Climate (Emergency Mobilities) | CEMORE /cemore Mobilities Research Sat, 14 Mar 2026 11:58:27 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /cemore/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/cemore_icon_RGB-02-150x150.png Climate (Emergency Mobilities) | CEMORE /cemore 32 32 Jeremy Rifkin – Planet Aqua recording /cemore/jeremy-rifkin-planet-aqua-recording/ Thu, 26 Feb 2026 11:56:29 +0000 /cemore/?p=10604 On February 26th 2026, CeMoRe hosted the 10th Anniversary John Urry Lecture online, delivered by ‘visionary’ thinker and policy consultant, Jeremy Rifkin.  Jeremy presented on his latest book, Planet Aqua: Rethinking Our Home in the Universe (2024), while also weaving in arguments from his 22 bestselling books (translated into more than 35 languages) about the impact of scientific and technological changes on the economy, the workforce, society, and the environment.  The event was opened by ̽̽App’s Vice Chancellor, Professor Steve Decent, and Jeremy’s talk was followed by a Q&A that was opened with comments from Professor Bron Szerszynski.

We are delighted to share a recording of this event. Please note that the recording began a short a couple of minutes into the proceedings, and so the video starts mid-way through Prof Decent’s opening remarks.

A summary of the book is provided below and :

“What would happen if we suddenly realized that the planet we live on appeared eerily alien, as if we’d been teleported to some other distant world? That frightening prospect is now. Our planetary hydrosphere, which animates all life on Earth, is rebelling in the wake of a global warming climate, unleashing blockbuster winter snows, biblical spring floods, devastating summer droughts, heatwaves and wildfires and deadly autumn hurricanes, wreaking havoc on ecosystems, infrastructure, and society. While fossil fuels lit the fuse, it’s the hydrosphere that’s ringing the death knell.

&Բ;Planet Aqua, Jeremy Rifkin argues that we have misjudged the very nature of our existence and to what we owe our lifeline. We have long believed that we live on a land planet when in reality we live on a water planet, and now the Earth’s hydrosphere is taking us into a mass extinction as it searches for a new normal.”

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John Urry Lecture 2026 – Jeremy Rifkin on ‘Planet Aqua’ /cemore/john-urry-lecture-2026-jeremy-rifkin-on-planet-aqua/ Tue, 27 Jan 2026 11:53:50 +0000 /cemore/?p=10549 The Annual John Urry Lecture was established to commemorate the life and work of one of Lancaster’s foremost researchers, leading sociologist and co-founder of the ‘mobilities paradigm’, following his untimely death in March 2016.

Please join us online on Thursday 26th February, 2026, for the 10th Anniversary John Urry Lecture, which will be delivered by leading global thinker Jeremy Rifkin. 

Jeremy will present his latest ground-breaking book, ‘Planet Aqua’, in which he argues that we have misjudged the very nature of our existence. We have long believed that we live on a land planet when in reality we live on a water planet, and now the Earth’s hydrosphere is taking us into a mass extinction as it searches for a new normal.

Six thousand years ago, urban hydraulic civilizations began to arise around the world. Today we find ourselves, amidst that legacy, trapped in a massive commercial juggernaut of hydropower superdams, artificial lakes, reservoirs, and ubiquitous water infrastructure that’s collapsing in the throes of a rewilding hydrosphere.

The great reset, says Rifkin, is rethinking the waters as a “life source” rather than a “resource” and learning how to adapt to the hydrosphere rather than adapting the hydrosphere to us. Rifkin takes us into a new future where we will need to reassess every aspect of the way we live – how we engage nature, pursue science, govern society, conceptualize economic life, educate our children, and even orient ourselves in time and space on our water planet: Planet Aqua.

The event is free but please .

The event will start at 4.30pm (GMT/11.30am EST)

Date

Thursday 26 February 2026 4:30 PM – 6:30 PM (UTC+00)

Location

Online event access details will be provided by the event organiser

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Seaweed Mobilities Day /cemore/seaweed-mobilities-day/ Thu, 08 Jan 2026 22:41:54 +0000 /cemore/?p=10524 Seaweed Mobilities Day was an invited event that brought together 18 people to explore seaweed mobilities and to imagine ways that we could work together in the future. The project was a network building collaboration between the School of Arts and Centre for Mobilities Research at Lancaster University, with  and funded by AHRC Impact Acceleration.

November 14th 2025 was wet and windy. We met in a car park on Walney Island near Barrow and then gathered on the beach in an area where honeycomb worms have built structures that mussels, cowries, and seaweeds have settled in.  The experts amongst us pointed out the variety of seaweeds there. At 11am an eerie siren sounded, the nearby BAE Systems testing their ‘Public Nuclear Safety Alert’. We paused to consider other potential environmental alerts. On our way out we noticed a piece of a sargassum that is invasive in the UK and a small Kelp with holdfast knotted with fishing line and epiphytes.

