Radical Think-Tank Theory

Interview with Ralf Homann and Manuela Unverdorben

By Geert Lovink

How can we imagine to do radical research outside of the established academic 
institutions and large mainstream media? Is this possible anyway? For decades 
this has been my dream. At first, my 1980s generation imagined this as an 
intellectual practice that was allocated deep inside the social movements. This 
was mostly investigative journalism, activist research into corporations, 
extreme-right wing networks and organizations, nuclear energy deals and related 
lobby campaigns of companies such as Shell that supported the apartheid regime 
in South-Africa. This type of indy-research was done to inform the movements 
themselves and provide them with info-ammunition in the fight for the hearts 
and minds of the people (sometimes confused by us with ‘public opinion’).

In Amsterdam there was a separate autonomous research collective that monitored 
racists and neo-fascists (FOK), a group that followed police and secret service 
activities (Jansen & Jansen) and one that investigated speculation and 
gentrification in the city (SPOK). My own band of gypsies can be considered the 
theory and humanities arm of the movement (ADILKNO). In some cases the groups 
were linked to specific archives or magazines, as was the case with radical 
feminism. The last thing these research collectives want to do was to produce 
dull policy papers.

I never thought of the need to start a ‘think-tank’—and over the years I 
started to wonder why. Perhaps it was enough to be in a collective? But in this 
term there is no explicit link to thinking. The thinking didn’t seem to be very 
sexy, neither was it to be situating your group inside a tank. But then, why 
call yourself a foundation (a legal term, controlled by lawyers and notaries) 
or an institute for that manner, the very symbol of one’s desire to be part of 
official reality and its ‘institutionalization’. Non-governmental organizations 
on the radar back then. NGOs were associated with United Nations and 
ministries. Their ‘non’ was often a farce.

I got immediately inspired when I heard about the Better Think Tank Project of 
the Munich art duo Ralf Homann and Manuela Unvrdorben. Their project 
investigates the politics and aesthetics of think tanks as a dominant form of 
knowledge production. What’s the appeal of the motor behind the current 
innovation madness? Are think tanks deadly boring? Why should we copy-paste 
such forms and mimic their socio-spatial culture (such as ‘the office’)?

Since 2005 I have been working with Ned Rossiter on the idea of ‘organized 
networks’ and I consider this a contribution, albeit from the opposite 
direction as I associate think tanks with bricks ‘n’ mortal spaces. Organized 
networks, on the other hand, are tight virtual networks, defined by their 
‘strong ties’, with dispersed contributors that do without expensive office 
spaces. But wait a minute. Aren’t these brave ‘orgnet’ comrades condemned to 
spend their days in co-working spaces, in cafes and at home at the kitchen 
table? How did we end up in such a neo-liberal trap? We urgently need new forms 
to conspire. One of the many ways to get there is the deconstruction of 
hegemonic formats. How can we envision the radical or post 
think-tank-as-a-form? Time for a dialogue via e-mail.

Q: There are virtually no leftist, radical think tanks. All of them seem 
mainstream by default. How would you explain this?

A: Let’s start with an anecdote. When the entrepreneur Anthony Fisher wanted to 
use his fortune to influence British politics and asked Friedrich von Hayek 
which party to support, he got the hint not to waste time and gain instead 
decisive influence in the battle of ideas by funding research in structural 
forms like think tanks. Think tanks are a better tool to persist the myth of an 
objective truth.

The success of right wing or radical market oriented think tanks, the kind of 
think tanks that we as BTTP are researching for more than 10 years now, is a 
matter of organization. They are embedded in transnational well-organized 
networks, newly established think tanks are getting financial and intellectual 
support for an effective start, a kind of toolkit of advice, and, as a crucial 
point, they are financially backed by corporations (e.g. ExxonMobile, Philip 
Morris or in Germany Bertelsmann) or rich private entrepreneurs (Koch 
brothers). Another important characteristic is that they operate with both 
short term and long term goals. Already in 1944 Friedrich von Hayek stated 
“that the most important change which extensive government control produces is 
a psychological change, an alteration in the character of the people. This is 
necessarily a slow affair, a process which extends not over a few years but 
perhaps over one or two generations.”

As all these ideas need institutional intermediation to become active, it is 
essential that also prominent political figures are part of the network, think 
of Margret Thatcher or Ronald Reagan. Or, as a more contemporary connection, 
Donald Trump and the strong supporter of his “political program”, the Heritage 
Foundation. Other strong networks in this sense are the Mont Pelèrin Society (a 
transatlantic network of academics, businessmen, journalists and activists 
founded 1947), the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA, 1955, the “original 
free-market think tank”) or the Atlas Network (established 1981 by the chicken 
farmer Anthony Fisher, with around 458 partners in 96 countries).

Q: Progressive types do think and gather their thoughts… Is this a question of 
language and labels or is there more to it?

A: It’s a common misunderstanding that think tanks are actually creative units, 
let alone were established with this intention. Think tanks label themselves 
“independent” but still push their backers agenda and accomplish credibility by 
pretending to be neutral and to conduct serious research. However, instead of 
actual academic research they operate as echo chambers, multiplicators of the 
neoliberal ideological agenda. There is no real eagerness in thinking up new 
ideas, because they already posses the “truth”. Instead, they aim to influence 
public opinion, to intervene in policy-making and to spread their program.

