Izmir: Mapping Alternative Routes out of Capitalism 8 Jan deadline.
See below a call for panels and papers for a section in the EISA conference, Izmir, Turkey, 7-10 September 2016. The section seeks panels and papers on alternatives to capitalism, and how we might achieve them, both within the capitalist present and on the route to a post-capitalist society. We welcome papers on explicit contestation of capitalism through varyingly autonomous forms of struggle as well as futurist, anti-proprietary or gift culture movements, survivalism, cooperatives, DIY culture, permaculture, experimentation with cybernetics and post-humanist ideals, as well as revived institutional interests in wellbeing. The deadline for proposals is 8 January 2016 and must be done online through the EISA conference tool website - https://www.conftool.pro/paneuropean2016/ Please feel free to contact us first to discuss informally ahead of submitting proposals: David Bailey (d.j.bailey@bham.ac.uk) and Phoebe Moore (p.moore@mdx.ac.uk) Section title: Mapping Alternative Routes out of Capitalism The critical study of global capitalism and the hegemony of neoliberalism are both central to the study of international relations and international political economy. Research has focused less, however, on questioning how (if at all) we might go beyond capitalism. This is despite global capitalism remaining dangerously unstable, not least because the global economic crisis that began in 2008 continues to linger without any obvious resolution to it. The aim of this section, therefore, is to bring together those with an interest in the rise of alternatives at varied positions along the ideological spectrum; mapping, studying, theorising, highlighting, judging and assessing practices which form contemporary alternatives to, and problems for, global capitalism. This includes pathways in local, regional and global contexts. In particular, we note two emerging types of response, each of which expose the ever-present possibility and presence of sometimes surprising and contradictory routes outside of capitalism, as well as raising the question of technology in contemporary social change. On the one hand, we see various modified projects seeking alternative routes to social justice and rights: futurist, anti-proprietary or gift culture movements, survivalism, cooperatives, DIY culture, permaculture, experimentation with cybernetics and post-humanist ideals, as well as revived institutional interests in wellbeing. On the other hand, we see the explicit contestation of capitalism through varyingly autonomous forms of struggle: Occupy, the indignados, the Greek grassroots projects, Rojava, and, then, the electoral manifestation of some of these trends within Syriza, Podemos, Barcelona en ComĂș, and Jeremy Corbyn. Section convenors: David Bailey (d.j.bailey@bham.ac.uk) and Phoebe Moore ( p.moore@mdx.ac.uk). Submissions to be made here: https://www.conftool.pro/paneuropean2016/ Deadline for submissions: 8 January 2016 Conference website and more details: www.paneuropeanconference.org/2016 Dr Phoebe V Moore Personal email pvm.doc@gmail.com Work email p.moore@mdx.ac.uk Twitter phoebemoore Profile http://www.mdx.ac.uk/aboutus/staffdirectory/phoebe-moore.aspx Biolog http://phoebevmoore.wordpress.com/
participants (1)
-
Phoebe Moore