The afternoon was hosted at Art Gene in Barrow and began with Lynne Pearce introducing mobilities research and how it is relevant to seaweed, Jen Southern’s tour of photographs of the Morecambe Bay seaweeds and the infrastructures they grow on, followed by an illuminating Q&A with Michele Stanley, a seaweed expert from the Scottish Association for Marine Science.

5 artists shared their rich as diverse works with seaweed: Amy Dickson, Jamie Jenkinson, Debbie Yare, Miranda Hill and Maddi Nicholson. They invited us to eat seaweed picked around this coast and consider its proximity to nuclear power stations; to watch films of dancing porphyra; to observe how quickly seaweed anchors on newly introduced rocks in a tidal zone; and invoke the rights of seaweed alongside the rights of water. At the end of the day we collaboratively wrote a seaweed mobilities manifesto as a record of our thoughts and conversations.

Themes included the resilience of seaweed, and its vulnerability to climate change. The mobilities within its own life cycle, how its spores anchor on substrate, and how it is mobile around the world through shipping and as food. We honoured the history of women working with seaweeds, particularly Kathleen Drew Baker known as the ‘Mother of the Ocean’, whose research led to a renewal of Japanese commercial seaweed production.

‘… there is so much exciting work being done on and with seaweed. I already knew it was super important in an ecological point of view, but seeing it through each others eyes and the way people are working with it, really installs some hope. The sense that seaweed isn’t just a resource but a storyteller. Hearing marine scientists and artists side-by-side helped me realise mobility, currents, tides, migration, shapes every strand of it. That connection between science and creativity has stayed with me.’ (participant feedback)

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CeMoRe Summer Symposium 2025: Making Connections /cemore/cemore-summer-symposium-2025-making-connections/ Mon, 14 Jul 2025 16:19:21 +0000 /cemore/?p=10462

20 June 2025

On an exceedingly hot Friday in June, colleagues from near and far gathered together in the Charles Carter Building at ̽̽App for CeMoRe’s Summer Symposium:  a regular fixture in the CeMoRe diary for several years now.

With a new director — Jen Southern  – at the helm, this was originally conceived as an ‘in house’ event: an opportunity to reach out to  colleagues whose work may speak to mobilities research, either directly or indirectly  (hence the decision to simply title the event  ‘Making Connections’).  Given Jen’s own interests, the CfP nevertheless indicated a particular interest in creativity /  mobile methods and the ‘more-than-human’: suggestions which was taken up in several of the papers (see website for a full list of abstracts and speaker bios).

 As it turned out, the Symposium evolved into a much larger — and decidedly extra-mural — event than we had originally intended  owing to the coincidence  of several visitors to the Centre at this time. Jason Finch ( Abo Akademi, Turku, Finland) was here as a Visiting Scholar; Kate Moles (Cardiff) had been examining a mobilities-related PhD in Sociology the previous day;  and Lucia Quaquarelli and Adrien Frenay (Paris Nanterre, France) were in Lancaster as  invited guests following CeMoRe’s reciprocal participation in a CRPM seminar in Paris  last November.

These visitors were given the opportunity to present longer-form papers at the start of the afternoon (although Kate Moles regrettably had to withdraw at the last minute due to illness) and — as ever — it was inspiring to hear about mobilities research (and mobilities communities) elsewhere in the world.

The rest of the afternoon was divided into  two ‘7 x 5’ panels (i.e., 14 speakers speaking for 5 minutes each), which one of our online participants likened to speed-dating!  In the time-honoured tradition of  CeMoRe’s  lunchtime ‘stand-up’ sessions initiated by  former director, Monika Buscher, speakers were strictly bound to the five-minute rule courtesy of a squawking cockerel alarm on Jen Southern’s phone. This  resulted in an exhilarating showcase of contemporary mobilities-related research from across multiple disciplines, and with variable agendas. I did, nevertheless, spot a  recurrent concern with the power of discourse and the imagination to  shape our mobility futures —  for better and  for worse.  Although this event was not recorded, the abstracts and bios are archived on the CeMoRe website which means that readers can share in our quick-fire ‘festival of ideas’ (and contact the speakers) if they so wish.

Many thanks to everyone who participated in this  event — both in-person and online — and especially those (aside from the visitors mentioned above) who made the effort to travel to Lancaster for this memorable day.  In these exceedingly challenging times for Higher Education in the UK,  it was heartening to see colleagues still finding the time to engage in the research and creative practice that they love and taking  inspiration from the mobilities paradigm.

Lynne Pearce

CeMoRe Co-Director (Humanities)

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Cemore Summer Symposium: Making Connections /cemore/cemore-summer-symposium-making-connections/ Sun, 15 Jun 2025 15:15:47 +0000 /cemore/?p=10449 Join us for the Cemore Summer Symposium 2025!

Please register here for tickets for online and in person attendance:

An opportunity to get together with mobilities researchers from Lancaster and further afield, to share our research, celebrate success, and maybe spark some new collaborations. 

We look forward to welcoming guest mobilities researchers Lucia Quaquarelli and Adrien Frenay from Université Paris Nanterre, France; Jason Finch, Åbo Akademi University, Finland; and Kate Moles, Cardiff University, UK. 

If you can’t make it to Lancaster please join us online to hear this exciting range of quick fire presentations sharing new mobilities reserch!

Symposium Schedule

Charles Carter Building, Room A15, ̽̽App.

12  – 1pm Sandwich Lunch

1pm Welcome – Jen Southern

1.10 Panel

Lucia Quaquarelli and Adrien Frenay (Université Paris Nanterre, France)
Shaping space in literary mobilities. “Espace, Déplacement, Mobilité”: inter-weaving narratives, space, and place from the perspective of mobility. A CRPM’s Research Project

Jason Finch (Åbo Akademi University, Finland)
Musical Railway Representations via Mobile Methods: Louis Jordan, James Brown, and YouTube

Kate Moles (Cardiff University, UK)
Swimming in Compromised Times and Places

2pm 7 x 5 minute presentations

Lynne Pearce: The Road that Keeps on Giving

Muren Zhang:  Driving into the Impasse: Affective Adjustment and Backward Hope in Never Let Me Go (East China Normal University)

David Tyfield: A Chinese-inspired Civilisational Turn: E-Mobility’s Uneven Remaking of Space-Time and Beyond

Gerry Davies & Sait Toprak: Migrations, a mail art exhibition

Giovanni Bettini: Climate Borderscapes – borders, (im)mobilization and justice in the climate emergency

Bruce Bennett, Maryam Ghorbankarimi, Emma Rose: Site-seeing: making films with refugees

Nicola Spurling: Follow the Auto/biography

2.50 short break with tea/coffee

3.10pm 7 x 5 minute presentations

Monika Buscher: Changing Mobilities

Colin Pooley:  Approaches to the study of past virtual mobility

Artist A & Artist B: Hauling with Intent

Xiao Geng: The Writing of Plant Mobility in 20th-Century British Literature

Rodanthi Tzanelli: Environmental imaginaria in the age of extinction: three biostyles of radical mobility

Serena Pollastri, Suzana Ilic : Doing research with water and sands: reflections on engaging with the fluidity of coastal environments.

Jen Southern: More-than-human mobilities and infrastructures

Abstracts

1pm Panel

Lucia Quaquarelli, Adrien Frenay

Université Paris Nanterre

Shaping space in literary mobilities. “Espace, Déplacement, Mobilité”: inter-weaving narratives, space, and place from the perspective of mobility. A CRPM’s Research Project

The presentation will introduce the international project «Espace, déplacement, mobilité», supported by the research centre CRPM-Centre de Recherches Pluridisciplinaires et Multilingues at the University Paris Nanterre, which aims to explore the relationship between space (urban and non-urban) and narratives through a transdisciplinary approach and from a mobility perspective. Two ongoing research strands within the project will then be presented: one focusing on a recent Italian literary corpus of « narrazioni mobili » and the other dealing with mobilities as literary tools and functions in the 19th century French novel.

Jason Finch

Åbo Akademi University, Finland 

Musical Railway Representations via Mobile Methods: Louis Jordan, James Brown, and YouTube 

Heard on the move via a smart phone, music originally recorded in the mid-twentieth century can be reinterpreted in novel ways that contain elements of co-production. My talk examines this activity using research frameworks drawn from mobility humanities, urban cultural studies and the history of media. In a recent conference paper developed as part of the ongoing research project ‘Twentieth-Century Railway Imaginations: Building the Mobility and Infrastructural Humanities’ (RAILIMAGE), I considered the media and technological landscape of the period from the end of the Second World War until the mid-1960s, when this music was created and within which it was first consumed. In that environment, the dominant recording medium was the vinyl record. Popular music then was consumed at home using physical recordings such as records playing at 78, 45 and 33⅓ rpm, but also, through the juke box, in public places, as well as being heard perhaps more than in any other way over the airwaves via the radio. At the end of the period, in the United States, television in particular markets and as syndicated coast to coast becomes a factor. While the earlier paper concentrated on two pieces of music, ‘Choo Choo Ch’Boogie’ and ‘Night Train’, using critical infrastructure studies to put them into dialogue with the crisis of passenger rail which America experienced during the postwar decades, my talk in Lancaster will instead consider media production and consumption in the broadcast era (1940s–1970s) alongside the methodological and social affordances of current (2020s) technology. 

