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[ecrea] June 7th Workshop: Protest Camps and Beyond
Fri Apr 28 22:50:16 GMT 2017
Protest Camps and Beyond: Temporality, Informality, Memory and Care
Wed 7 June 2017
10:00 - 18:00
Ken Edwards Building Room 527
University Road, University of Leicester
Leicester, LE1 7RH
Register at eventbrite:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/protest-camps-and-beyond-temporality-informality-memory-and-care-tickets-34035557268
?
Camps offer an increasingly visible form of housing and shelter in the
contemporary world. Notionally temporary, camps seem to form a permanent
social reality reflecting an increasingly permanent state of crisis of
social reproduction globally. We witness, on the one hand, state and
supra-state agencies employing camps as attempts to manage flows of
migration and refuge, or in responses to natural disasters. On the other
hand, camps emerge more autonomously, in defiance of the control
associated with the managerial provision of care, and in response to the
limits of state and supra-state care provision. Finally camps have
become an ever more present social movement tactic, often explicitly
addressing concerns of social reproduction.
Following Hailey's (2009) typology camps can be cast as expressions of
necessity, control and autonomy. In the context of the contemporary
proliferation of camp architectures, it seems evidence that those three
types of camps increasingly overlap. Protest camps, cast as autonomous
expressions of political questionings of the status quo (Feigenbaum,
Frenzel, & McCurdy, 2013) express concerns about a crisis of social
reproduction. In recent years new protest camps have often focused on
issues such as housing, but also addressed specifically the threats to
life emerging from the continuous exploitation of natural resources.
Protest camps form a site of contestation, but they also provide places
in which sustainable and resilient alternatives are experimented with,
created, and practiced. A key feature uniting many protest camps and
other place-based protests is the politicisation of care. To the extent
that camps produce forms of shelter and care, they also have to grapple
with the challenges and contradictions of autonomous care provision.
In this one day seminar we want to approach the theme from three
thematic angles:
1) Informality and Temporality
2) Memory and Visibility
3) Care as resilience and resistance
We will have inputs and provocations followed by discussions on each of
the themes.
We finish the day with a book launch and celebration of the recently
published Protest Camps In International Context edited by Gavin Brown,
Anna Feigenbaum, Fabian Frenzel and Patrick McCurdy.
Timetable
10:00 Gathering (Refreshments available)
10:30 Informality and Temporality
12:00 Lunch
13:30 Memory and Visibility
15:00 Coffee
15:30 Care as Resilience and Resistance
17:00 Book Launch Celebration for Protest Camps in International Context
The seminar is free to attend but places are limited. Register at
eventbrite:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/protest-camps-and-beyond-temporality-informality-memory-and-care-tickets-34035557268
Some travel bursaries are available to participants. To apply for a
bursary please sent an email to Fabian Frenzel (ff48 /at/ leicester.ac.uk)
explaining your interest in the seminar and possible contributions on
the day.
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