Q: The free software initiative dyne.org calls itself a think-and-do tank. Is 
that a solution to actually produce stuff in order not to get stuck in the 
paper reality of policy making?

A: Dyne.org is a good example for our view as they aim on community 
empowerment, in contrary to the above mentioned think tanks. Dyne.org is a 
place of inspiration and development of really new tools, they do not repeat 
the mantra of the free market. Like many leftist or critical groups they know 
that the crucial principle for self-empowerment is to do, “to-think-and-do”, to 
act.

Q: Can you describe the ups and downs of artists dealing with the think-tank 
model? Is it again out of fashion?

A: Over the years, a lot of think tanks by artists adopted the idea of the 
think tank as a supposed intellectual, interdisciplinary platform to brood over 
problems, to foster exchange or find solutions. Which sounds good in the first 
moment. It still is a fashionable term. Can protagonists of the art field like 
museums or artists free themselves from the underlying right-wing connotations 
of the term? In our opinion, it is highly questionable to use the concept 
without reflecting on a whole cluster of problems. The organizational form of 
think tanks is not suitable to discuss the problems of the future in an open 
and unbiased way.

In our work, “The Better Think Tank Project (BTTP)”, we directly research the 
phenomenon of "think tanks" and their networks: their achievements, reflection 
of their hidden agenda, focusing on their aesthetic appearances, cultural 
influence and the production of knowledge. Combining facts and fiction, the 
language, corporate designs and events from existing free-market oriented think 
tanks with new contents, this becomes the starting point for a better 
understanding and critique. We think more deeply, more broadly, and more 
soundly! Of course.

Q: There is a certain formal, corporate style associated with think tanks, such 
as wearing suits and showing boring power points with a lot of bullet points. 
You have used all these elements in your work. A lot of the NGO workers that 
end up in the policy environment had to adopt to these social dress codes. Do 
people despise the bland aesthetics of this particular office culture? What’s 
the fun of it?

A: Our power point lectures are of course never boring, but insightful and 
exciting! Full of profound experiences! In our artistic work we appropriate the 
aesthetics, the visual appearance and the diction of think tanks. We transfer 
popular events and formats, like the Liberty Café, the Capitalist Ball or the 
Freedom Dinner, from existing free-market oriented think tanks and fill them 
with new contents. It is an over-affirmative appropriation, which creates 
irritations by little incongruous details. To dance at the Capitalist Ball is a 
lot of fun! But be beware of misunderstandings. If it should happen that the 
think tank dress code would change to hoodies then we also would reflect on 
that. Still, we watch the developments in the NGO field critically, especially 
when NGOs are acting as think tanks. Progressive movements should be based on 
solidarity and organizational forms of solidarity.

Q: Influence of lobby organizations such as the Montpelerin Society seems real. 
Activist transparency groups make an effort to map their activities. Do you 
think regulation, such as lobby registers, actually works.

A: Yes, to show that, covering up network connections makes sense. It’s a very 
small first step. For example, in our exhibition “Liberty Café” in Cologne we 
introduced the activities of German Lobby Control, and focused on the influence 
of the consultancy industry on the German federal government. From our point of 
view it is more important to generate new methods to revise contemporary 
knowledge production and distribution. This also includes highlighting the 
exertion of influence of think tanks in universities and schools under the 
pretext of independent academic research or the practice to appear as surveyors 
and experts in media discourses.

Let’s have a look at a current example. The Friedrich A. von Hayek Gesellschaft 
(Society), connects, among others, to the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, 
the Friedrich-Naumann-Stiftung (foundation of the German Liberal Party) and the 
far right Alternative für Deutschland—AfD. Three seats at the German Parliament 
are taken by AfD politicians who are also members of the Friedrich A. von Hayek 
Gesellschaft. Watch the consequences, there is a political far right-wing, but 
radical free-market program. For instance, in March 2018 Swiss citizens voted 
on the abolition of their public broadcasting (SRG). The initiative against the 
SRG was started by Swiss followers of Friedrich von Hayek’s ideas. In a way 
this is a repetition of old long term goals from the 1950s. The above mentioned 
Institute of Economic Affairs promoted the break-up of the BBC as a first step 
to destroy all public services in the UK.

URLs:

https://www.khm.de/termine/news.2200.the-better-think-tank-project-bttp-liberty-caf-29-01-bis-24-02-2013/
 
<https://www.khm.de/termine/news.2200.the-better-think-tank-project-bttp-liberty-caf-29-01-bis-24-02-2013/>
http://manuelaunverdorben.de/bttp.html <http://manuelaunverdorben.de/bttp.html>
http://manuelaunverdorben.de/capitalist%20Ball.html 
<http://manuelaunverdorben.de/capitalist%20Ball.html>
https://wiki.ralfhomann.info/bttp <https://wiki.ralfhomann.info/bttp>
https://www.facebook.com/BTTPnetwork/ <https://www.facebook.com/BTTPnetwork/>
 
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