Kate Moles

Cardiff University, UK

Swimming in Compromised Times and Places 

Abstract: Water allows us to think about and with mobility; it ebbs and flows, runs and seeps, collects and disperses, evaporates and pools, erodes and deposits. Access to water – to drink, for sanitation, and for leisure – offers ways to see social inequalities and to think about interconnections, vulnerability and complexities. More specifically, water moves us to consider environmental and non-human assemblages and swimming, as a method and as a social practice, provides insight into how movement, and blocked movement, invites us to think about the world today and the world becoming. Swimmers immerse themselves in polluted, risky, grey, brown, green waters as well as the blue idyllic that is often portrayed. Making sense of their practice and their accounts of where they swim and why, allows us to consider how we might go about swimming ethically in shifting and compromised times and places. 

2pm  7 x 5 minute Presentations

Lynne Pearce 

Department of English Literature and Creative Writing, Cemore Co-Director, ̽̽App.

The Road that Keeps on Giving 

Even the most mundane of roads, and roadscapes, delivers a wealth of knowledge aside from the ‘system of automobility’ (Dennis and Urry 2009) in which it is enmeshed. The linear space of the road – and the fact it is often (though not invariably) apprehended from a moving vehicle and at speed — gives rise to transient and hence unique configurations of human and non-human forces. These afford novel insights into how, inter alia, road-users of different kinds orient themselves in space and time (including memory) via idiosyncratic landmarks, form powerful but paradoxical attachments to vanishing places, and participate in the production of everyday kin/aesthetics. Most importantly of all, the road demonstrates how change manifests itself in familiar and notionally unremarkable environments as well as the mechanisms by which change becomes visible. This is a snapshot of some of the topics addressed in my forthcoming book — Britain’s Changing Roadscapes: Mobility, Place, Attachment, Loss —  which I shall expand upon in this brief presentation, together with some signposts to where my road research is heading next: for example, a case-study capturing how roads — and the experience of driving them — are dramatically impacted upon by weather, including the consequence of climate change. 

Muren Zhang

East China Normal University

Driving into the Impasse: Affective Adjustment and Backward Hope in Never Let Me Go 

In Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go (2005), driving does not mark the possibility of freedom or forward movement. Kathy’s driving, often unmoored from destination or urgency, enacts a form of affective adjustment rather than escape. What unfolds is not a linear progression, but a spatial and temporal impasse – movement that suspends transformation while sustaining attachment to what has already been lost. Mobility in this context does not open the future; it manages the present. Drawing on Lauren Berlant’s account of impasse and Heather Love’s concept of backward hope, I read this mode of mobility as part of the novel’s affective biopolitical logic: not a refusal of the system, but a technique of staying within it. 

Dr Muren Zhang is Associate Professor of English Literature at East China Normal University. Her research interests include affect theory, mobility studies and contemporary British Literature and Culture. She is the author of Neo-Victorianism, Empathy and Reading (Bloomsbury, 2022). 

David Tyfield

Lancaster Environment Centre, Cemore Associate Director, ̽̽App

A Chinese-inspired Civilisational Turn: E-Mobility’s Uneven Remaking of Space-Time and Beyond

Gerry Davies & Sait Toprak

Lancaster Institute for Contemporary Arts, ̽̽App / Dokuz Eylül University, Izmir, Turkey

Migrations, a mail art exhibition

The exhibition invited artists to respond to the following theme, submitted by post in 2025: Movement and mobility are features of developed organisms, they are also means by which creatures, including we, orientate ourselves in and across the world. Today people and populations shift and change location for opportunity or leave under pressure. Archaeology tells us that pre-history saw radiating flows from Africa toward new lives East and West. And our futures will be rich with new Migration. While there remain few migratory peoples today, the migratory movement of critters, of birds, land animals and sea creatures continue.  Migrations mysterious and essential, large and small: wildebeest move for pasture, zooplankton up for food and down for safety, but sand dunes migrating, who knew? Artists are migrants. We live, move, work, communicate and trade within flows of migrating information. Geographically and digitally our ideas and work travel. In the street, on the kitchen table or a screen, in the studio or workshop, we encounter each other. You are coming the other way with something new; I take it up, pass it on. Whether actual or virtual, migrants exchange, collaborate and offer aid, ideas and support through shared mobility and movement. We offer the idea of Migrations freely and in the plural. Interpret it as human, animal, mineral, biological, geographic, gendered, geologic, spiritual or cultural. The effect might be close or far, the scale, visibility and impact global, local or microscopic.

Giovanni Bettini

Lancaster Environment Centre, Cemore Associate Director, ̽̽App.

Climate Borderscapes – borders, (im)mobilization and justice in the climate emergency

This intervention introduces the notion of ‘climate borderscapes’, which brings work on borderscapes (Mezzadra and Neilson 2013, Brambilla and Jones 2019, Krichker 2021, Peña 2023) into dialogue with the emerging climate mobilities framework (Boas et al 2022). The concept of climate borderscapes recasts the focus of debates on climate migration away from the spectre of a feared ‘climate exodus’. Instead, it foregrounds more pressing questions on how climate change may intersect with current processes of borderization (Mbembe 2019) and expulsion (Sassen). The risk is an intensification of forms of forced mobilisation and immobilization – often mirroring racialised lines – to which growing segments of the Majority World are exposed. The notion of climate borderscapes offers insights into the territorialization of sovereignty, borders, justice, and political subjectivities amidst the ongoing climate emergency, opening space to challenge dominant regimes and proposing alternative visions.

