The Institute for Interdisciplinary Research on Conflict and Violence (IKG) hosts the International Conference on Conflict and Violence Research 2025 at Bielefeld University from September 17th to September 19th 2025 to shed light on conflict and violence research from an interdisciplinary and global perspective, especially against the background of climate change, and invites scholars from all relevant fields to present, discuss, and exchange ideas.
Climate change not only leads to ecological changes but also contributes to social conflicts. These can be expressed in political polarization and normative or non-normative activism, the spread of fake news, conspiracy myths, hate speech, and the rise of right-wing populists and extremists denying climate change. At the same time, climate change is directly or indirectly linked to wars and violence around the world, thus affects global health and well-being, and triggers migration movements which are, in turn, connected with phenomena of conflict and violence.
Participation and presentation at the conference are open to researchers from any disciplinary background relevant to conflict and violence research (e.g., psychology, sociology, political sciences, public health and health sciences, education sciences, history, anthropology, economics, environmental sciences, & legal studies). Scholars at all career stages, from early-career researchers to established academics, are encouraged to contribute. The conference seeks to create a multidisciplinary platform for sharing innovative research, theoretical advancements, and practical solutions on a wide range of topics, including but not limited to:
The conference aims to foster a collaborative environment where researchers can exchange ideas, develop interdisciplinary collaborations, and contribute to a deeper understanding of the complex interconnections between climate change, conflict, and violence.
Please submit your unstructured abstracts for individual oral or poster presentations (max. 1250 characters, approx. 200 words) by February 28th using this link.
Feel free to contact the organizing team if you have any questions regarding the conference:
conferenceIKG25@uni-bielefeld.de
Susan Elliott is a geographer and University Research Chair in Health Geography at the University of Waterloo in Canada. She has an active research career, with 250+ publications related to global environment and (public) health with an emphasis on WASH, gender, aging, violence and vulnerable populations. She is the past Director of the Institute of Environment and Health (McMaster University), Senior Research Fellow in the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health, Dean of Social Sciences (McMaster University) and Dean of Health Sciences (University of Waterloo). She is the founder and Co-Editor in Chief of the journal Wellbeing, Space & Society, as well as the Editor in Chief of Social Science and Medicine. She was recently inducted as a Fellow of the African Academy of Sciences. She has a commitment to impactful research in the area of global environment and public health, and her research is characterized by strong science-policy bridging. See her lab website for more information.
Kari Marie Norgaard is a Professor of Sociology and Environmental Studies at the University of Oregon. Over the past ten years she has published and taught in the areas of environmental sociology, gender and environment, race and environment, climate change, sociology of culture, social movements and sociology of emotions. She currently has two active areas of research, namely work on the social organization of denial (especially regarding climate change), and environmental justice research with the Karuk Tribe on the Klamath River. Both of these areas of scholarship have been nationally recognized through the award of research grants, speaking invitations, and coverage of research by high profile media outlets including the Washington Post, National Geographic, British Broadcasting System, and National Public Radio. Norgaard is the recipient of the Pacific Sociological Association’s Distinguished Practice Award for 2005, the Sociology of Emotions Recent Contribution Award, American Sociological Association 2019 and the Fred Buttel Distinguished Contribution Award, Environmental Sociology Section of American Sociological Association 2019. See her website at the University of Oregon for more information.
For more information about Prof. Norgaard’s groundbreaking research, visit her websites: