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Call for Papers

Theme: Infrastructures of Injustice
Subtitle: Law and Conflict
Type: International Workshop
Institution: St Edmund's College, University of Cambridge
Location: Cambridge (United Kingdom)
Date: 26.–27.10.2018
Deadline: 11.5.2018

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The Cambridge workshop “Infrastructures of Injustice: Law & Conflict”
is part of the Cambridge-Singapore-Princeton Network workshop series.
The workshop series interrogates the interrelationships between
infrastructures and injustice; alert to the manner in which law
threads through the material, the conceptual, the ethical, and the
affective. We seek work at the junctions of infrastructure and
injustice to provoke a reconceptualization of injustice across
multiple empirical settings, but particularly within regimes of
conflict in the Global South. We intend to achieve this through
delving into key ways in which the interactions of human and
(in)tangible infrastructure materializes injustice today. Recognizing
accelerating trends of securitization, financialization, and
calculability, means that interrogating the complicity of
infrastructure in the moralities and ethics of contemporary social
life is urgent and imperative.

In keeping with the workshop’s push to excavate law’s sometimes
subterranean presence, the Cambridge workshop will focus on
infrastructures of conflict. The second workshop in Singapore in
January 2019 will examine migration infrastructures, and the final
workshop in Princeton in April 2019 will draw these two themes
together.

The Cambridge workshop operates from the premise that accounts of
armed conflict can be productively unpacked through the analytic
frameworks of infrastructure, and notions of injustice. Ferguson
(2008, 36) rightly says that human, social and material
“infrastructure define how war is fought and what is fought over”.
The framework of infrastructure is usefully enhanced through
grappling with notions of injustice because war is often prompted by
actual or perceived injustices. In addition to affecting human,
cultural, and social infrastructure, armed conflict also disrupts the
functioning of built infrastructure. Armed conflict leads to the
unequal provision of multiple forms of infrastructure, or
infrastructure deficiency. The space of conflict zones is also the
space of “pirate” and “fugitive” infrastructures and territorialities
(Simone 2006); elusive infrastructures that are more likely to
develop in complex and alternative forms. More broadly, the
workshop’s concern will be with the loss of infrastructure in the
context of armed conflict and the dehumanization of social capital in
the process.

The Cambridge workshop seeks to explore a set of concerns that are
framed by but not limited to these questions:

- How are infrastructures of injustice temporally and contextually
formed and how do they morph and change dynamically in relation to
shifting circumstances of war and conflict? If lawyers simultaneously
make law and non-law (Johns 2014, 1), what role does legal
infrastructure play in this context?

- What are the infrastructures that sustain, perpetuate and reify
injustice(s)? Here we are looking for empirically grounded analyses
that deconstruct the ways in which injustice continues to work. We
are interested, for example, in intersections of social capital and
public infrastructures in cases of armed conflict (eg. hospitals and
militaries).


- How are infrastructures of injustice countered, including in
situations of conflict? What are the discursive, material and
performative strategies of structural subversion and individual
resistance? How, for instance, does collective organisation depend on
technologies of communication? (eg. underground railroad,
safehouses).

- How does infrastructure cope with changing notions of injustice,
across time and across place in conflict zones? When do forms of
infrastructure become obsolete? Do new or reconfigured
infrastructures become necessary to maintain injustice and perpetuate
the subjugation of the subjects of injustice?

John Comaroff (Harvard) has confirmed his participation in the
Cambridge workshop. Selected speakers will be asked to produce a
first draft of their paper three weeks before the event in Cambridge
for pre-circulation. Interested participants are expected to cover
their own expenses but limited funding may be available to scholars
with no funding available to them. There is limited funding available
for scholars based in the Global South.

Please note, a selection of presenters from the Cambridge (and
Singapore) workshops will be invited to present their revised papers
at Princeton University (workshop hosted by Carol Greenhouse) on
26-27 April 2019; travel and accommodation expenses will be covered
by Princeton University.

Please send an abstract of 250-300 words and a short biographical
statement by May 11th 2018 to Sandra Brunnegger ([email protected]) and
Laavanya Kathiravelu ([email protected]) and also state if you
will be available for the Princeton meeting in April 2019 if selected.

Venue:
St Edmund’s College, University of Cambridge, UK
26-27th October 2018


Contact:

Dr Sandra Brunnegger
St Edmund’s College
University of Cambridge
Cambridge CB3 0BN
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]




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