Bruce Bennett, Maryam Ghorbankarimi, Emma Rose

Lancaster Institute for Contemporary Arts, ̽̽App.

Site-seeing: making films with refugees 

This presentation discusses a film-making course we ran in Spring 2023 and then again in 2024 for asylum seekers residing in the local area. Working in groups under our supervision, the participants devised, shot and edited a set of short films, and at the end of the course they presented their films on stage at the local independent cinema to a public audience. 

Many of the participants had been transported to temporary housing in Lancaster and Morecambe in Northwest England through the Home Office National Dispersal Scheme while their asylum claims were being processed, some only a few weeks previously, and so one of the functions of this course was to allow them to investigate their new home (however temporary it would prove to be). 

In this presentation we outline the principles behind the design of this participatory project, discuss the work produced by the filmmakers, and reflect upon its effectiveness. 

Nicola Spurling

Sociology Department, Cemore Associate Director, ̽̽App.

Follow the Auto/biography

3pm 7 x 5 minute Presentations

Monika Buscher 

Emeritus Professor, Sociology Department & Cemore, ̽̽App

Changing Mobilities 

Why is it so hard to change mobility systems even as natural, political, and social systems are collapsing? What can we do? These questions are at the heart of a book I have co-authored with Greg Marsden, due out in 2025. In this presentation I give a glimpse of our research and conclusions. Many analysts suggest a crisis of imagination, and it can, indeed, seem easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. But we find that there is nothing natural about this, it is a crisis manufactured by powerful people and interests. Part of their strategy is suppression of a vibrant world where alternative mobilities are not just imagined but made real against huge odds. We argue that mobile methods can help infrastructure resistance and allow these alternatives to take hold and spread. 

Colin Pooley

Emeritus Professor, Lancaster Environment Centre & Cemore, ̽̽App 

Approaches to the study of past virtual mobility. 

Virtual mobility is usually associated with the internet age and the rise of social media. It is a term often applied to distance learning, but can also apply to any media through which people make connections and learn about distant places. My research has been using a large collection of letters written by a young lady in Toronto to her pen friend in north Lancashire. They began corresponding in 1946 and continued until 2013. Pen pal correspondence was common in the mid-twentieth century and the Toronto correspondents wrote to at least 40 different pen pals scattered all over the globe. Through these she made connections, swapped personal information and learned about distant places and cultures. Letters were not the only way in which virtual mobility took place in the past, but I argue that they could provide a dense network of interaction long before the internet age. 

Artist A & Artist B

University of Central Lancashire / Independent Artist

Artist A & Artist B: Hauling with Intent

‘Artist A & Artist B’ is the collaborative name for Dr Jackie Haynes and Dr Heather Mullender-Ross. Since 2020 they have developed a series of multimedia, performance-based and mobilised artforms under the project title ‘Statement of Intent’. Their respective art practice-based PhDs focussed on the German Dada artist, Kurt Schwitters, and the wider legacy and contemporary relevance of Merz, Dada and Fluxus. They are currently working on a 7” vinyl recording of shanty songs reflecting on their project (A-Side) and the working terms and conditions of the contemporary artist (B-Side). The forthcoming songs, accompanying exhibition and live event will inform a co-written book chapter fuelled by the creative exchanges and collaborative strategies of Raoul Hausmann and Kurt Schwitters, during their period of enforced exile. Both Statement of Intent and the book chapter seek to illuminate the work of both sets of collaborators by asking, what forms of art practice can articulate ideas arising from persistence, non-fixity and the pooling of skills and ideas?  

Xiao Geng

College of Foreign Languages, South-Central Minzu University 
Visiting Professor, Faculty of English, University of Cambridge 

The Writing of Plant Mobility in 20th-Century British Literature 

This paper explores the concept of botanical mobility in British literature, examining how plants—both literal and symbolic—traverse geographical, cultural, and metaphorical boundaries across key literary works. Focusing on texts from the Romantic era to postcolonial narratives, the study analyzes how authors such as John Keats, D. H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf, etc employ botanical imagery to interrogate themes of colonialism, ecological interconnectedness, and human displacement. By tracing the movement of plants as symbols of migration, hybridity, and resilience, the essay reveals how flora in literature often mirrors socio-political dynamics. Drawing on ecocritical and postcolonial frameworks, the paper argues that botanical mobility serves as a narrative device to critique power structures and envision ecological solidarity. Ultimately, it contends that British literature’s engagement with plant life transcends mere pastoral aesthetics, offering a radical reimagining of nature’s role in shaping identity and resistance. 

