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Posts by Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

The first Earth Day in 1970 had many inspirations – Rachel Carson’s compelling Silent Spring, antiwar student movements across the US, and the devastation of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill – but one photo is often credited with the emergence of a new global environmental consciousness in the late 1960s. Earthrise was snapped by astronaut Bill Anders as the Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited the moon, and it depicts a blue and white planet floating in the blackness of space. While it highlights earth’s vulnerability to environmental destruction, the picture also showed us a different vision of ourselves. As Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman reflected, “We were the first humans to see the world in its majestic totality… this must be what God sees.”

In this Earth Day keynote, Joanne Yao explores the abstracted view of earth from above as an integrated whole and the politics of a whole humanity that this God-like view engendered. From this position, the 1968 moment becomes the culmination of a longer quest to know the earth in its entirety through scientific exploration into the unknown, which was often entangled with histories of colonialism and racialized and gendered exclusions. 

The keynote will explore the utopian imaginaries this view of earth inspired in how humans could rise above parochial interests to unite as one against the cold nothingness of space, but it also traces the silences and erasures that enabled what Donna Haraway calls the “god trick of seeing everything from nowhere.”

The first Earth Day in 1970 had many inspirations – Rachel Carson’s compelling Silent Spring, antiwar student movements across the US, and the devastation of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill – but one photo is often credited with the emergence of a new global environmental consciousness in the late 1960s. Earthrise was snapped by astronaut Bill Anders as the Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited the moon, and it depicts a blue and white planet floating in the blackness of space. While it highlights earth’s vulnerability to environmental destruction, the picture also showed us a different vision of ourselves. As Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman reflected, “We were the first humans to see the world in its majestic totality… this must be what God sees.” In this Earth Day keynote, Joanne Yao explores the abstracted view of earth from above as an integrated whole and the politics of a whole humanity that this God-like view engendered. From this position, the 1968 moment becomes the culmination of a longer quest to know the earth in its entirety through scientific exploration into the unknown, which was often entangled with histories of colonialism and racialized and gendered exclusions. The keynote will explore the utopian imaginaries this view of earth inspired in how humans could rise above parochial interests to unite as one against the cold nothingness of space, but it also traces the silences and erasures that enabled what Donna Haraway calls the “god trick of seeing everything from nowhere.”

The Earthrise photo

The Earthrise photo

Tomorrow!! 'Earthrise' and the politics of seeing everything from nowhere, an Earth Day keynote from Joanne Yao (QMUL)

11am-12.30pm BST, online and free

Make sure you register!

www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

1 day ago 7 5 1 0

@mybisa.bsky.social @notesnthemargin.bsky.social @ebonyyoung.bsky.social @paulinesophieh.bsky.social @psaenvironmental.bsky.social @environmentalpol.bsky.social

1 day ago 0 0 0 0
The first Earth Day in 1970 had many inspirations – Rachel Carson’s compelling Silent Spring, antiwar student movements across the US, and the devastation of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill – but one photo is often credited with the emergence of a new global environmental consciousness in the late 1960s. Earthrise was snapped by astronaut Bill Anders as the Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited the moon, and it depicts a blue and white planet floating in the blackness of space. While it highlights earth’s vulnerability to environmental destruction, the picture also showed us a different vision of ourselves. As Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman reflected, “We were the first humans to see the world in its majestic totality… this must be what God sees.”

In this Earth Day keynote, Joanne Yao explores the abstracted view of earth from above as an integrated whole and the politics of a whole humanity that this God-like view engendered. From this position, the 1968 moment becomes the culmination of a longer quest to know the earth in its entirety through scientific exploration into the unknown, which was often entangled with histories of colonialism and racialized and gendered exclusions. 

The keynote will explore the utopian imaginaries this view of earth inspired in how humans could rise above parochial interests to unite as one against the cold nothingness of space, but it also traces the silences and erasures that enabled what Donna Haraway calls the “god trick of seeing everything from nowhere.”

The first Earth Day in 1970 had many inspirations – Rachel Carson’s compelling Silent Spring, antiwar student movements across the US, and the devastation of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill – but one photo is often credited with the emergence of a new global environmental consciousness in the late 1960s. Earthrise was snapped by astronaut Bill Anders as the Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited the moon, and it depicts a blue and white planet floating in the blackness of space. While it highlights earth’s vulnerability to environmental destruction, the picture also showed us a different vision of ourselves. As Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman reflected, “We were the first humans to see the world in its majestic totality… this must be what God sees.” In this Earth Day keynote, Joanne Yao explores the abstracted view of earth from above as an integrated whole and the politics of a whole humanity that this God-like view engendered. From this position, the 1968 moment becomes the culmination of a longer quest to know the earth in its entirety through scientific exploration into the unknown, which was often entangled with histories of colonialism and racialized and gendered exclusions. The keynote will explore the utopian imaginaries this view of earth inspired in how humans could rise above parochial interests to unite as one against the cold nothingness of space, but it also traces the silences and erasures that enabled what Donna Haraway calls the “god trick of seeing everything from nowhere.”

