__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Making Connections
Type: 2nd Anarchist Studies Network Conference
Institution: Loughborough University
Location: Leicestershire (United Kingdom)
Date: 3.–5.9.2012
Deadline: 31.1.2012

__________________________________________________


We live in interesting times. The Arab Spring, Occupy X and
anti-austerity protests are only the latest and most visible examples
in a long tradition of grassroots social movements in which ordinary
people create democratic alternatives to hierarchy and inequality.
Here and everywhere, people are getting together and making
connections between their own everyday experiences and wider patterns
of relationships and power, official and unofficial. They (or we) are
making connections with each other, personal and political. New
patterns evolve as people experiment with different ways of
organising, of relating, of connecting, of thinking. Scholars,
artists and activists observe, theorise and participate in various
ways, helping to make connections, both in social movements and in
the movements of everyday life. Feminists, in particular, have
foregrounded intersectional approaches to power, privilege and
oppression. Race, class and gender; sexuality, ecology and
(dis)ability; age, species and faith -- each of these and more
interconnect in numerous ways, both subtle and overt.

The Anarchist Studies Network is hosting a conference to acknowledge,
celebrate and deepen these diverse efforts to understand and
transform our world, our lives. We want this conference itself to be
a space for making connections, both intellectual and personal. It
will include a blend of more or less traditional panels,
participatory discussions and experiential workshops, extended breaks
and social events. This first call is an invitation to propose
thematic streams, workshops or panel topics by those who are willing
to take a role in organising them. Further calls will invite papers,
participation, performance. We're particularly keen to make
connections across borders of identities, movements, disciplines and
practices. We invite contributions from students, academics and
unaffiliated researchers, activists and artists, health practitioners
and care workers, trade unionists, community organisers and those
without labels. Above all, we would like to nurture a convivial
atmosphere in which to make connections with others, explore areas of
both overlap and difference, create or simply meet, to learn and to
share.

Our intention is for this to be a scholarly conference with a
difference. Scholar means both student and teacher. By bringing
together a diverse group of participants, who share in common a
desire to learn and a commitment to acknowledging and creating
alternatives to rigid hierarchies and exploitative relationships, we
hope that each of us will have something to offer others and much to
learn. The process of organising the conference is decentralised,
with the conference initiators welcoming proposals from a diverse
range of session organisers covering a wide variety of engaged and
engaging topics. We also invite session organisers to consider
playful, participatory and/or experimental panel and workshop
formats. This might range from a traditional three paper panel
followed by a discussion using alternative facilitation techniques
(e.g., open space technology, fishbowl, or sitting in a circle with a
facilitator) to more interactive workshop-style discussion or
experiential sessions. Our intention is not to be transgressive for
the sake of it, but to encourage a variety of methods in order to
facilitate making connections.

If you're interested in organising a stream or a session but are new
to the role, feel free to contact us for advice about what this is
likely to involve.
You can also see how the 1st Anarchist Studies Network Conference in
2008 was organised by linking to the following web page, where
thematic streams and their organisers are indicated in bold print:
http://www.anarchist-studies-network.org.uk/documents/Final%20Schedule.pdf
Likewise, if you'd like to do something a bit playful or different,
but are not sure how or just need a little advice, please get in
touch. Finally, if you are keen to be involved in a session, but not
wanting to take on the responsibility of organising one, let us know
and we'll see if we can match you up.

Topics we'd love to see explored include:

* Occupy X
* Race & Radical Politics
* The Arab Spring
* Anarchism & Feminism
* Embodiment & Practices of Freedom
* Anarchist/Queer
* Alternatives to Capitalism
* Direct Democracy in Action
* Revolutionary Theory and Practice
* Science, Technology and Ecology
* Non-Western Anarchisms
* Anarchism and Utopianism
* Class-Struggle Politics and Anarcho-Syndicalism
* Anarchist History
* Anarchism & Religion
* Post-anarchism
* Anarchy and Education
* Politics & Emotion
* Art, Literature & Social Transformation
* (Dis)ability
* Nurturing Autonomy
* Zapatismo, Via Campesina
* Borders, Walls & Fences
* Spaces of Resistance

And others we've not yet thought of. We welcome surprises. Please
send your proposals (no more than 500 words) by 31st January 2012 to
Alexandre Chrisoyannopoulos ([email protected]) and Ruth
Kinna ([email protected]).

Conference Initiators:

Matthew Adams, Alexandre Christoyannopoulos, Laurence Davis, Oisín
Gilmore, Jamie Heckert, Petar Jandric, Ruth Kinna, Alex Prichard,
Chris Rossdale & Matt Wilson    


Contact:

Laurence Davis DPhil
Dublin, Ireland
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://anarchist-studies-network.org.uk
 
 
 
 
__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

__________________________________________________
 
 

Reply via email to