Rodanthi Tzanelli

School of Sociology & Social Policy, University of Leeds, UK 

Environmental imaginaria in the age of extinction: three biostyles of radical mobility 

Abstract: Environmental imaginaria is my own umbrella term, as featured in my last monograph, which explored different schools of critical thought, travel style and artistic creativity addressing planetary crises, and especially those triggered by climate catastrophes (Tzanelli, 2025). It refers to multiple sites, physical, virtual and audiovisual, which preserve traces of actual and imagined species and habitats extinct or at risk of extinction. The spectrality of these sites is conducive to imaginaries of loss, ecocide but also hope and hospitality extended to more-than-human life.  

Rather than discussing the sites themselves, I focus on three styles of human mobility enacted in and through them, each of them corresponding to the moving subject’s radical habitus: posthuman countertravel (Tzanelli, 2017, 2025), planetary drifting (Szerszynski, 2018), and last-time travel (McGaurr and Lester, 2018).  Each of these styles relates to the mobile subject’s attitude towards climate change (catastrophist, gradualist and denialistist – Urry, 2016). Not only each style imprints attitude as their (post-)biopolitical signature, but it also situates them within different arguments in the ‘Critical Zone’ (Latour, 2018). 

Serena Pollastri, Suzana Ilic

Lancaster Institute for Contemporary Arts / Lancaster Environment Centre, ̽̽App

Doing research with water and sands: reflections on engaging with the fluidity of coastal environments. 

The seashore is an elusive and arguably arbitrary border between sea and the coast: it moves with the rhythms of the tides and through sudden shifts caused by storms, winds, erosion and sediment accretion. In intertidal saltmarshes this border becomes blurred and frayed, as it seeps through the pockets of vegetations that exist in the wet spaces between water and land.  

These areas are also site of intricate entanglements between human and non-human animal communities whose lives are affected by water, its movements, and its often-unpredictable effect.  

Drawing from the experience gained in a recent project of design and deployment of nature-based solutions in intertidal zones, this contribution reflects on the importance of situated knowledge in coastal areas. Specifically, it argues for incorporating fluidity in research and design methods that fully embrace the dynamic nature of the shore – and resist the temptation to fully rely on computational models and predictions.  

Jen Southern

Cemore Director, Lancaster Institute for Contemporary Arts, ̽̽App

More-than-human mobilities and infrastructures

This presentation introduces the mobilities and anchoring of seaweed as a site for study of relational more-than-human mobilities. This research collaboration with Prof. Lynne Pearce focusses on relationships between seaweed archives and seaweed in the wild to explore mobility and infrastructure. I will start by looking at the discoveries of phycologist Kathleen Drew-Baker that led to modern methods of Japanese Nori cultivation. Then, through an introduction made by artist Debbie Yare, I focus on the close observational work of W.B. Kendall found in Barrow Archives. As railway engineer, geologist, and seaweed collector his work offers a useful example to explore connections between surveys, collections and engineering infrastructures.

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Uncertain Climates: An Interdisciplinary Roundtable /cemore/uncertain-climates-an-interdisciplinary-roundtable/ Thu, 09 Jan 2025 19:42:08 +0000 /cemore/?p=10365 Cemore, in collaboration with the is pleased to invite colleagues to join an interdisciplinary hybrid roundtable event on the topic of ‘Uncertain Climates’. The event will take place from 4pm to 5.15pm on Friday January 17th.

Chaired by Dr. Rolien Hoyng (Dept of Sociology, ̽̽App) and Dr. Andy Yuille (LEC, ̽̽App), the event will feature contributions from:

  • Prof. Hannah Knox (Social Anthropology, University of Manchester)
  • Dr. James Keeble (LEC, ̽̽App)
  • Dr. Nils Markusson (LEC, ̽̽App)
  • Dr. Jen Southern (LICA, ̽̽App)

Uncertain Climates: An Interdisciplinary Roundtable

The climate crisis confronts us with uncertainty and is negotiated through a host of speculative technical epistemologies and apparatuses. However, rather than resolving uncertainty, it is translated and reconfigured, and it reverberates across social contexts. The dominant impulse has been to double down on certainty. But what consequences do discourses of certainty have and how do we understand the ethical possibilities of the uncertain?

At a time of flourishing new and old climate scepticisms, a wildly interdisciplinary panel combining speakers from atmospheric science, social science and art will reflect on this question.