The Earthrise photo

The Earthrise photo

Tomorrow!! 'Earthrise' and the politics of seeing everything from nowhere, an Earth Day keynote from Joanne Yao (QMUL)

11am-12.30pm BST, online and free

Make sure you register!

www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

1 day ago 7 5 1 0
Preview
Spotlight on: Chris Saltmarsh- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

Hear from Chris Saltmarsh in our new Spotlight blog, up on the site now! Chris is a PhD candidate in political economy at University of Sheffield, where he researches the climate movement and energy transition.

www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

2 days ago 1 3 0 0
Preview
Spotlight on: Chris Saltmarsh- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

Hear from Chris Saltmarsh in our new Spotlight blog, up on the site now! Chris is a PhD candidate in political economy at University of Sheffield, where he researches the climate movement and energy transition.

www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

2 days ago 1 3 0 0
the Earthrise photo

the Earthrise photo

The first Earth Day in 1970 had many inspirations – Rachel Carson’s compelling Silent Spring, antiwar student movements across the US, and the devastation of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill – but one photo is often credited with the emergence of a new global environmental consciousness in the late 1960s. Earthrise was snapped by astronaut Bill Anders as the Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited the moon, and it depicts a blue and white planet floating in the blackness of space. While it highlights earth’s vulnerability to environmental destruction, the picture also showed us a different vision of ourselves. As Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman reflected, “We were the first humans to see the world in its majestic totality… this must be what God sees.”

In this Earth Day keynote, Joanne Yao explores the abstracted view of earth from above as an integrated whole and the politics of a whole humanity that this God-like view engendered. From this position, the 1968 moment becomes the culmination of a longer quest to know the earth in its entirety through scientific exploration into the unknown, which was often entangled with histories of colonialism and racialized and gendered exclusions. 

The keynote will explore the utopian imaginaries this view of earth inspired in how humans could rise above parochial interests to unite as one against the cold nothingness of space, but it also traces the silences and erasures that enabled what Donna Haraway calls the “god trick of seeing everything from nowhere.”

The first Earth Day in 1970 had many inspirations – Rachel Carson’s compelling Silent Spring, antiwar student movements across the US, and the devastation of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill – but one photo is often credited with the emergence of a new global environmental consciousness in the late 1960s. Earthrise was snapped by astronaut Bill Anders as the Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited the moon, and it depicts a blue and white planet floating in the blackness of space. While it highlights earth’s vulnerability to environmental destruction, the picture also showed us a different vision of ourselves. As Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman reflected, “We were the first humans to see the world in its majestic totality… this must be what God sees.” In this Earth Day keynote, Joanne Yao explores the abstracted view of earth from above as an integrated whole and the politics of a whole humanity that this God-like view engendered. From this position, the 1968 moment becomes the culmination of a longer quest to know the earth in its entirety through scientific exploration into the unknown, which was often entangled with histories of colonialism and racialized and gendered exclusions. The keynote will explore the utopian imaginaries this view of earth inspired in how humans could rise above parochial interests to unite as one against the cold nothingness of space, but it also traces the silences and erasures that enabled what Donna Haraway calls the “god trick of seeing everything from nowhere.”

A week today!

Earth Day keynote from Joanne Yao: The parts and the whole: 'Earthrise' and the politics of seeing everything from nowhere.

22 April, 11am-12.30pm BST, online.

Make sure you register!

@mybisa.bsky.social

www.bisa.ac.uk/events/parts...

1 week ago 4 4 1 0
Global Methane Politics Project opportunity - Global Methane Politics at the University of Leeds

📣 Fully-funded PhD position on Methane Politics on the ERC funded METHPOL project @ Leeds Uni w/Prof Jan Selby. Open to home (UK) applicants (international studentships have been filled) to start October 2026. Deadline 22 April. #ClimateChange.
Full details ⬇️ phd.leeds.ac.uk/funding/427-...

1 week ago 2 8 1 2

@notesnthemargin.bsky.social @ebonyyoung.bsky.social @ctmcateer.bsky.social @environmentalpol.bsky.social @psaenvironmental.bsky.social

1 week ago 0 0 0 0
the Earthrise photo

the Earthrise photo

The first Earth Day in 1970 had many inspirations – Rachel Carson’s compelling Silent Spring, antiwar student movements across the US, and the devastation of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill – but one photo is often credited with the emergence of a new global environmental consciousness in the late 1960s. Earthrise was snapped by astronaut Bill Anders as the Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited the moon, and it depicts a blue and white planet floating in the blackness of space. While it highlights earth’s vulnerability to environmental destruction, the picture also showed us a different vision of ourselves. As Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman reflected, “We were the first humans to see the world in its majestic totality… this must be what God sees.”

