Hi All,

I thought this group might enjoy the latest *Landscapes
<https://landscapes.libsyn.com/> *podcast episode: *The Afterlives of Coal
<https://open.spotify.com/episode/4YfCIYG2MXJyHjTnHQLUxz>*.

It is an interview with two of the authors of the recent paper: Shade, L.,
Schwartzman, G., Rignall, K., Slovinsky, K., & Johnson, J. (2025). Afterlives
of coal: land and transition dynamics in Central Appalachia
<https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2753-3751/adb1ea/meta>.
*Environmental
Research: Energy*, *2*(1), 015015.

Listen on a podcast app <https://plinkhq.com/i/1552882054/e/1000722044102>

-Adam

*Episode Description*

Even as efforts to transition Appalachia out of coal receive broad policy
support, the fate of the landscape is ultimately driven by incumbent actors
used to getting what they want. Dr Lindsay Shade and Dr Karen Rignall
discuss their research about how legacies of land ownership frustrate
equitable and effective transition strategies. While an "Abundance"
argument suggests that  "the Democratic fetish for legalistic procedure has
in so many places, made it impossible to get stuff done," the a*fterlives
of coal* provides a stark reminder of the deeper powers that control what
happens on the land. Confronting the legacies of landownership may be the
only path to meaningful landscape transformation.

Episode Links

   - Dr Lindsay Shade <https://sociology.utk.edu/people/lindsay-shade/>
   - Dr Karen Rignall <https://cld.ca.uky.edu/directory/karen-rignall>
   - Shade, L., Schwartzman, G., Rignall, K., Slovinsky, K., & Johnson, J.
   (2025). Afterlives of coal: land and transition dynamics in Central
   Appalachia
   <https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2753-3751/adb1ea/meta>.
*Environmental
   Research: Energy*, *2*(1), 015015.
   - Also see: Shade, L., Rignall, K., Tarus, L., & Starr, C. (2025). The
   role of land in a just transition: the Appalachian Land Study collective
   <https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2753-3751/add93d>.
*Environmental
   Research: Energy*, *2*(2), 025010.
   - The ongoing Appalachian Land Study
   <https://www.appalachianlandstudy.org/about> and the historic Appalachian
   Land Ownership Study
   <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appalachian_Land_Ownership_Survey>
   - Martin County solar project <https://www.martincountysolarproject.com/> on
   the former Martiki mine
   - The Cumberland Forest Project
   
<https://www.nature.org/en-us/what-we-do/our-priorities/protect-water-and-land/land-and-water-stories/cumberland-forest-project/>
(The
   Nature Conservancy)
   - Congressman Hal Rogers and prison development
   
<https://halrogers.house.gov/2024/10/congressman-rogers-announces-approval-of-letcher-prison-construction>
   - Carbon sequestration court case
   
<https://www.courtswv.gov/sites/default/pubfilesmnt/2023-10/21-BCD-4MotionToRefer.pdf>:
   Pocahontas Surfcae Interests and Forestland Group
   - The Alliance for Appalachia <https://theallianceforappalachia.org/>
   - The Appalachian Rekindling Project
   <https://www.appalachianrekindlingproject.org/about>
   - The Abundance critique of process
   <https://www.derekthompson.org/p/the-future-of-abundance-and-the-left>
   - The Heavens <https://groveatlantic.com/book/the-heavens/>, by Sandra
   Newman



-- 

Adam Calo <https://www.ru.nl/english/people/calo-a/>

Assistant Professor of Environmental Governance and Politics

Radboud University, Netherlands

@adamcalo <https://bsky.app/profile/adamcalo.bsky.social>

*Google Scholar
<https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=lbMG9IcAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao>*

*Land Food Nexus Blog <https://adamcalo.substack.com/about>*


(2024). Transforming land for sustainable food: Emerging contests to
property regimes in the Global North
<https://online.ucpress.edu/elementa/article/12/1/00028/203451>. *Elementa:
Science of the Anthropocene*, *12*(1).(2024) New Entrant Farming Policy as
Predatory Inclusion
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10460-024-10557-4>. *Agriculture
and Human Values*.

(2022). Using property law to expand agroecology: Scotland’s land reforms
based on human rights
<https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03066150.2022.2083506>. *The
Journal of Peasant Studies*, 1-37.
(2020). The Yeoman Myth: A Troubling Foundation of the Beginning Farmer
Movement
<https://online.ucpress.edu/gastronomica/article-abstract/20/2/12/110257/The-Yeoman-Myth-A-Troubling-Foundation-of-the>
. *Gastronomica* 20, 12–29.

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