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Dear colleagues,

Apologies for cross-posting. 

Please find below the details of this forthcoming workshop. Online link:  http://tinyurl.com/3gxfvom

As places are limited, please register to [log in to unmask] if you plan to attend. 


Best wishes,
Sara Fregonese


Dr. Sara Fregonese
British Academy Post-Doctoral Fellow
Department of Geography, Royal Holloway University of London
Egham, Surrey  TW20 0EX UK
[log in to unmask]
+44 (0)1784 276 291
http://tinyurl.com/6dl3gkd


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City/State/Resistance. Spaces of protest in the Middle East and Mediterranean
British Academy-sponsored interdisciplinary workshop 
Thursday 1 December 2011, 9am – 5pm
RHUL @ Bedford Square, Room G3 
2 Gower Street, London, WC1E 6DP

Speakers: 

Sara Fregonese (convener, RHUL), Chris Doyle (CAABU), Alan Ingram (UCL), Laleh Khalili (SOAS), Adam Ramadan (Cambridge), Larbi Sadiki (Exeter), Nadim Shehadi (Chatham House), Lynn Staeheli (Durham), Andrea Teti (Aberdeen)Lorenzo Trombetta (ANSA-Beirut), Yair Wallach (SOAS).


Themes:

Mohamed Bouazizi’s self-immolation in the Tunisian city of Sidi Bouzid in December 2010 began what has become known as ath-thawra al-arabiyya - the Arab revolution, or ‘Arab Spring’. Protests against authoritarian regimes and calls for social justice and freedom have spread across the whole region, from Tunisia to Bahrain, and have been met with fierce state repression.

However, is this an exclusively Arab phenomenon?

With NATO using bases in Italy and southern Europe for air raids on Libya, and thousands of Tunisian, Libyan and other North African migrants reaching Lampedusa and the Italian mainland, the implications of events south of the Mediterranean seem clear. However, while the Arab Spring has swept across the south and east of the Mediterranean, several countries in Mediterranean Europe are also experiencing their largest protests in decades. In Greece protests against government austerity measures turned into street clashes between protesters and police. In Italy, protesters demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Berlusconi, and a landslide popular referendum blocked the Government’s resources privatisation and justice reforms. In Spain, protest camps occupied main squares in Madrid and Barcelona, with activists declaring them new Tahrir Squares; the Spanish resistance movement Los Indignados is now marching towards Brussels protesting against unemployment.

While media pundits and political analysts have compared the ‘Arab Spring’ to a ‘domino effect’ spreading through contiguous states, this workshop aims to see these events within a more complex frame. In particular, the workshop accounts for the spaces of trans-Mediterranean resistance and (in)security, beyond the Middle East and into Southern Europe. It explores whether and how the current events are impacting on the real and imagined boundaries dividing Mediterranean European and the Arab world.

The workshop explores the following questions: 

1. What, if anything, do protests against neoliberal financial restructuring and public sector cuts in Europe have in common with those protests in the Arab world? Are references to ‘Spain’s Tahrir Square’ and so on merely rhetorical or is a trans-Mediterranean space of resistance taking shape?

2. Cities are important arenas for the shaping of identity, citizenship, rights and conflict, and cities have been the focus of protests on all sides of the Mediterranean. What are the geopolitical implications of the current protests for Mediterranean and Arab cities, and how are urban spaces shaping spaces of resistance and revolution?

3. How are states cooperating to face down protests and learning lessons from the approaches of different regimes? European countries have sold crowd control weapons and other military equipment to repressive regimes in Libya, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Algeria, while the French government considered sending police to Tunisia to help put down the uprising, and Saudi armed forces did enter Bahrain to repress protests. Especially in the light of the Summer 2011 ‘riots’ in London and other British cities, these dynamics raise important questions about the meaning of state sovereignty in front of urban ‘emergency’. 

4. With governments on all sides of the Mediterranean facing down protests with various degrees of intransigence, repression and in some cases violence, have old taken-for-granted boundaries between an ‘authoritarian’ Arab world and a ‘democratic’ Mediterranean Europe blurred in recent months?

Sponsored by the British-Academy, the workshop brings together academic and non-academic delegates in order to discuss and identify future research agendas and collaboration.