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[Commlist] Call for Chapters: Coronavirus, Crisis and Culture
Wed Mar 17 14:43:15 GMT 2021
*Coronavirus, Crisis and Culture: ***
*Policing, Protest and the Mediation of Dissent during the Covid-19
Pandemic ***
*
*
*Editors: Ben Harbisher and Stuart Price,*
*/Media /**/Discourse/**//**/Centre/*
*/Call for Chapters/**//*
*.....*
*Dear All - this may be of interest to members ... deadlines, format,
etc., scroll down*
**
_Global restrictions on protest _
In May 2020, the Bonavero Centre for Human Rights published an analysis
of twelve nations’ response to the pandemic: the authors identified ‘a
global rise in autocratic populism’ accompanied by ‘Covid 19 emergency
measures’ that ‘risk becoming a foundation for greater consolidation of
executive power’ (3). A month later, Amnesty International
produced/Policing the Pandemic/, which drew attention to ‘systemic human
rights concerns regarding institutional racism, discrimination in law
enforcement and lack of accountability regarding allegations of unlawful
use of force by law enforcement officials’ (4). In March 2021, the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace identified over 230
anti-government protests in some 110 countries, with 25 significant
protests aimed specifically at coronavirus restrictions.
This Call for Chapters from the Media Discourse Centre emerges in
response to the/worldwide/limits placed on public protest during the
last twelve months, and the social movements that have continued to
mobilise in the face of these conditions. Contributors can discuss new
manifestations of dissent, the adaptation of existing movements to
political/pandemic restrictions, live and mediated events, and the
online reconfiguration of the protest tradition (see below).
_Controversies and resistance _
Events such as the death of George Floyd on 25 May 2020, and the global
call to end racial inequality, have shown that protest in this era was
not monopolised by the conspiratorial Right, and that the articulation
of alternative social visions has not been curtailed by ‘lockdown’
legislation. Yet, although widespread condemnation of the use of
‘discretionary’ powers, exercised for example against women attending
the Sarah Everard vigil on Clapham Common (13 March 2021), seemed to
presage renewed resistance to state interference, it may not prevent the
creation of draconian restrictions on protest in the UK and elsewhere
(Allegretti and Wolfe-Robinson, 2021). A substantial drift towards
authoritarianism was notable pre-Covid, but the pandemic seems to have
exacerbated this trend, within ‘democratic’ systems, in repressive
nations like China, and in countries like Brazil that have emerged from
dictatorial regimes but have in this period repurposed repressive laws
to stifle dissent (Human Rights Watch, 2021).
In some nations, there was also clear conflict between national and
regional authority, evident for instance in Spain, where in October
2020, the Government enforced restrictions on the region of Madrid, and
in Britain, where the Tier System and the disbursement of recovery funds
seemed inequitable. Yet obvious state intervention in this period,
against visible signs of public dissent, are mirrored by the control or
‘private’ life and increased workforce surveillance through modes of
technology (from Amazon workforce tracking to the monitoring systems
within Microsoft Teams) that employees were forced to endure.
_A range of issues and movements _
During the lockdown, a range of social movements and political causes
became visible, either in direct response to official limitations, or in
spite of them. Some were longstanding campaigns that gathered renewed
momentum, and some (such as the Clap for Carers phenomenon), were
enthusiastically promoted by Establishment figures as a means to promote
social cohesion. Right-wing protests over lockdown measures, intended as
direct challenges to formal authority, included the UK’s ‘Freedom
Festivals’, advertised throughout social media, which (state actors
claimed) had been appropriated by the Far Right. Groups such as
anti-vaxxers and anti-maskers emerged, and there were numerous
demonstrations in London at the closure of Gyms. In the UK at least, the
blanket ban on gatherings rendered all forms of protest illegal, but
inconsistent policing and vague public policy led to the variable
application of new laws. In the United States, the first ‘armed
invasion’ of a state facility took place in the Michigan Capitol, after
the Governor introduced emergency measures to control the spread of the
pandemic (Beckett, 2020).
