Recovering the Commons, a Decade Later: Appalachian Commons and Possibilities for Interdisciplinary Research and Action

Author:

Guest M. Aaron,Carter-Stone Laura,Vance-Berg Leah

Abstract

AbstractThis research note promotes a dialogue among disciplines about education, activism, and research in Appalachian studies. The challenges developing in our current era are occurring amidst significant changes in Appalachian studies as the field’s long-standing leaders and scholars continue to retire. In their places, new scholars are developing who, in many cases, lack the activist training and experiences of their predecessors, but whose academic preparation and interest are interdisciplinary in innovative ways. We explore past and present scholarly and activist efforts while foregrounding Reid and Taylor’s concept of the “body~place~commons.” We propose that the future of Appalachian studies depends on interdisciplinary collaboration between diverse populations of researchers and activists, and especially emerging scholars who seek to sustain and further the field. Only through an understanding of how multiple disciplines approach research, and how they can engage with one another, can a new path forward for the field develop. We conclude this note with considerations from emerging scholars for the future of the field.

Publisher

University of Illinois Press

Subject

General Engineering

Reference29 articles.

1. 1. Over the last decade, we have observed the growth of a diverse field of “commons” such as the technological, futures, the Arctic, sustainability, and lab sciences commons.

2. 2. The RECLAIM Act (Revitalizing the Economy of Coal Communities by Leveraging Local Activities and Investing More Act) was introduced in the Senate and House on March, 27, 2017, and was supported by a broad coalition of organizations. The bill did not pass and has been re-introduced each Congress, most recently in the 117th Congress by thirty-three co-sponsors in the House and four in the Senate.

3. Alliance for Appalachia. 2020. Our work. https://theallianceforappalachia.org/ (accessed October 2, 2020).

4. Appalachian Studies Association. 2020. Online community. http://appalachianstudies.org/members/community.php (accessed October 3, 2020).

5. Appalachian Studies Association. 2016. About the Y’ALL committee. http://appalachianstudies.org/members/committees/yall.php (accessed April 29, 2021).

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