Event details

  • Time: 4pm to 5.15pm on Friday January 17th
  • Attend in person in the Management School, ̽̽App, Lecture Theatre 14
  • Attend online, via Teams. Email j.a.southern@lancaster.ac.uk for the meeting link

Photo by on

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Mobilities Journal Special Issue: Auto/biography and mobilities in the time of climate emergency /cemore/mobilities-journal-special-issue-auto-biography-and-mobilities-in-the-time-of-climate-emergency/ Tue, 24 Sep 2024 10:43:47 +0000 /cemore/540016n-24715w-copy/ We’re pleased to announce the publication a Special Issue of Mobilities Journal titled Auto/biography and mobilities in the time of climate emergency.  The collection has been co-edited by CeMoRe’s Lynne Pearce and Nicola Spurling, and contains a selection of papers from a 2022 International Conference that was held at Lancaster, and co-organised by CeMoRe in collaboration with the Academy of Mobility Humanities, Konkuk University, Seoul. 

The motivations for the special issue were twofold. Firstly, and as we have  argued in the 2020 CeMoRe Manifesto, the advancement of a just and ecological mobilities transformation should be central to the work of mobilities scholarship at the current time. Secondly, the co-editors were keen to explore how such aspirations intersect with the major, though often unspoken, changes to the ways in which individuals and societies are now contemplating life course and planning for the future which became  visible in the Covid-19 pandemic, and which climate change is further forcing individuals and society to contemplate. 

The Symposium brought together a rich range of contributions which spoke to these concerns, and the special issue develops this thinking a step further. A central argument which we build in the special issue is that the auto/biographical genre offers theoretical and methodological starting points that are key to a just and ecological mobilities transformation. We make this argument in our introductory paper which is available open access ‘’.&Բ;

The special issue is dedicated to the memory of our colleague, Russell Hitchings, Professor of Geography at University College London, who passed away in May 2024. As we say in our journal dedication, Russell contributed an inspiring and insightful talk at the Symposium on which this special issue is based, in which he eloquently engaged with the relationships between the three themes auto/biography, mobilities and climate change. His ideas and insights are frequently cited in our Introduction. We remember him with great respect; his intellectual contributions, and his kindhearted and welcoming presence will be missed by all who knew him.

The full list of papers in the Special Issue with links to abstracts and open access papers (where available) can be found below. If you are developing research which speaks to the theme of auto/biography and mobilities in a time of climate emergency, the co-editors Lynne Pearce and Nicola Spurling would be really interested to hear from you, on l.pearce@lancaster.ac.uk and n.spurling@lancaster.ac.uk.

Special Issue (currently available online) 

Pearce, L. and Spurling, N. J.  (open access)

Murray, L.  (open access) 

Spurling, N. J.  (open access) 

Lee, J.

Rau, H. and Matern, A.  (open access)

Kim, T.

Sheriff, R. E.

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‘Under the Weather’: Dr Stephanie Sodero’s webinar recording /cemore/under-the-weather-dr-stephanie-soderos-webinar-recording/ Tue, 21 Mar 2023 12:19:02 +0000 /cemore/?p=9850 On Friday 10th March CeMoRe was delighted to host Dr Stephanie Sodero talking about her new book ‘Under the Weather: Reimagining Mobility in the Climate Crisis’ in an online webinar. The event also featured fantastic insights from discussants Dr Mimi Sheller and Dr Monika Buscher.

Stephanie is a Lecturer in Climate Change and Health at the University of  Manchester and he research focuses on vital mobilities — how goods, such as blood, saline IV solution, and oxygen move from the point manufacture to the point of care, and how such  supply chains can be made more resilient in a changing climate. See this blood illustration to learn more about her work.In her book, Stephanie uses two Atlantic Canadian case studies as a springboard, and contributes to pressing cultural and policy discussions about community resilience by imagining human mobility that works with, rather than against, the climate in ways that benefit local communities.

Focusing on community advocates, policy makers, and academics,  Stephanie called for a transformative approach to mobility and offer five recommendations:  revolutionising mobility, prioritizing vital mobilties,embracing green and blue, rebranding redundancy, and thinking flex.

You can now watch the entire webinar below:

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Connected Cumbria: Social Design and Business Podcast /cemore/connected-cumbria-social-design-and-business-podcast/ Tue, 14 Mar 2023 13:37:32 +0000 /cemore/?p=9834 Connected Cumbria: Social Design and Business

Click here to listen!

This podcast explores social, digital and physical mobilities in Cumbria from a social design and business perspective.  Nasser Bahrami, Social Analyst in the Cumbria Innovation Platform ‘Connected Cumbria’ project draws on his knowledge as a design researcher to discuss the innovative, and sometimes global relational networks small and medium sized  companies based in Cumbria have spun, he discusses challenges and opportunities for logistics efficiencies in the remote and beautiful Cumbrian hills, the potential of 5G and digital connectivity, how to make businesses more resilient in a climate-smart way, using a systems approach to solve issues without creating new ones. This is a really rich, wide-ranging conversations about emplaced multi-layered mobilities.

