Bastian Michelle, Flatø Emil Henrik, Baraitser Lisa, Jordheim Helge, Salisbury Laura, van Dooren Thom
University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Department of Philosophy, Classics, History of Art and Ideas, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Geogr J. 2023 Nov 20;190(3). doi: 10.1111/geoj.12557. eCollection 2024 Sep.
Online conferences are widely thought to reduce many of the costs of convening academic communities. From lower carbon emissions, lower fees, less difficulty in attending (particularly for marginalised researchers), and greater accessibility, virtual events promise to address many of the issues that in-person events take for granted. In this article, we draw on a community economies framing from geographers J.K. Gibson-Graham to argue for centring the work of convening within efforts to explore reparative possibilities within the academy. Reflecting on the changing costs arising from moving an originally in-person conference series online, we argue for embracing the opportunities offered. We explore how organising teams might enact alternative values through allocating the material, financial and labour resources traditionally spent for these events differently. We look particularly at how our carbon and financial costs changed, and how, by retaining a fee, we were able to allocate our budgets in ways which redistributed the surplus to participants in need (rather than bolster conference centre profits). We then explore what these changing costs meant in terms of our attendance levels across career stages and geographical locations. Looking at whether our experiment resulted in increased support for online events, we examine the continued ambivalence felt for the virtual. Finally, while we largely explore the benefits of online options, our last section urges caution over assumptions that this move will result in a more sustainable academia, particularly given the intensifications surrounding high quality streaming video, and suggest that we treat current trends as ongoing experiments, rather than solutions.
人们普遍认为,在线会议能大幅降低召集学术团体的诸多成本。虚拟会议有望解决许多线下会议视作理所当然的问题,包括更低的碳排放、更低的费用、参会难度降低(尤其是对边缘化研究人员而言)以及更高的可达性。在本文中,我们借鉴地理学家J.K. 吉布森 - 格雷厄姆的社区经济框架,主张将召集工作置于探索学术机构内部修复可能性的努力之中。通过反思将原本线下的系列会议转移到线上所带来的成本变化,我们主张抓住所提供的机遇。我们探讨组织团队如何通过以不同方式分配传统上用于这些活动的物质、财务和劳动力资源来践行不同的价值观。我们特别关注我们的碳成本和财务成本如何变化,以及通过保留一项费用,我们如何能够以将盈余重新分配给有需要的参与者(而非增加会议中心利润)的方式来分配预算。然后,我们探讨这些成本变化对于不同职业阶段和地理位置的参会人数意味着什么。审视我们的实验是否导致对在线会议的支持增加,我们考察了对虚拟会议持续存在的矛盾态度。最后,虽然我们主要探讨了在线会议的好处,但我们的最后一部分提醒人们要谨慎对待这一转变将带来更具可持续性的学术界的假设,特别是考虑到围绕高质量流媒体视频的强化情况,并建议我们将当前趋势视为持续的实验,而非解决方案。