Interrogating Climate Apartheid: Law, Economy and Culture - Conference and Call for Papers
24 March 2026 - 25 March 2026
9:00AM - 4:00PM
St Mary's College, Elvet Hill Road, Durham
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Free
This two-day conference provides an interdisciplinary platform for academic and non-academic stakeholders to interrogate the concept of climate apartheid. It will be focused on, but not limited to, putting the realms of law, economy, and culture into dialogue around a set of questions that pertain to the term or concept
Call for Papers: Interrogating Climate Apartheid: Law, Economy and Culture
March 24-25, 2026
Organisers:
Professor Andrew Baldwin (Geography, Durham University)
Dr Simona Capisani (Philosophy, Durham University)
Dr Christopher Szabla (Law, Durham University)
Confirmed Speakers:
Professor Louise Bethlehem (Department of English, The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem)
Professor Carmen Gonzalez (Loyola University Chicago School of Law)
The term ‘climate apartheid’ has been used in a variety of contexts to characterise
forms of unequal climate change adaptation. It is often used broadly to describe an
observable pattern in which those with the means to survive climate change become
physically separated from the vast majority of the world’s population for whom
surviving climate change will be an unaffordable luxury. Whether ‘climate apartheid’
is an appropriate term to describe this pattern remains an open question. Still, the
term has found its way into climate change legal discourse, economic reasoning, and
popular culture, suggesting its growing importance among a variety of different
climate change actors. The meaning of ‘climate apartheid’ is varied, often signifying
uneven patterns of climate-related mobility and immobility, infrastructure, exposure to
risk, availability of insurance and access to the very means of survival, including
capital, drinking water, energy, food, soil, land and biodiversity. Use of the term
‘climate apartheid’ also coincides with the insistence on the part of the scientific
community that planetary climatic conditions are far more dire than is often
commonly realised. At the same time, ascendent authoritarianisms which often deny
the science of climate change pose a significant challenge to the very legal regimes
that underpin collective action on climate change, and inequalities related to it, even
while the impacts of climate change are often experienced acutely in places where
denialist sentiment is widespread.
This two-day conference provides an interdisciplinary platform for academic and
non-academic stakeholders to interrogate the concept of climate apartheid. It will be
focused on, but not limited to, putting the realms of law, economy, and culture into
dialogue around a set of questions that pertain to the term or concept:
- What and for whom is ‘climate apartheid’?
- What does the notion add to existing scholarship on, for example, climate
justice, international criminal law, environmental ethics or to narratives on
politics and climate? - What—if anything—distinguishes it from other concepts concerned with the
links between climate and inequality? - What kinds of values, normative commitments and/or narrative undergird the
concept of ‘climate apartheid’? - What kind of relationship can be said to exist between ‘climate apartheid’ and
the history and legacies of South African Apartheid? - To what extent is ‘climate apartheid’ primarily a material condition, a
discursive formation, or geographical imaginary? - What legal, economic and cultural processes are said to give rise to ‘climate
apartheid’? - What are the conceptual limits of ‘climate apartheid’?
- What institutional implications does 'climate apartheid' have for addressing the
ethics of climate finance? - Is there value in using ‘climate apartheid’ as a rhetorical device for mobilizing
broad political support for climate change? Or would this usage be
counterproductive? - What types of obligations might climate apartheid help to establish for urban,
national and multilateral policy negotiations?
This conference welcomes contributions from academics from all disciplines with an
interest in addressing these and other questions relating to climate apartheid. While
bbroadly organized around the conceptual pillars of law, economy and culture, the
conference is open to all disciplinary, methodological and theoretical orientations.
Abstracts of up to 500 words should be submitted using this form no later than
December 19, 2025. Decisions about all submissions will be notified no later than
Friday January 9, 2026.
Enquiries can be directed to Professor Andrew Baldwin w.a.baldwin@durham.ac.uk .