All times are in UTC+3 (Eastern European Summer Time)
Presentations marked with * will be held online only.
Zoom link will be sent out prior to the date.
Friday, 6 May
10:30–11:00 Registration
11:00–11:05 Opening words
11:05–12:00 Keynote 1
Farištamo Eller “Profit at the cost of life is a loss: A glimpse into the animal advocacy and environmental movements in Estonia today”
12:00–14:00 Session 1 – Animal Advocacy Pasts, Presents and Futures
- Karl Hein “History of the Estonian animal welfare movement before World War II”
- Ronnie Lee “Animal liberation and the climate crisis: Campaigning in the local community” *
- PJ Smith “A fur-free future is almost here. What’s next?” *
- Ryuji Chua “Visual storytelling for animal advocates: How to make videos that help animals” *
14:00–15:00 Lunch
15:00–16:00 Keynote 2
Richard White “Reasserting the Radical Praxis of Veganism in the Capitalocene: some thoughts and reflections” *
16:00–17:00 Session 2 – The Nature of Hunting
- Eduardo Gonçalves “Trophy Hunting: why it’s time to ban it” *
- Francisco Sánchez Molina “Hunting a Protected Species: Is Finland circumventing the legal strict protection of wolves?”
19:00 Conference dinner (speakers only)
Saturday, 7 May
11:00–11:30 Registration
11:30–13:30 Session 3 – Anthropocene Entanglements
- Zuzanna Nalepa “The Impact of Human Activity on the Soundscape of Nature in the Perspective of Anthropology of Sound and Eco-acoustics” *
- Katja Tiisala “Environmental Concern for Sentient Beings’ Lifeworlds” *
- Alex Lockwood ja Dan Kidby “The Evolving Narrative for Animals and Climate” *
- Renata Mliczak “(Dis)abled humans and other than humans’ place and role in the age of climate crisis”
13:30–14:30 Lunch
14:30–15:30 Keynote 3
Laura Wright “Resisting the Masculinist Rhetoric of “Plant-Based”: An Ecofeminist Vegan Intervention” *
15:30–16:00 Break
16:00–18:30 Session 4 – Everyday Matters
- Joaquín Fernández Mateo & Alberto José Franco Barrera “Sustainable Development Goals & Animal Ethics or How to Consume and Produce with Responsibility in the Anthropocene” *
- Kuura Irni “Conceptualisations of “Nature” in Feminist Food Politics: Intersectional Implications” *
- Kadri Aavik ““The environmental aspect is more convincing because it’s not so much based on emotion”: using environmental arguments to justify veganism”
- Anniina Ljokkoi “Taimsed pärimustoidud” (in Estonian)
18:30–18:40 Closing remarks