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Call for Papers

Theme: Practices of Order
Subtitle: Colonial and Imperial Projects
Type: International Conference
Institution: University of Copenhagen
Location: Copenhagen (Denmark)
Date: 28.–30.1.2015
Deadline: 1.6.2014

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With this conference we wish to explore practices developed by
colonial states and empires in order to govern the behavior of their
subject populations. Studies of colonialism and empire have
increasingly drawn attention to the problem of conceptualizing the
political logic of colonial projects and the circumstances of state
formation processes in colonial contexts. Concepts such as "colonial
governmentality" (Prakash, Thomas, Scott, Legg), "state effect" and
"enframing" (Mitchell), "rule of difference" (Chatterjee),
"ethnographic state" (Dirks), "the colonial state as a social
field" (Steinmetz), "affective state" (Stoler) have contributed
immensely to the analytical framing of the peculiarities of colonial
rule.

By evoking the concept practices of order we wish to highlight the
complexities of colonial power relations and political processes.
These practices were not only utilized by colonial authorities to
secure social control, but were also essential in establishing
abstract visions of colonies as ordered and governed spaces. The
practice of governing entails processes of thinking about
governmental strategies and planning for order as well as efforts to
effectuate ordering programs. Accordingly, contributors to the
conference are encouraged to investigate the different ways in which
colonial space and subjects were rendered calculable and governable
and how these abstractions were in turn invested in interventional
programs of order. We therefor invite papers that address the
heterogeneous field of thought and action, within which a
multiplicity of authorities sought to govern the conduct of colonial
subjects through a diversity of practices.

Topics may include (but are not limited to):
- What problems were practices of order intended to solve and what 
  programs were designed as solutions?
- How did coexisting rationalizations of these activities interact?
- Which political, epistemological, and moral understandings of the 
  nature of the colonial projects acted to structure the practices of 
  order?
- On what basis were practices of order legitimized (e.g. scientific, 
  legal, religious, economic)?
- What kind of techniques did the practices of order involve (e.g. 
  repressive, violent, productive, regulating, disciplining, 
  incentivizing)?
- How did knowledge of the local populations inform the organization 
  of various techniques and practices of government?
- What positions of subjectivity did practices of order produce?
- How did the activities act to shape the conceptualizations of the 
  people to be governed and the people to govern; their statuses and 
  capacities?
- How can aspects of scale and materiality inform our understanding
  of practices of order?

We invite proposals from scholars working in all disciplines. Please 
include the following information with your proposal:
- A paper title
- Name, institutional affiliation, and email address
- A brief description of the proposed paper (up to 500 words) 
  explaining the substance of the proposed paper and the topic's 
  relationship to the conference theme
- A short biography listing publications relevant for the conference 
  theme

The deadline for proposals is 1 June 2014 for acceptance on 1 July
2014.

Those invited to participate in the conference will be asked to
submit papers of no more than 8,000 words in length by 3 January 2015.

In order to promote dialogue between conference participants the
number of participants will be limited to twenty-four people. The
Conference will be held at the University of Copenhagen. Participants
are expected to make their own arrangements for travel and
accommodation. However, some travel funding will be made available
for selected PhD students, if accepted.

Proposals and enquiries should be sent to administrative coordinator 
Jane Finnerup Johnsen ([email protected]).

Confirmed keynote speakers:
- George Steinmetz
- Mariana Valverde
- Patrick Joyce
- Stephen Legg

The conference is organized by the research project Colonial 
Policing, Law and Penal Practices funded by the Danish Council for 
Independent Research | Humanities.

More information will be posted at the project's webpage:
http://colonial.saxo.ku.dk




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