic sessions

The conference has the following thematic sessions:

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null 11. Anthropology and the New Energy Complex: Critical Infrastructure, Sustainable Futures, War

The Ukraine-Russia war and attendant risks to critical infrastructure, including sabotage of the Nord Stream pipelines create new topics of discussion about sustainable futures and the risks associated with emerging and existing forms of critical energy infrastructure. Contributors to this panel are invited to explore methods, analyses and theories of infrastructure protection and attendant complex systems seen as both open and vulnerable, or that continually falter and are undermined according to their own logics and the logics of war.   

Critical Infrastructure is an assemblage of things that comprise human and non-human components. An electric grid, pipeline, natural gas terminal is part of a complex system composed of physical objects, the operating data and norms and practices for managing them. In other words, the new energy complex consists of both tangible things in a physical space (long-haul fiber optic lines, operation centers that control financial information flows, transmission lines, power plants, gas compressor stations, and so forth) and non-tangible things in a speculative space (promises of infrastructural investments by public and private sectors, the possibility of “nuclear Armageddon”). 

These themes draw attention to questions such as how does infrastructure engage actors in the politics of resource extraction, sustainable futures, but also war and territorial conflict? How does the customizability of infrastructure become key to negotiating security and sovereignty in existing resources spaces and the frontiers? How is infrastructure nested within other regimes such as markets and political aims, or global vulnerability surrounding the perceived abundance, scarcity, sabotage and political-environmental impact of non-renewable resources?  

Organizers

Arthur Mason,  Department of Social Anthropology, NTNU 
Vidar Hepsø, Department of Geoscience and Petroleum, NTNU 

Contact: Arthur Mason


Poster session <a name="poster"></a>

Poster session

The conference will also have an open poster session where participants are invited to present any sustainability related social science and humanities research.  Guidelines for poster and poster presentation (pdf).

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null The Role of Digitalization in Shaping a Sustainable Future for the Built environment

Digitalization in the architecture, engineering, construction, and facility management industry (AEC/FM) has so far seen the introduction and evolution of digital technologies such as Building Information Modeling (BIM) and Digital Twins. However, throughout the years’ such technologies have faced challenges in their effective integration into projects and consequently in their alignment and use in tackling future-oriented targets within the industry such as sustainability and circular economy. Therefore, there is a gap in research on how technologies can evolve to facilitate sustainability within the built environment and its management. The main research question here is what are the industry strategies, frameworks and scenarios that could align digitalization with sustainability transitions? 


Playing, doing, thinking, arguing, working, walking: call for alternative format sessions <a name="alternative"></a>

Playing, doing, thinking, arguing, working, walking: call for alternative format sessions

The conference will also allocate one timeslot for parallel sessions using alternative formats. We welcome workshops, activities, co-creation exercises, innovative discussions, brainstorming formats, and whatever other creative initiatives you can come up with.

Playing, doing, thinking, arguing, working, walking: call for alternative format sessions toggler

Beyond crises/Beyond Normal acknowledges that grappling with the key challenges of our era requires creative engagement beyond standard knowledge production and sharing through academic presentations. We will therefore allocate one timeslot for parallel sessions using alternative formats.

We welcome workshops, activities, co-creation exercises, innovative discussions, brainstorming formats, and whatever other creative initiatives you can come up with. The only condition is that activities should be clearly engaging with or be relevant for researchers working on themes of sustainability, climate change, transitions, and energy from a social science or humanities perspective.

While we are open to any good idea that offers an alternative to the conventional panel of paper presentations, we suggest keeping to the following guidelines:

  • The session should require little or no preparation from the audience/participants. People should be able to decide to join on the spot.
  • The session's success should not depend on the number of participants. Design your session such that it can be successful with 5 persons as well as with 30.
  • Allow for both active and passive participation. Allowing mere spectators is likely to be more inclusive as not everyone may want to be ‘on stage’. At the same time, of course make active participation as attractive as you can.
  • The activity should be concluded in 90 minutes. Also, mind that the venue will not allow for extensive preparation of the rooms.
  • Make clear whether you want this to be an academic exercise, or something that welcomes audience of any kind
  • Have an idea for a side-event, an outdoors event, a field trip, an evening event, or any other activity? Do not hesitate to reach out, and we will happily discuss and help!

Describe your plan for the session in 200-300 words. Also describe specific needs for the session (but bear in mind that anything beyond a conference room with AV equipment might be difficult for us to arrange).

Alternative format sessions

Alternative format sessions

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null Identifying Sustainable Development Goal interlinkages: the case of solar photovoltaics


Date: 28 September
Time: 12.30 - 14.00

This session addresses the indivisible nature of the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) framework and the related knowledge gap on how SDG targets interlink with each other. It examines how SDG targets interact in the context of a specific technology, solar photovoltaics (pv). This will be researched with interdisciplinary focus groups where a workshop (online "board game") on interlinkages in the case of solar pv will be held to identify trade-offs and synergies.

The selected SDG targets for this study (the selection of targets is performed prior to this session) are plotted against each other to discuss the interlinkages between the targets within the focus groups. Here the scale of Nilsson et al. (2016) will be used, where the interlinkages were scored as follows: -3 cancelling, -2 reinforcing, -1 enabling, 0 consistent, +1 enabling, +2 reinforcing and +3 indivisible.

During the session, the participants will be guided through an online board game where they can score the interlinkages and learn more about the SDG targets in the context of the technology. This will give them in depth information on how solar pv directly and indirectly relates to the SDGs (based on a literature review), but will also help them to identify how these direct and indirect linkages in turn relate (i.e. interlink) to other SDGs. 

Organizer

Nikki Luttikhuis, SINTEF Norway

 


Organizing committee

Organizing committee

Contact