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[ecrea] CFP - citizenship in an era of global crisis
Tue Jul 26 09:26:16 GMT 2011
POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES RESEARCH NETWORK CONFERENCE
University of Otago, Dunedin, NEW ZEALAND
28-30 Nov 2011
Citizenship in an Era of Global Crisis
Keynote Speakers:
Joseph Pugliese (Department of Media, Music, Communication and Cultural
Studies, Macquarie University)
Tracey McIntosh (Department of Sociology, University of Auckland)
Greg Noble (Centre for Cultural Research, University of Western Sydney)
We are today witnessing the biopolitical re-ordering of the world and
various aspects of life in and through the notion of citizenship. This
reordering is evident in such processes and instances as the ‘war on
terror,’ the protests and violence in the Middle East, the outsourcing
of labour, the movement of refugees and migrants, the construction of
camps within nation-states, the increased policing of borders, and the
imposition of techniques of governmentality. At the same time, we are
also witnessing various challenges, predicated on specific notions of
citizenship, which seek to rethink established, dominant conceptions of
belonging: the struggles of indigenous communities, protest communities,
and other marginalized and exploited peoples testify to the project of
reconstituting how we might think of citizenship in the era of
unprecedented crisis — financial, food, water, political, social,
cultural, territorial, environmental and so on. Citizenship further
invokes concerns about the forms of violence enacted through, because
of, and by the idea of citizenship, and the protests, as well as
resistances and struggles that have emerged out of discontent with
articulations of citizenship, impelled by a desire to redefine what we
mean by citizenship. ‘Citizenship in the Era of Global Crisis’ is, in
other words, a call to explore the ways in which citizenship is used and
abused variously from disciplining quotidian cultural practices to
fostering the grounds for social protests and legitimating killing. In
short, the role, conception, articulation and dissemination of
citizenship has fundamental consequences in the globalised world today.
In order to explore the multiple social, cultural, political and
economic contexts within which these concerns are articulated, the
conference is open to a range of disciplinary perspectives and approaches.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
Multiculturalism/ Biculturalism
National(ist) Culture
The International Division of Labour
Borders
Law
Indigenous Struggles
The State
Activism
Environment
Resources
Gender
Open Media
The conference conveners invite abstracts of no more than 250 words and
a short bio to be sent to Brett Nicholls at (brett.nicholls /at/ otago.ac.nz)
<mailto:(brett.nicholls /at/ otago.ac.nz)> and copied to Vijay Devadas at
(vijay.devadas /at/ otago.ac.nz) <mailto:(vijay.devadas /at/ otago.ac.nz)> with
‘CONFERENCE’ in the subject-line by 16 September 2011. Further
information on the Postcolonial Studies Research Network is available at
http://www.otago.ac.nz/humanities/research/networks/postcolonial/
#############
Dr Brett Nicholls
Senior Lecturer
Department of Media, Film, and Communication
University of Otago
Te Whare Wānanga o Otāgo
PO Box 56
Dunedin, 9054
New Zealand
Phone: 64 3 479 8819
Fax: 64 3 479 3932
*
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