Turning the Tide 2025: Island Imaginaries and Interdisciplinaries in Climate Change

DATES: June 16-20, 2025
VENUES: University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown and St. Peter’s campuses
CO-HOSTS: University of Prince Edward Island, University of Aruba, Sophia University (Tokyo)

Come Turn the Tide on Prince Edward Island in 2025! This third international conference on Small Island States (SIS) and Subnational Island Jurisdictions (SNIJs) will bring together perspectives from around the world and across disciplines, for the first time in Canada’s smallest subnational island jurisdiction. The conference is, foremost, a way to share stories about climate change in the context of the lived experience of islandness.

Our 2025 conference will build upon its predecessors in Oranjestad, Aruba, and will include both in-person and online components. The Institute of Island Studies, the UNESCO Chair in Island Studies and Sustainability, and the Canadian Centre for Climate Change and Adaptation at the University of Prince Edward Island, as local hosts, look forward to engaging participants in both traditional and non-traditional formats. We also look forward to working once again with our conference co-host, the University of Aruba, and to working for the first time with Sophia University from Tokyo!

Our call for abstracts is now open, until 30th September 2024! 

Call for Abstracts & Submissions

Download the Call for Abstracts: http://projects.upei.ca/unescochair/files/2024/07/Call-for-Proposals_-Turning-the-Tide-2025.pdf

Submit your Abstract: https://forms.gle/bp9zUf7KGcD9oULW7

We invite researchers, practitioners, artists, and communities across disciplines to explore island imaginaries and interdisciplinarities in the context of climate change. Recognizing that climate change is profoundly cultural and that island imaginaries wield discursive power and material effects, we seek insights from different perspectives such as arts, humanities, social sciences, and climate (and other) sciences.

Islands have long evoked imaginative responses that informed the ways they have been conceptualized, researched, represented, colonized, and deployed by Western-scientific-economic interests. With climate change, new island imaginaries are being produced, for example, via data, computer models, visualizations, and dystopic predictions, all of which have material dynamics that forge realities. Islanders have been resisting and critically responding to past and current island imaginaries through research, art, stories, and Indigenous epistemologies. Diverse, decolonizing, and interdisciplinary collaborations that challenge and reconsider how imaginaries and knowledge(s) about islands are produced, valued, disseminated, utilized, and resisted are vital in creating transformative possibilities. Don’t miss the opportunity to present your work at this vibrant and collaborative forum, bringing together island scholars from around the world and across various disciplines. Submit an abstract related to one or more of the sub-themes:

  • Food sovereignty in an era of climate change
  • Ocean health and climate change (ecosystem functionality, terrestrial, ocean, ecotone)
  • Incorporating diverse knowledges in climate change adaptation strategies
  • The importance of health and well-being
  • Material culture: lived experiences of the everyday
  • Climate and social justice
  • Gender and intergenerational framing
  • Environmental law and governance
  • Migration and urbanization
  • Nature-based solutions
  • Climate change communications
  • Climate change education

This conference aims to share stories. We therefore encourage academic papers, panels, roundtables, posters, and non-traditional presentations (e.g., storytelling, interactive sessions, creative) from all disciplines. In addition to scholarly papers, we also invite submissions for:

  • Artist in residence / Poet in residence
  • Creative pieces that engage with the themes
  • Workshops on sharing creative practices (e.g., poetry, art, photography, storytelling)
  • Indigenous practices and workshops
  • Experiential learning activities

We welcome submissions that look at the dynamics of climate change, island imaginaries and the imperative of interdisciplinary research on a case-by-case, island-by-island, or regional basis. All disciplinary perspectives are welcomed, but they must engage with notions of the lived experience of islandness. We are also keen to engage with presentations that adopt a more comparative framework or methodology in their critical analysis.

Abstracts of around 150-200 words each are invited on any of the above themes. Although this is primarily an in-person event, we will accommodate those who choose not to travel with a parallel stream made available to participants online. Please indicate in the Abstract Submission Form if you prefer this mode of delivery. Registration fees will be adjusted accordingly.

Download the Call for Abstracts: http://projects.upei.ca/unescochair/files/2024/07/Call-for-Proposals_-Turning-the-Tide-2025.pdf

Submit your Abstract: https://forms.gle/bp9zUf7KGcD9oULW7

Registration

More information coming soon!

Travel & Accommodations

More information coming soon!

Speakers

More information coming soon!

Schedule & Book of Abstracts

More information coming soon!

Partners & Sponsors

More information coming soon!

Volunteer

More information coming soon!

Contact Us

For more information, please contact Ms. Pooja Kumar, Coordinator for the Institute of Island Studies/UNESCO Chair in Island Studies and Sustainability at the University of Prince Edward Island (turningthetide2025@gmail.com).

Turning the Tide: Climate Change, Social Change, and Islandness

This is the webpage for the 2023 conference, for information on the 2025 Conference in Prince Edward Island, click here.

The Second International Conference on Small Island States and Subnational Island Jurisdictions

DATE: October 23rd-26th, 2023
LOCATION: University of Aruba, Oranjestad, Aruba
CO-HOSTED BY: The University of Aruba and the University of Prince Edward Island, Canada

REGISTERKEYNOTE SPEAKERS | TRAVEL AND ACCOMMODATIONS | PROGRAM | BOOK OF ABSTRACTS


Islands are at the front lines of climate change. With close proximity to the oceans, they are often the first to experience land loss due to sea-level rise and erosion, the often catastrophic effects of extreme weather events, and the life-changing effects of changes in seasonality and temperature change on land and in the ocean.

But what of social change on islands brought about by climate change? How are the effects of climate change impacting on islandness?

This transdisciplinary conference sets out to explore the theme of climate change and social
change on islands through various sub-themes listed below.
● Food sovereignty
● Ocean health: ecosystem functionality (terrestrial, ocean, and the ecotone)
● Diverse knowledges
● Health and well-being
● Material culture: lived experiences of the everyday
● Climate and social justice
● Methods: contextualising in context
● Changing livelihoods
● Gender and intergenerational framing
● Environmental law and governance

We want to share stories. We encourage academic papers, panels, roundtables, posters, and non-traditional presentations (e.g., storytelling, interactive sessions, creative) from all disciplines, and we welcome submissions that look at the dynamics of climate change and social change on a case-by-case, island-by-island, or regional basis. All disciplinary perspectives are welcomed, but they must engage with notions of the lived experience of islandness. We are also keen to engage with presentations that adopt a more comparative framework or methodology in their critical analysis.


Call for Papers

Abstract Submission Form [Submissions closed February 28th, 2023]


For more information, please contact

turningthetide2023@gmail.com


UNIVERSITY OF ARUBA
Dr. Eric Mijts, Coordinator, University of Aruba Research Center
eric.mijts@ua.aw
Ms. Kristen Haime, Coordinator, Center for Lifelong Learning, University of Aruba
kristen.haime@ua.aw


PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
Dr. Laurie Brinklow, Chair, Institute of Island Studies, University of Prince Edward Island
brinklow@upei.ca
Dr. Jean Mitchell, UNESCO Chair in Island Studies and Sustainability, University of Prince Edward Island
mjmitchell@upei.ca
Ms. Megan MacDonald, Communications,  Institute of Island Studies, University of Prince Edward Island
megmacdonal2@upei.ca


Supported by the UNESCO Co-Chairs in Island Studies and Sustainability,
and the Institute of Island Studies at the University of Prince Edward Island
and
The University of Aruba