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Call for Papers

Theme: Borders and Walls
Type: 2nd Global Inclusive Interdisciplinary Conference
Institution: Progressive Connexions
Location: Athens (Greece)
Date: 10.–11.7.2022
Deadline: 11.2.2022

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In a contemporary moment where human mobility is shaped by a global
pandemic, the ongoing effects of climate change, and growing economic
instability, the role and utility of borders are in need of renewed
exploration. The spread of the novel coronavirus has made the ways in
which borders structure and constrain our lives apparent to more
people than ever. Due to the pandemic, billions of people around the
world have faced the realities of confinement to home countries as
traversal across international lines has been limited only to those
with sufficient claims to citizenship, residence, and now, proof of
vaccination. Some argue that in times like these, borders provide
security, the preconditions for effective governance, and the
distribution of goods and services within a given population. Yet,
others might ask to what extent they simultaneously reinforce
hegemony and bar access to necessities - such as life saving COVID
vaccines and other medical infrastructure - for those who, by mere
lottery of birth, happened to be born on the 'wrong' side.

In reality, people across the globe have been grappling with the
asymmetries bound up in borders ever since the 1648 Treaty of
Westphalia and the emergence of modern nation-state, a geopolitical
concept that has hitherto fundamentally relied on the existence of
borders - both in their physical manifestations as well as in the
political imagination and in terms self-determination. On one hand,
in consolidated economic spheres such as the European Union, citizens
have enjoyed decades of free and uninhibited movement across the
continent. Yet, it's undeniable that certain member states have fared
far better than others in this arrangement, and each national project
within the Schengen Zone has struggled with questions of pluralism
and exclusion. Meanwhile, the US-Mexican border of the post-9/11
world is increasingly militarized via structures and technologies,
and those same structures have disseminated to other borderlands such
as that of Israel-Palestine, whose tensions have only risen in recent
months. Thus, borders and their meanings exist within complex social,
political, and economic networks where movement is codified by
factors such as ethnicity, social class, and cultural narrative.

Moving beyond conventional notions of borders as static lines
separating "us" from "them" and "inside" from "outside," this
conference aims to open a non-essentialist conversation about borders
and walls. As inclusive and multidisciplinary, we seek submissions on
the varying significance of borders and borderlands across a wide
array of contexts and fields including but not limited to
architecture, sociology, urban planning, history, anthropology,
linguistics, literature, art, poetry, performance, journalism, and
cartography. We welcome both traditional and nontraditional formats
ranging from empirical research and analysis, ethnography, and
journalism to poetry, performance, film, and fictocriticism. Drawing
upon this multiplicity of perspectives from people directly affected
by borders, our objective is to invite critical reflection with
respect to the presence of borders as constructs in contemporary
society, their transnational histories, and multidimensional
significance. We seek to imagine border alternatives, and to open up
space for new approaches and understandings via interdisciplinary
exchanges.

Key Topics

Key topics, themes and issues for discussion may include, but are
definitely not limited to:

- Border as metaphor
- Critical implications of border technology and security
- Local voices in border literature, poetry, art, performance
- Borders and architecture
- Borders and the nation-state
- Borders within nations (states, lands reserved for Indigenous
  peoples, territories)
- The neoliberal border
- Globalization's impacts
- Trade (including trade agreements; clandestine/smuggling/informal
  economies; remittances)
- Necroviolence and necropolitics
- Identity construction
- International development
- Transnational histories or case studies about border wall projects
  (Berlin, Israel, US-Mexican)
- Key border regions: EU, US-Mexican (maquiladoras, border towns),
  Israel (Gaza); post-9/11; Russia-Osettian (Georgia); India-Pakistan
- Borders and walls in fiction and literature
- "Frontiers," nation expansion, imperialism
- Border as industry (analysis financial investments/corporate
  stakeholders that maintain and expand these projects)
- Border violence
- Bifurcation and creation of borderlands
- Borders over time: i.e. modern/post-Westphalian border
- Borders as theorized vs. borders as lived; borders as real and
  imagined
- Borders as theorized vs. borders as lived; borders as real and
  imagined
- Poetics of space, spatiality and the border
- (Mis)representations of borders
- Mapping, archiving, and cartography
- Border ethnographies
- Critiques of border essentialism
- Resisting borders and (anti)border movements
- "Natural" borders vs. constructed borders
- Border ontologies and linguistic constructions of borders\
- Open borders and debordering
- Borders and migration (clandestine vs. legitimized)
- Borders and citizenship, identity, belonging
- Beyond the wall: borders as institutions/institutional maintenance
  (consulates/embassy, specialized border police forces,
  bureaucracy/documentation)
- Transnational relationships between borders (e.g.
  Israel/US-Mexican); comparative analyses
- Traversing and transportation with respect to borders
- Border disputes and contestations
- Borders and legality/law and immigration law; borders and
  "criminality"
- Borders and human rights
- Race, class, sexuality: sociology of border
- Critical analysis of terms such as immigrant, expat, migrant,
  refugee
- Borders and Indigenous sovereignty
- Emancipatory visions with respect to a world without borders
- Borders and ecology/biodiversity; environmental impacts of border
  walls

