RHN 65/2026 | Event
Organisers: International Conference of Labour and Social History (ITH) (AK-Bildungshaus Jägermayrhof)
17 – 19 September 2026, Linz, Austria
Working nature – exploring intersections of labour history and political ecology
61st International Conference of Labour and Social History (ITH)
The bundle of human-made ecological crises has reached a point where most earth scientist see an actual breaching of ecological thresholds, not only in relation to climate change but also six of nine processes for which “planetary boundaries” have been defined. In this context, the interdisciplinary field of political ecology (which dates to at least the 1970s) has experienced a spectacular boom. In a certain sense, it has become the interdisciplinary critical social science of our days, a field in which both academic and political concerns converge. In the English-speaking world, political ecology has proved to be strongly inflected by historical reasoning, with several authors highlighting the entanglements between material extraction, energy carriers (particularly fossil ones), ecological over-use, capitalist economic development, and exploitation.
While the history of work and labour relations have a place in these studies, many commentators have noticed an ongoing non-communication between labour history and political ecology. Despite such (self-)critical assessments, the last decades already have seen numerous instances scholarship at the intersection of “labour” and “environmental history” as well as “political ecology”. It thus seems both timely and necessary to bring global labour history and historical political ecology into a more structured and fruitful dialogue, to assess existing research at the intersection of both and to explore further avenues of research. While open to a broad spectrum of topics and approaches – from the carbon nexus to agrarian ecologies, from toxic through contested to multispecies labour –, this conference will insist on “labour” as one major category of differentiation in past and current ecological predicaments.
Programm
Thursday, 17 September 2026
Registration at the venue begins at 15:00
13.30–15.30 Meeting of the ITH Board and International Scientific Committee
15.30–16.00 Break
16.00–17.00 General Assembly of the ITH
17.30–18.00 Conference Opening
Therese Garstenauer, ITH President
Martina Jungert, Chamber of Labour of Upper Austria
TBA, City of Linz
18.00–19.30 Keynote lecture
Jason Moore (Binghamton University): The Climate-Class Conjuncture, or, the Worldwide Class Struggle in the Web of Life: Climate and Class on the 'Real Ground of History’
19.30–21.00 Welcome Reception by the Mayor of Linz
Friday, 18 September 2026
09.00–11.00 Panel I: Carbon Nexus
Chair and comment: On Barak
Azar Kafaee (University of Michigan): Oil extraction and agrarian enclosure – tribe and British Petroleum in southern Iran 1900–1950
Joe Rigby (University of Chester): Cumbrian coal and capitalist world-ecology: social and ecological frictions through changing commodity regimes
Jary Koch (Leibniz Centre for Contemporary History in Potsdam): The Everyday Life of Material Transformation: Labour and Ecology in the West German Chemical Industry, 1960s to 1980s
Limin Teh (Leiden University): Between Labor Process and Socionature: Workplace, Mechanization, and Coal Mining in Japanese Manchuria
11.00–11.15 Coffee Break
11.15–13.45 Panel II: Agrarian Ecologies
Chair and comment: Marcel van der Linden
Kartika Natalia Manurung (University of Bonn): Spatialised Labour Regimes in Indonesian Palm Oil Plantations
John Emrys Morgan & Nye Merrill-Glover (both University of Bristol): Bodily ecologies in early modern wetlands
Harm Zwarts (University of Groningen): Who Controls the Seed? Farmers, Diversity Loss, and Unequal Power Relations in Dutch Agriculture c. 1930–1990
Matan Kaminer and Ayan Meer (both Queen Mary University London): Climate migration: Deconstructing a trope and reconstructing a politics
Tomasz Kargol (Jagiellonian University, Krakow): Political ecology and history of labour in Habsburg Galicia and southern Poland in the 19th and 20th century (up to 1939) on the example of hydrotechnical construction and melioration
13.45–15.00 Lunch
15.00–17.00 Panel III: Toxic Labour
Chair and comment: David Mayer
Clément Fontanarava (Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne): Working Oil: An Environmental History of Labor at La Mède Refinery,France, 1934–1940
Bastien Cabot (Sciences Po): A variety of ‘labour environmentalism’? Facing industrial hazards in interwar Parisian suburbs
Alex Nagel (Independent Researcher, Amsterdam): Rebelling against the Environment and Equality: Political Ecology and Industrial Labor Resistance in the 1970s United States
Anusha Sundar (Columbia University): Making the Body Speak: Labour and Crisis in Madras, 1861–1874
17.00–17.15 Coffee Break
17.15–18.45 Panel IV: Contested Transitions
Chair and comment: Therese Garstenauer
Felix Wagenitz (University of Vienna): Politicising Production: Trade Union Opposition, Conversion Conflicts, and Workplace Power in the German Automobile Industry, 1970–1990
Girigan Gabriel (Lucian Blaga University, Sibiu, Romania): Dangerous and Precarious Forestry Labour in the Carpathian Mountains
Bridget Kenny and Simon Gush (both at University of the Witwatersrand): Of mine dumps, vegetables and container mountains: City Deep as space of capital, labour and nature in Johannesburg, South Africa
18.45–19.30 Dinner
19.30–20.30 Special Event
TBA
Invited guests:
Aaron Niederman, Rosa Luxemburg Foundation
Lukas Oberndorfer, Chamber of Labour of Vienna
Moderation: David Mayer
Saturday, 19 September 2026
09.00–11.00 Panel V: Multispecies Labour
Chair and comment: Ernst Langthaler
Juri Auderset (University of Bern): Knowing Nature Through Animal Work: Agroecological Workscapes and Contested Epistemologies of Laboring Animals in Switzerland, 1820s–1940s
Jelena Micić (Academy of Fine Arts Vienna): Working Nature in the Non-Aligned World: Animals, Labour, and Visual Surplus at the Leda Footwear and Plastics Industry
Jadon Nisly-Goretzki (University of Kassel): Working Cows, Their Peasants, and the River Meadows that Fed Them
Sanjay K. Paul (Harvard University): Yankee Pests: The 1864 "Army Worm" Infestation and the Ecology of Emancipation in the Mississippi Valley
11.00–11.15 Coffee Break
11.15–13.15 Panel VI: Embodied Ecologies
Chair and comment: Susan Zimmermann
Muhammed Junaid (University of Hyderabad): Ecologies of martiality: Labour, Political Ecology and making of Mappila soldiers in Colonial South Asia, 1896–1907
Adrian A. Smith (York University): Heat and Reigns of Terror: Agricultural Labour Regimes and Human-Planetary Boundaries
Anna Sailer (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen): The rise and fall of forest workers’ cooperatives in post-colonial India, 1950s–1970s
Marten Dondrop (Harvard University): Environmental risk and the comparability of labor: Colonial transport workers as risk-managers, c.1750–1850
13.15–14.30 Lunch
14.30–14.50 Final Remarks
On Barak (Tel Aviv) and Ernst Langthaler (Linz)
14.50–15.30 Concluding Debate
Moderation: Marcel van der Linden, David Mayer, and On Barak
Kontakt
Laurin Blecha (conference@ith.or.at)
Further information: https://www.ith.or.at/en/cfp-61st-ith-conference-working-nature-exploring-intersections-of-labour-history-and-political-ecology/
Source: H-Soz-Kult