In this Earth Day keynote, Joanne Yao explores the abstracted view of earth from above as an integrated whole and the politics of a whole humanity that this God-like view engendered. From this position, the 1968 moment becomes the culmination of a longer quest to know the earth in its entirety through scientific exploration into the unknown, which was often entangled with histories of colonialism and racialized and gendered exclusions. 

The keynote will explore the utopian imaginaries this view of earth inspired in how humans could rise above parochial interests to unite as one against the cold nothingness of space, but it also traces the silences and erasures that enabled what Donna Haraway calls the “god trick of seeing everything from nowhere.”

The first Earth Day in 1970 had many inspirations – Rachel Carson’s compelling Silent Spring, antiwar student movements across the US, and the devastation of the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill – but one photo is often credited with the emergence of a new global environmental consciousness in the late 1960s. Earthrise was snapped by astronaut Bill Anders as the Apollo 8 spacecraft orbited the moon, and it depicts a blue and white planet floating in the blackness of space. While it highlights earth’s vulnerability to environmental destruction, the picture also showed us a different vision of ourselves. As Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman reflected, “We were the first humans to see the world in its majestic totality… this must be what God sees.” In this Earth Day keynote, Joanne Yao explores the abstracted view of earth from above as an integrated whole and the politics of a whole humanity that this God-like view engendered. From this position, the 1968 moment becomes the culmination of a longer quest to know the earth in its entirety through scientific exploration into the unknown, which was often entangled with histories of colonialism and racialized and gendered exclusions. The keynote will explore the utopian imaginaries this view of earth inspired in how humans could rise above parochial interests to unite as one against the cold nothingness of space, but it also traces the silences and erasures that enabled what Donna Haraway calls the “god trick of seeing everything from nowhere.”

A week today!

Earth Day keynote from Joanne Yao: The parts and the whole: 'Earthrise' and the politics of seeing everything from nowhere.

22 April, 11am-12.30pm BST, online.

Make sure you register!

@mybisa.bsky.social

www.bisa.ac.uk/events/parts...

1 week ago 4 4 1 0
Preview
Leaning into this difficult political moment for climate mitigation- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

New blog!

Leaning into this difficult political moment for climate mitigation by Caroline Kuzemko / @cisk.bsky.social

In this blog, Caroline talks us through the arguments of her new book, 'Climate Politics: Can’t live with it, can’t mitigate without it'.

www.bisa.ac.uk/articles/lea...

1 week ago 2 4 1 0
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@mybisa.bsky.social @notesnthemargin.bsky.social @ebonyyoung.bsky.social @ckweatherill.bsky.social

1 week ago 0 0 0 0
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Leaning into this difficult political moment for climate mitigation- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

New blog!

Leaning into this difficult political moment for climate mitigation by Caroline Kuzemko / @cisk.bsky.social

In this blog, Caroline talks us through the arguments of her new book, 'Climate Politics: Can’t live with it, can’t mitigate without it'.

www.bisa.ac.uk/articles/lea...

1 week ago 2 4 1 0

Tell you what, this event is feeling very timely.

2 weeks ago 1 1 0 0
the 'earthrise' photo that's referenced in the title of the talk - taken from the perspective of the moon, earth looks small and fragile in the darkness of space

the 'earthrise' photo that's referenced in the title of the talk - taken from the perspective of the moon, earth looks small and fragile in the darkness of space

New event! 'The parts and the whole: 'Earthrise' and the politics of seeing everything from nowhere', an Earth Day keynote from Joanne Yao.

22nd April, online, 11am-12.30pm UK.

Register here: www.bisa.ac.uk/events/parts...

@mybisa.bsky.social @ebonyyoung.bsky.social @notesnthemargin.bsky.social

4 weeks ago 6 7 1 1
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The parts and the whole: 'Earthrise' and the politics of seeing everything from nowhere - Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

Hm, try this? We aren't currently planning to record it but we could look into it.

www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

4 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
the 'earthrise' photo that's referenced in the title of the talk - taken from the perspective of the moon, earth looks small and fragile in the darkness of space

the 'earthrise' photo that's referenced in the title of the talk - taken from the perspective of the moon, earth looks small and fragile in the darkness of space

New event! 'The parts and the whole: 'Earthrise' and the politics of seeing everything from nowhere', an Earth Day keynote from Joanne Yao.

22nd April, online, 11am-12.30pm UK.

Register here: www.bisa.ac.uk/events/parts...

