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CALL
FOR PAPERS



Exploring
the ‘Grey Zones’:


Governance,
Conflict and (In)Security in Eastern Europe



Aarhus
University, Denmark, 1-2. November 2013



Keynote
speakers:



Professor
	Sarah Green, Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of
	Helsinki
	Dr.
	Frances Pine, Dept. of Anthropology, Goldsmiths, University of
	London







Within
the last two decades, countries in Eastern Europe have undergone a
wide range of changes in the areas of geo-political relocations and
relations. We have witnessed attempts to establish liberal
democracies, re-orientations from planned to market economies, and a
political desire to create ‘new states’ and internationally
minded ‘new citizens’. While parts of the populations have
benefitted from these developments, other parts have instead
experienced increasing poverty, unemployment and social insecurity.
Today we see that people in such vulnerable positions are
increasingly relying on normative coping and semi-autonomous
strategies, sometimes even crime and violence, in order to obtain the
security and social guarantees they feel deprived of in their present
day societies. Such processes testify to a paradoxical situation
between, one the one hand, the political attempts to create
well-functioning, modern civil societies and, on the other hand,
reliance on normative laws on the margins of society.

In
this conference we wish to explore the
aspects of everyday uncertainty, which we define as ‘grey zones’.
This term refers to the ambiguities, insecurities and contradictions
which lead to responses and strategies challenging perceptions of
legality and illegality. Within anthropology, ‘grey zones’ have
been conceived of in relation to political corruption (Robertson
2006) and zones of ambiguity related to violence (Roy 2008). Yet, we
propose to expand the term to include situations where uncertainty
and ambiguity have become part and parcel of everyday life and where
the indefinable becomes that which defines the situation.
We view these various grey zones not
merely as legacies of socialism but as something in and of
themselves. We thus deploy the notion of grey zones in order to find
new ways of approaching and conceptualizing current situations in
Eastern Europe, ways that are not preconfigured in terms of
‘post-socialism’
or ‘transition’.



We
invite papers which ethnographically explore (but are not necessarily
restricted to) one or more of the following questions:



What
	are the relations between governance, corruption and informality in
	contemporary Eastern Europe?
	How
	do new emerging class systems in Eastern Europe affect people’s
	perceptions of self and other?
	In
	which ways do changing relations between individuals, institutions
	and state manifest themselves in everyday life?
	Which
	roles do the mafia and organized crime play in contemporary Eastern
	Europe?
	How
	do increased illegal work and labour migration to Western Europe
	relate to insecure situations on the home front?
	How
	to citizens in Eastern Europe relate to the influx of migrants from
	Africa and the Middle East in relation to their own situation and
	their perceptions of the borders of Europe (or the EU)?
	How
	are we to perceive the seemingly increasing presence of antagonism,
	violence and openly expressed racism and homophobia in present-day
	Eastern Europe?





Please
send an abstract of 250 words, along with a short biography of 150
words, no later than June 1st 2013 to: 





Ida Harboe:
[log in to unmask]





or







Martin Demant
Frederiksen: [log in to unmask]
 






If
your abstract is accepted we will ask you to send a paper for
pre-circulation by October 1st. During the conference each
participant will have 20 minutes to present, followed by 10 minutes
of discussion. After the conference we will select the most relevant
papers and publish them in an edited volume. Participants will
receive an ‘information package’ about hotels, busses and
conference dinner. Please note that the conference organizers will
not be able to cover travel expenses and accommodation for anyone
other than the keynote speakers. 




Best
regards,



Ida
Harboe and Martin Demant Frederiksen (conference organizers)