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Call for Papers

Theme: De-colonizing Disability Theory
Subtitle: Cripping Development
Type: International Interdisciplinary Conference
Institution: Department of Gender Studies, Charles University Prague
   Gender Research Office and Department for Development Studies,
University of Vienna
   Czech Academy of Science
Location: Prague (Czech Republic)
Date: 19.–21.9.2013
Deadline: 15.6.2013

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The organizers of the conference wish to provide space for critical
dialogue between disability studies and studies of Central and
Eastern Europe, postcolonial studies, global and development studies.
This year’s interdisciplinary meeting focuses on mapping out the ways
in which development policies and strategies as well as the very
concept itself allow for or contribute to upholding global
inequalities.

For instance, a growing number of both disability scholars and
activists is calling for a sustained and critical engagement with the
ways in which disability policies and rights agendas carried out in
the name of global development reinscribe the hegemony of the global
North. This diagnosis however does not only apply to a presumed
North/South axes. Similar critique has been directed at the
narratives of development that frame the transformation of the
Eastern and Central European countries from communism/socialism into
capitalism (and their subsequent inclusion into the European Union);
such narratives have served to reproduce the hegemonic notion of the
“progressive West” and the “backwards Eastern” peripheries and were
instrumentalized in transmission of neoliberal capitalism. These
processes have had very specific impact on lives of people with
disabilities, on their political/activist formations as well as on
state disability policies and their recent austerity cuts.

Furthermore, on the level of the epistemological, conceptual and
political foundations the field of disability studies is implicated
in global hegemony. As Helen Meekosha phrases it, disability studies
practice “scholarly colonialism” by leaving the spaces of the global
South “assumed.” As a result, the social and material realities of
many disabled and crip lives remain under-theorized. Moreover, both
in the post-socialist spaces and in the global South, the absence of
disability identity-frameworks and recognizable (i.e. “western”)
political agendas is often perceived as a lack of political
consciousness. Thus, a thorough engagement of disability theory with
“southern disabled bodies” (Connell) and the “post-socialist crip” is
long overdue.

In particular, the organizers seek work that engages with (but does
not have to be limited to) the following questions and lines of
interrogations:

- What are the connections and contingencies between the concepts of
development (but also backwardness, stagnation, chronicity),
transnational capitalism and disability?

- How do development agendas that arguably contribute to disability
rights, politics of provision, nation building and crisis management,
sustain or even exacerbate global redistribution of poverty and
inequalities?

- How does the ideology of development legitimize, and rely upon,
processes of globalizing care and outsourcing care facilities towards
the global South and/or Eastern Europe?

- How do structures of neocolonialism inform relationships between the
disabled subjects of the global North/West and the disabled subjects
of the global South/East?

- And what would it mean to embrace notions of chronicity, stagnation
and debility (in this context)?

- How would disability theory enriched with various forms of situated
knowledges challenge scholarly colonialism and forms of North/Western
hegemony?

- Where are the spaces for disability critique? And how do these
locations shape the thought and knowledge within respective
disability theories?

- What relationships develop between knowledge production and
political activism/agency on the one hand and political institutions
on the other hand?

- What forms of epistemological and political alliances open at the
intersections of various categories? What are the hurdles to such
alliances?

- And finally, what would disability/crip studies look like from the
perspective of global “peripheries”? What forms of knowledge might be
produced by these perspectives?

The organizers encourage intersectional work that engages with
disability and cripness in relation to race, ethnicity, gender,
sexuality, age, class and other socially produced categories of
difference and hierarchy. We will consider work that has import to
the broader questions raised by the call, even if it does not address
the concept of development in an explicit way.

The organizers wish to make the conference a non-hierarchical space
of collegial support and we encourage junior scholars to apply. The
conference language is English and the conference will be held in
Prague.

Please send a 500 Word abstract for individual presentation, a
workshop or a thematic panel by June 15, 2013 to:
[email protected]

Confirmation of acceptance: June 30, 2013

With further inquiries please contact Kateřina Kolářová at:
[email protected]


Contact:

Kateřina Kolářová
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://gender.univie.ac.at/crippingdevelopment2013 




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