Congress of the European Society for Rural Sociology: Call for Contributions
October 18, 2006.
Call for Contributions:
XXII"d Congress of the European Society for Rural Sociology; Wageningen, 20-24
August 2007, Mobilities, Vulnerabilities and Sustainabilities: New questions and
challenges for rural' Europe
Working group 2: "'Negotiating sustainabilities - reshaping the sciences-rural society
relationships through transdisciplinary research and collective learning processes"
Convenor: Dr. Stephan Rist, National Centre of Competence in Research (NCCR)
North-South, Centre for Development and Environment (CDE), Bern, Switzerland
Starting point are present internal and external transformations within and outside rural
spaces relating to the paradoxities of modernity in rural spaces: Due to
industrialization, urbanization and globalization of food production the historically grown
centrality of rural Europe is nowadays definitively transformed into marginality. The
manifold attempts to 'modernise' rural spaces and life through the application of
scientifically validated knowledge that has been operationalised through policies
related to rural development has -contradictorily - not led to reconnect the 'lagging
behind' rural societies with modernity. This 'development betrayed' (Noorgaard, 1994)
led to a reorientation of rural actors and their urban alliances which instead of aiming at
further perfectionising unsustainable pathways of rural development, started to
mobilize social and cultural capitals e.g. expressed in the manifold new social
movements related to organic agriculture, rural tourism, non-capitalist 'new' uroral
economies, defence of local autonomy, areas free of GMO's or communities declaring
themselves free of GATT.
In this process the science-rural society relationship is undergoing profound
transformations too. Conventional approaches of science-based rural development
instead of being the only 'true source' of knowledge is increasingly recognised as part
of the problem. Consequently the actors of rural societies are increasingly
emancipating from the science, expert and top-down policy makers. This gives new
and more space for the revitalization and further development of 'local forms of
knowledge' and ways of validation based an endogenous views of men, society and
nature. Transdisciplinary science aims to relate to these tendencies by radically
changing its attitudes, epistemologies and methodologies: Instead of representing the
'objective source' of knowledge transdisciplinarity understands itself as an external
resource for the enhancement of endogenous development aiming to support the
creation of new and broader spaces for collective learning processes within and
outside of the new rural social movements that aim for regaining agency in
'development from within'. As a consequence, scientific knowledge production is
replaced by a societal co-production of knowledge.
The shift from conventional to transdisciplinary approaches of co-production of
knowledge cannot be made by the scientific community alone. It can only be made in
close dialogue and cooperation with other related non-scientific actors and an the
basis of an intra- and interontological dialogue between different actors representing
different forms of knowledge. This can be conceived of as a collective learning process
aiming to reshape the present science-rural society relationships. The work group
would therefore focus an the following: discussion of experiences and pathways for
reshaping present science-rural society; relationships considering the principles of
sustainable development, vulnerability and mobility; analysis of internally and externally
enabling and hindering factors related to the emergence of collective learning
processes through transdisciplinary research and action
Offers of papers, including a title and abstract (maximum 300-400 words) should be
sent by email to;, Stephan Rist at stephan.rist@cde.unibe.ch by 15 November 2006.