@mybisa.bsky.social @ebonyyoung.bsky.social @notesnthemargin.bsky.social

4 weeks ago 6 7 1 1
Preview
Spotlight on: Mir Wafa Rasheeq- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

New Spotlight blog! Featuring PhD candidate @wafarasheeq.bsky.social, who researches the factors driving environmental degradation in Kashmir.

To hear more about Wafa's work, and some recommended sources on environmental politics in South Asia, check it out here: www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

1 month ago 0 4 1 0
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Save the date!

Our Earth Day event this year will be a keynote from Joanne Yao, Reader in International Relations at Queen Mary (QMUL).

22nd April, 11am - 12.30pm.

Registration details to follow!

@mybisa.bsky.social @ebonyyoung.bsky.social @notesnthemargin.bsky.social

1 month ago 4 5 0 0

@mybisa.bsky.social @ckweatherill.bsky.social @notesnthemargin.bsky.social @ctmcateer.bsky.social @ebonyyoung.bsky.social @paulinesophieh.bsky.social

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
Preview
Spotlight on: Mir Wafa Rasheeq- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

New Spotlight blog! Featuring PhD candidate @wafarasheeq.bsky.social, who researches the factors driving environmental degradation in Kashmir.

To hear more about Wafa's work, and some recommended sources on environmental politics in South Asia, check it out here: www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

1 month ago 0 4 1 0

Save the date!

Our Earth Day event this year will be a keynote from Joanne Yao, Reader in International Relations at Queen Mary (QMUL).

22nd April, 11am - 12.30pm.

Registration details to follow!

@mybisa.bsky.social @ebonyyoung.bsky.social @notesnthemargin.bsky.social

1 month ago 4 5 0 0
Preview
New Books Network podcast - African Climate Futures- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

We have another episode of the New Books Network podcast! @mybisa.bsky.social

In this podcast, Carl Death discusses his book African Climate Futures with @paulinesophieh.bsky.social. Give it a listen!

www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

1 month ago 2 3 0 0
Preview
New Books Network podcast - African Climate Futures- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

We have another episode of the New Books Network podcast! @mybisa.bsky.social

In this podcast, Carl Death discusses his book African Climate Futures with @paulinesophieh.bsky.social. Give it a listen!

www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

1 month ago 2 3 0 0
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Multispecies Mutualisms - Join Our Research Team! We’re hiring 4 Postdoctoral Research Associates (PDRAs) In this video, members of the team share insights into four exciting PDRA opportunities currently available. If you are ready to take the next s...

1/ Calling all ECRS - we have 4x 3 year post docs on Multispecies Mutualisms working with us at Sheffield. Don't want to read through all the stuff to work out if its right for you? Here is a short video explainer 🎥
digitalmedia.sheffield.ac.uk/media/Multis...

1 month ago 38 27 2 5
Close-up of a transparent hourglass with white sand flowing from the upper to the lower chamber against a dark background.

Close-up of a transparent hourglass with white sand flowing from the upper to the lower chamber against a dark background.

🚨 The registration deadline for #BISA2026 is MONDAY 🚨

'Is International Studies ready for what comes next? New thinking, new directions': looking ahead to the next 50 years 🌟

Register now 👉 https://ow.ly/m6SU50YmPIP

Simon Rushton @julietdryden.bsky.social VisitBrighton Juanita Elias

1 month ago 1 4 0 0
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Deadline to register is Monday - 2nd March!

1 month ago 2 0 0 0

@mybisa.bsky.social @ckweatherill.bsky.social @notesnthemargin.bsky.social @paulinesophieh.bsky.social @ctmcateer.bsky.social

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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Spotlight on: Margarida Gama- Environment and Climate Politics | BISA - Environment and Climate Politics Working Group

New Spotlight blog is up on the site! Hear from PhD researcher Margarida Gama about her work on water weaponisation 💧

Check it out here: www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

1 month ago 2 2 1 0
Idyllic forest scene with a clear river flowing under a summer sky.

Idyllic forest scene with a clear river flowing under a summer sky.

Overlooked dimensions: Emotions in environmental movements and green politics 🌍

New article with Environment and Climate Politics Working Group & Efser Rana Coşkun exploring why emotions matter in environmental movements and ideas from her new book? 🌳

Full article here 👉 https://ow.ly/Wk9550Y4H7n

2 months ago 2 2 0 0
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Environment and Climate Politics The new Environment and Climate Politics Working Group is a group that encompasses all research and researchers who share a commitment and concern for tackling questions of environment and climate pol...

Did you know you can now be a member of as many @mybisa.bsky.social working groups as you like?

If you're a BISA member, consider joining us to get our monthly update emails about events / blogs and news from the community.

www.bisa.ac.uk/members/work...

2 months ago 2 1 0 0