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[ecrea] Arizona ICA Preconference CFP
Tue Oct 04 17:29:17 GMT 2011
The Philosophy of Communication and Popular Communication divisions seek
submissions to participate in a co-sponsored panel on Citizenship,
Culture and Sovereignty as part of the Arizona and Beyond
inter-divisional 2012 ICA preconference.
Description and Rationale:
Arizona’ SB 1070 has put into place harsh measures aimed at identifying
and deporting the undocumented, including criminalizing being without
documents at any time, authorizing police to stop anyone suspect of
being undocumented, and criminalizing helping the undocumented. The law
has been widely criticized for its de facto requirement of racial
profiling, exceeding state authority, and for its cruelty.
SB 1070 is just one part of the broader effort to control migrants and
the physical space of the border within the U.S. and abroad. These
efforts have notably surfaced in law and in architectural and
technological interventions aimed at controlling the physical spaces of
borders (walls, video surveillance). These efforts are attempts to
instantiate or buttress state and national sovereignty, as traditionally
understood. Sovereignty as a political concept is an idea of
independence and self-determination linked to control of both territory
and policy. Commonly, it equates this independence with military,
political, and social control of geographic territory. This concept of
sovereignty is written into national and international law and deeply
entwined with many political systems and distributions of power. Control
of flows of people and of legal citizenship is one of these expressions
of sovereignty. The use of cultural policy and communication
infrastructure to privilege notions of national singularity and
distinction is another.
At the same time as many countries and localities are attempting to
shore up such sovereignty through efforts to control the flow and
movement of migrants and to police the physical and symbolic spaces of
borders, communication technologies and commerce have facilitated the
flow of culture, goods, and forms of community across these borders.
These flows potentially erode some of the intellectual and symbolic
resources typically used to construct and maintain state sovereignty.
Additionally, alternative notions of citizenship and belonging that
hinge less on state-based political rights and more on consumption
practices, media culture, and access to goods have become part of
popular discourse and culture. Arguably, media culture and communication
play key roles in the formation and circulation of these alternative
ideas of citizenship and community. These more diffuse cultural
connections pull in a different direction than state efforts to control
borders, migrants, and citizenship. The roundtable seeks to explore this
tension and the contribution that communication scholarship can make to
discussions of sovereignty and citizenship in popular discourse and
sites of legal struggle. Topics that proposal might address include, but
are not limited to:
• The role of communication and popular/media culture in conceptions of
post-sovereignty and in cosmopolitan challenges to territorially-bound
notions of sovereignty
• Examples in which ideas and practices of cultural citizenship
articulates alternative forms of solidarity or sovereignty to compete
with territorial ideas of sovereignty
• Comparisons of communication, citizenship and borders within liberal
political regimes and non-liberal political regimes
• Examination of cultural policy and communication infrastructures in
terms of sovereignty and citizenship
• The ethical bases for contemporary regimes of citizenship and
sovereignty and the political and legal potentials of alternative
ethical groundings
• Programs for how communication and media scholarship, especially in
areas such as cultural citizenship, hybridity, and cosmopolitan ethics,
can become tools for tearing down walls, symbolic, legal or physical
• Specific tensions or places of contact between ideas and practices of
cultural citizenship with state practices of sovereignty
• Explorations of how territoriality and sovereignty define
communication/media production, policy, and consumption
• Consideration of what place traditional political ideas of sovereignty
(and the definitions and distributions of citizenship that flow from it)
should have in our research agendas
The Citizenship, Culture, and Sovereignty roundtable is part of the
broader, inter-division pre-conference, Arizona and Beyond. In light of
the location of the 2012 conference in Arizona, the Arizona and Beyond
pre-conference brings together a broad cross section of ICA divisions to
explore the political, cultural, ethical, and theoretical issues raised
by state efforts to control migrants and borders. The roundtable will
contribute to the pre-conference through exploring the cultural and
communicative underpinnings and implications of the conceptual apparatus
of border and migrant control, sovereignty, and through examination of
alternative bases of political autonomy and solidarity. Culture and
communication are key bases of solidarity, community, and new practices
of autonomy and citizenship; as such, they can be productive starting
points for re-thinking the foundations and practices of border control.
The panel will consist of 4 invited respondents and 4 respondents to
this open call. The format is geared toward discussion and productive
exchange, following the Flow conference format. Each panelist will be
asked to circulate a short position paper to participants and moderators
beforehand and will have 5 minutes to introduce their argument.
Panelists will then be invited to discuss points of connection and
dissent among the position statements before the panel is opened up for
discussion with the room.
Non-U.S. focused submissions are encouraged. Submissions for this open
call should consist at this stage of a title and abstract (maximum 300
words). Please send these to Jennifer Petersen at (jenp /at/ virginia.edu) by
Nov. 30, 2011.
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