REMINDER -- 2 weeks until deadline

Call for presenters



*Bringing life’s work to market:*

*A symposium on practices and spaces of marketised social reproduction*



16-17 December 2019, University of Auckland, New Zealand (Aotearoa)



Confirmed speakers:

·      Beverley Mullings (Queen’s University, Canada)

·      Christian Berndt (University of Zurich, Switzerland)

·      Dan Cohen (Concordia University, Canada)

·      Emily Rosenman (Penn State University, USA)

·      Gareth Bryant (University of Sydney, Australia)

·      Jessa Loomis (Clark University, USA)

·      Kalervo Gulson (University New South Wales, Australia)

·      Lisa Adkins (University of Sydney, Australia)

·      Shiloh Groot (University of Auckland, New Zealand)

·      Sophia Maalsen (University of Sydney, Australia)

·      Tom Baker (University of Auckland, New Zealand)



*Convenors*

Dan Cohen, Emily Rosenman, Jessa Loomis and Tom Baker



*Outline*

While economic production and social reproduction have always been deeply
inter-dependant, the political and cultural ascendance of ‘the market’ over
the last 40 years has further blurred the lines between economic and social
life. As market logics have proliferated, various spaces of social
reproduction—such as homes, schools and social services—have been reshaped
by market-based and market-enabling subjectivities, technologies and
policies. Most recently, the growing dominance of financial systems and
logics in these spaces has led to claims that social reproduction has
become fundamentally ‘financialised’ (Federici 2018).



Framed by such claims, this symposium seeks to bring together critical
scholars to further develop a research agenda on contemporary relations
between markets and those spaces commonly associated with practices of
social reproduction. It comes at a time, not only of empirically
intensifying relations between ‘life’s work’ (Mitchell et al. 2004) and
forms of marketisation, but of resurgent scholarly interest in critical
theories of social reproduction and marketisation. We welcome established
and emerging scholars from Geography, Political Economy, Sociology,
Education, Science & Technology Studies, and cognate disciplines to
interrogate the features, implications and implied futures of marketised
social reproduction.



*Anticipated cost, format and output*

There is no registration fee, however presenters are expected to cover the
cost of evening meals. Lunch and tea/coffee will be provided to presenters
on both days. Child care will be subsidised, with arrangements to be
finalised in consultation with applicable presenters. The convenors
anticipate the symposium will comprise a mixture of conference-style (15
mins) papers by each presenter as well as interactive sessions, keynotes
and communal meals/refreshment breaks, with the intention of building
professional connections and developing a diverse but shared intellectual
project. The symposium is being organised with the intention of producing a
special issue or edited book collection, to be discussed in more detail
during the symposium.



*Instructions for potential presenters*

If you are interested in presenting a paper at the symposium, please submit
a paper title, author list and abstract of approx. 200 words to
t.ba...@auckland.ac.nz by 31 July 2019. We aim to reply to potential
presenters within two weeks of this date.  Please direct any questions or
informal expressions of interest to Tom Baker at the email above.



*Travel grants*

Funding is available to support two early-career scholars (inclusive of PhD
students, post-docs and junior faculty). One travel grant will be awarded
to a scholar from Australia or New Zealand and will cover flights and
accommodation up to the value of $1000; the other travel grant will be
awarded to a scholar from outside Australia/New Zealand and will cover
flights and accommodation up to the value of $2000. Travel grants will be
allocated according to the submitted paper’s alignment to the symposium’s
theme and preference will be given to Indigenous scholars, scholars from
the global South, and those without institutional resources that would
otherwise enable their involvement. When submitting a paper (details
above), we ask that people wishing to be considered for a travel grant
indicate whether such criteria are applicable to them. We aim to inform
travel grant applicants within two weeks of the abstract submission date.

-- 
*Jessa M. Loomis, PhD*
*Visiting Assistant Professor of Urban and Economic Geography*
Clark University, Graduate School of Geography
950 Main Street | Worcester, MA 01610

Reply via email to