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C-URGE curated panel at EASA: Citizen Science and Eco-Ethnography - Call for Papers


C-URGE doctoral candidates will present at the 18th biannual conference of the European Association of Social Anthropologists (EASA), taking place in Poznań, 21–24 July 2026, at a panel curated to englobe our research purpose and methodologies. Discover our panel below, the call for papers is now open.



As climate change intensifies and public trust in science becomes increasingly fractured, anthropologists are experimenting with new methods to engage more directly with socioecological realities and public concerns. We invite ethnographic papers that critically reflect on the promises, pitfalls, and practicalities of citizen science and eco-ethnography as innovative approaches within anthropology.
“Citizen science”, even though difficult to define (see Hackley et al. 2020), refers mainly to the involvement of volunteers (“citizens”) in scientific research that benefit both society and the environment. Citizen science thus opens up inquiry to lay participants, creating spaces for collaboration, knowledge production, and public engagement. Eco-ethnography (Grace-McCaskey et al. 2019), then, is a method that enriches citizen science through ethnographic insights — fostering collaboration, contextual depth, and recognition of cultural and ecological dynamics in environmental research and practice. It foregrounds entanglements of human and more-than-human worlds, offering a methodological shift that seeks to decenter the human while remaining grounded in ethnographic attentiveness. Both approaches challenge conventional boundaries—between researcher and researched, expert and layperson, human and environment.

We seek contributions that explore how these methods are adapted, resisted, or transformed in practice. What kinds of relationships, data, and ethical dilemmas emerge in eco-ethnographic or citizen science projects? How do these approaches navigate the tensions between scientific authority and embodied situated knowledge, or between academic critique and public relevance? Can they help anthropology respond to societal polarization by fostering more inclusive and dialogical forms of knowledge-making?


We welcome papers that:

• Reflect on successes, failures, and adaptations of eco-ethnographic and/or citizen science methods;

• Explore how these approaches reshape fieldwork, analysis, and anthropological writing;

• Consider their potential to bridge divides between academia and the public, or between polarized communities;

• Engage with the political and epistemological stakes of doing anthropology in a time of climate urgency.



Convenors:

• Katrien Pype (KU Leuven University)

• Mara Benadusi (University of Catania, Department of Political and Social Sciences)

• Susann Baez Ullberg (Uppsala University)

• Asta Vonderau (Martin-Luther University, Halle-Wittenberg)



The call for papers is now open. PO55: Citizen Science and Eco-Ethnography:

Please check the procedures for submission here: https://easaonline.org/easa-conference/easa2026/call-for-papers/



 
 
 

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Anthropology of Global Climate Urgency

is a Marie Skłodowska–Curie Actions Doctoral Network (101073542 – C-Urge HORIZON – MSCA – 2021 – DN) ​funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or Horizon Europe. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.

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