What To Send

This interdisciplinary conference and collaborative networking event
aim to bring together academics, professionals, practitioners, NGOs,
voluntary sector workers, etc., in the context of a variety of
formats: presentations, seminars, workshops, panels, performances,
etc.

300-word reviews of your proposed contribution (paper abstracts,
proposals for workshops, collaborative works or round tables,
overviews of artistic projects, or any other relevant forms of
participation you are interested in) should be submitted by Friday
11th February 2022.

All submissions will be minimally double reviewed, under anonymous
(blind) conditions, by an international panel drawn from the Project
Advisory Team and the Advisory Board. In practice, our procedures
usually entail that by the time a proposal is accepted, it will have
been triple and quadruple reviewed.

You will be notified of the panel's decision by Friday 25th February
2022

If your submission is accepted for the conference, a complete draft
of your contribution should be submitted by Friday, 20th May 2022

Proposals may be in Word, PDF, RTF, or Notepad formats with the
following information and in this order: a) author(s), b) affiliation
as you would like it to appear in the programme, c) email address, d)
title of proposal, e) body of the proposal, f) up to 10 keywords.

Emails should be entitled: Borders Submission

Where To Send

Abstracts should be submitted simultaneously to the Organising Chair
and the Project Administrator:

Lily Cichanowicz (Organising Chair):
lac...@cornell.edu

Len Capuli (Project Administrator):
athensbord...@progressiveconnexions.net

What's so Special About a Progressive Connexions Event?

A fresh, friendly, dynamic format - at Progressive Connexions we are
dedicated to breaking away from the stuffy, old-fashion conference
formats, where endless presentations are read aloud off PowerPoints.
We work to bring you an interactive format, where exchange of
experience and information is alternated with captivating workshops,
engaging debates and round tables, time set aside for getting to know
each other and for discussing common future projects and initiatives,
all in a warm, relaxed, egalitarian atmosphere.

A chance to network with international professionals - the beauty of
our interdisciplinary events is that they bring together
professionals from all over the world and from various fields of
activity, all joined together by a shared passion. Not only will the
exchange of experience, knowledge and stories be extremely valuable
in itself, but we seek to create lasting, ever-growing communities
around our projects, which will become a valuable resource for those
belonging to them.

A chance to be part of constructing change - There is only one thing
we love as much as promoting knowledge: promoting real, lasting
social change by encouraging our participants to take collective
action, under whichever form is most suited to their needs and
expertise (policy proposals, measuring instruments, research
projects, educational materials, etc.) We will support all such
actions in the aftermath of the event as well, providing a platform
for further discussions, advice from the experts on our Project
Advisory Team and various other tools and intellectual resources, as
needed.

An opportunity to discuss things that matter to you - Our events are
not only about discussing how things work in the respective field,
but also about how people work in that field - what are the
struggles, problems and solutions professionals have found in their
line of work, what are the areas where better communication among
specialists is needed and how the interdisciplinary approach can help
bridge those gaps and help provide answers to questions from specific
areas of activity.

An unforgettable experience - When participating in a Progressive
Connexions event, there is a good chance you will make some long-time
friends. Our group sizes are intimate, our venues are comfortable and
relaxing and our event locations are suited to the history and
culture of the event.

Ethos

Progressive Connexions believes it is a mark of personal courtesy and
professional respect to your colleagues that all delegates should
attend for the full duration of the meeting. If you are unable to
make this commitment, please do not submit an abstract or proposal
for presentation.

Please note: Progressive Connexions is a not-for-profit network and
we are not in a position to be able to assist with conference travel
or subsistence, nor can we offer discounts off published rates and
fees.

Please direct all enquiries to the project email:
athensbord...@progressiveconnexions.net

For further details and information please visit the project web page:
https://www.progressiveconnexions.net/interdisciplinary-projects/cultures-and-societies/borders-and-walls/conferences/




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