In the UK, despite the questionable legal grounds on which a national
lockdown had been imposed, fear and acquiescence dominated public
discourse during the initial curfew. On the one hand, nearly all
collective public activity had been prohibited, and on the other,
strategically crafted messages were disseminated via public institutions
and by the mass media to propagate compliance (Dagnall et al, 2020). To
ensure that key political messages were ubiquitous, opposing posts on
social media were sometimes lumped together, condemned as irresponsible
or conspiratorial, and consigned to the lunatic fringe. A range of
organisations were established during the pandemic to counter subversion
and regulate communications, and the threat to ‘infrastructure’ from
malignant forces was woven into the discourse of securitisation (CPNI,
February 2021). Besides over-priced PPE, popular opinion became the UK’s
most valuable commodity, and disinformation became the new sedition –
censured by normative convention and by deliberate state intervention
under the rubric of media literacy and the war against ‘fake news’
(Ofcom, 2021).
*Academic disciplines and fields of study:***
Social movement theory, state and corporate analysis, feminist
internationalism, policing and surveillance studies, class analysis,
media studies, intersectional organisation theory, digital labour and
resistance studies, critical management studies, trade and industrial
union theory, discourse and multimodal analysis, libertarian left and
revolutionary critiques, regionalist and independence studies, race and
post-colonialist approaches, cultural studies, comparative and
historical studies, economic theory, and queer theory.
*Topics for chapters may include specific or general examples:***
George Floyd and U.S. BLM protests
The toppling of Edward Colston’s statue
Anti-lockdown demonstrations in Europe (Netherlands, France, Spain, etc)
Mutual Aid and foodbanks in Communities
Managerialist recuperation of pandemic collectivity (mindfulness/CBT, etc)
Antifa in the U.S.
XR protests in the UK
The Sarah Everard vigils
Echoes of the Arab Spring
Transnational online protest events and organisation
State Repression in Brazil
International LGBTQI organisation
‘Minority’ unions and syndicalism under Covid (IWGB, IWW, UVW)
Anti-Putin mobilisation in Russia
Clap for Carers and the ‘slow handclap’ against government
The Sardines Movement in Italy
European antifascist mobilisation
Agitation for Universal Basic Income
The worldwide Feminist General Strike
General Defence Committees of the U.S. IWW
The heritage, public statues and ‘woke’ controversies
Pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong
The repression and coup in Myanmar
‘Taking the knee’ as a symbol of global solidarity
Fascist mobilisation and state collusion: Proud Boys, Trump and the
Alt-Right
Left and Right-wing Militia protest in the U.S.
Physical state/police response to public protest
Whereas mainstream coverage of the crisis has focussed on factors such
as maintaining social cohesion, the effectiveness of official
‘messaging’, and opposition to ‘fake news’, this submission explores the
various modes of collective resistance, made in response to a variety of
attacks (open or insidious) on: civil liberties; human rights; working
class autonomy; BAME communities; activist health workers; and women’s
organisations. The volume highlights, therefore, the increase in
policing, surveillance and supervisory practices, and the innovative
ways in which contemporary social movements have organised their
response. The book questions the legitimacy of authoritative sources
such as the BBC because of the profound lack of the ‘investigative’
impulse that should characterise news organisations.//
**
*Proposal for Chapters *
The edited volume will be published in the Protest, Media and Culture
Series by Roman Littlefield International. We welcome submissions that
examine coronavirus laws and their impact on public dissent from an
international perspective, and invite contributions from a range of
disciplines (see above).
Please send an abstract of the proposed piece at 300 words maximum, and
a brief bio of 150 - words (toBen.Harbisher /at/ dmu.ac.uk)
<mailto:(Ben.Harbisher /at/ dmu.ac.uk)>*and*(sprice /at/ dmu.ac.uk)
<mailto:(Stuart.Price /at/ dmu.ac.uk)>– no later than Friday*30^th ****April
2021*. Feedback will be provided shortly after that date, with draft
submissions due*1^st ****August**2021*.
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