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CeMoRe 20th Anniversary Programme of Events (February Update) /cemore/cemore-20th-anniversary-programme-of-events-february-update/ Wed, 22 Feb 2023 12:23:02 +0000 /cemore/?p=9787 LANCASTER CENTRE FOR MOBILITIES RESEARCH [CeMoRe] 

20th ANNIVERSARY (2003-2023)

Programme of Events

**F E B R U A R Y   U P D A T E **

Academic year 2022-3 marks the twentieth anniversary of Lancaster’s Centre for Mobilities Research which was founded by John Urry and Mimi Sheller in 2003. The current CeMoRe team would like to celebrate this special occasion by reaching out to friends and colleagues around the world who have been on the mobilities journey with us in the hope that we can meet with you – virtually or in person – at some point over the coming year.

To this end, we share below our continuing programme of events for 2023 and we would like to thank everyone who has attended our events that have taken place thus far. The programme of events culminates in a strand dedicated to the CeMoRe Anniversary at 2023’s Annual T2M Conference. 

We will be hosting an exhibition and in-person event at ̽̽App to run alongside the main conference taking place at Konkuk University in Seoul (South Korea). The hybrid format of the conference will also facilitate the participation of groups and individuals from around the world who would prefer to join us remotely.  We will be writing to colleagues who we believe may be interested in this opportunity soon.

In the meantime, we would be delighted to welcome colleagues based in the UK to the Lancaster-based events listed below as well the online workshops and seminars.

10th March, 1.00-2.30pm (British Standard Time): CeMoRe Spring Webinar (Online)

Dr Stephanie Sodero (Climate Change and Health, Manchester University) 

‘UNDER THE WEATHER: REIMAGINING MOBILITY IN THE CLIMATE CRISIS’ 

 At this online event Stephanie Sodero will be talking about her new book, ‘Under the Weather: Reimagining Mobility in the Climate Crisis’, with discussants Monika Buscher and Mimi Sheller. There will also be an opportunity to participate in the discussion and ask questions.

Follow this link for more information and to .

12th May: Art Mobilities Webinar (Online) 4.00-5.30pm BST

Dr Jen Southern (̽̽App) and Kaya Barry. 

Details to be confirmed at a later date, please refer to our website and mailing list for upcoming information. 

25th May:  CeMoRe Summer Seminar with Dr Sharon Wilson (̽̽App / in-person) 4.00-6.00pm BST (Room to be confirmed).

Dr Sharon Wilson (Northumbria University and Mobilities Futures Research Network)

PUTTING “FLESH ON THE BONEYARD”; EVERYDAY MILITARIES AND MUSEUM, A MOBILITIES PERSPECTIVE.

This is an in-person event, exact location on campus to be confirmed closer to the date. For more information and to register for the event please .

17th July 2023:  CeMoRe 20th Anniversary Colloquium (̽̽App / in-person and online) 

This event will incorporate presentations from CeMoRe’s past and present directors, a PGR/ECR workshop/masterclass (with competitive travel bursaries for up to four students) and Mimi Sheller’s 20th Anniversary Lecture:

MOBILITY JUSTICE AND CLIMATE REPARATIONS: REFLECTING ON 20 YEARS OF MOBILITIES RESEARCH’

Eventbrite registration (online and in-person) will be advertised via the CeMoRe website and mailing list in the near future together with details of PGR/ECR funding for the workshop.

Early expressions of interest are also welcome: please contact us at cemore@lancaster.ac.uk  

October 25-28th 2023:  Annual T2M Conference (Seoul, South Korea and ̽̽App / in-person and online)

CONFERENCE THEME: MOBILITY, AESTHETICS AND ETHICS

A conference strand will be dedicated to CeMoRe’s 20th anniversary at this year’s T2M conference and we will be reaching out to colleagues around the world in the hope of putting together a series of online panels. In the meantime, if you would like to propose your own panel please contact us at  cemore@lancaster.ac.uk.

 To coincide with the conference, Jen Southern will be curating an online international exhibition – ‘ROCKY FUTURES’  (see link following for details) – and at least two in-person / live-stream panels relating to the exhibition will take place at ̽̽App.

CeMoRe is also happy to host in-person / live-stream panels convened by UK/European conference participants, with ̽̽App  functioning as a European hub for those unable to travel to South Korea. 

26th October 2023: Annual John Urry Lecture (̽̽App/ in-person)

Alice Mah (Professor of Sociology and Head of Department, University of Warwick). 

Full details and registration to be confirmed at a later date. 

To be kept up to date on future events and activity at CeMoRe please view our website. 

CeMoRe Website:  /cemore

If you are not already signed up the CeMoRe mailing list and would like to be kept updated, please email cemore@lancaster.ac.uk to be added to the list. 

If you have any other queries please contact:

Lynne Pearce (Co-Director Humanities and Acting Director): L.Pearce@lancaster.ac.uk

Harriet Phipps (CeMoRe Administrator): cemore@lancaster.ac.uk

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