Print

Print


Dear all,

Apologies for x-postings. Let me know if you would be interested in
contributing to the following panel and please forward to anyone interested.

This call is for the coming American Association of Geographers annual
conference in San Francisco, March 29 - April 6 2016 (
http://www.aag.org/annualmeeting)

All the best

Omar

*...*


*Material Lives : Resisting infrastructures and infrastructures of
resistance *

From America to Asia, infrastructural unrest is thriving as grassroots
movements resist the privatisation of water, electricity, health, education
and food systems; mobilise to stop the construction of prisons, walls and
military bases; confront the laying of oil and gas pipes; challenge the
expansion of highways, damns and airports; occupy banks, government
buildings and squares; battle against telecommunication surveillance; and
fight the labor conditions and closure of factories. These struggles—which
are simultaneously local, regional and global—coalesce around and aim at
the infrastructure that makes accessible, readable, extractable, and
governable resources turned into commodities, from land and water to
information and bodies. As such, these communities are targeting the very
foundations that enable imperialism, colonialism, capitalism and the
nation-state to extend its reach and sustain through time and space.

Because of their understanding of the socio-material and technical worlds
we inhabit, these coalitions of resistance expose the profound political
and enduring nature of these complex assemblages. Activists, organisers and
their supporters contribute to unveil how these projects produce and
reproduce racialized, gendered and class-based social orders. They debunk
the expert-crafted political and economic narratives that define
infrastructures —so often concealed as necessary technical acts and
fantasies of liberalism, modernisation, development and securitisation.
Most crucially, they reveal the relations contained within infrastructures,
the actors that plan them, the law that legitimizes them, the discourses
and imaginaries that shape them, the knowledge gone into their design, the
labour used to build them, the contested histories of their construction,
the broader structural forces that shape them, and the ways in which they
are experienced. Thus while infrastructure are shown as the historical and
contemporary sources of power and fragility that they are, seemingly
unimportant struggles against a road or a pipe become terrains of political
contestation that can quickly turn into broader and crucial fights against
authoritarian regimes.

One also needs to take into consideration that resisting infrastructures
necessarily involves an infrastructure of resistance. As part of their
resolve, communities develop people-powered networks that employ a wide
range of tactics, skills, knowledge and forces to counter and sometimes
subvert infrastructural violence. These networks provide other forms of
infrastructure beyond the technologies and systems they are part of and
often related to, they conform actual collective infrastructures that are
used to empower as well as cover the needs and aspirations of marginalised,
oppressed and dissatisfied communities. And in doing so they build and
envision alternative and autonomous social, political, economic and
material worlds. In other words, they create infrastructures for autonomy
and self-sufficiency that consolidate around broader struggles and open up
spaces of political possibility. These infrastructures of resistance may be
incipient, precarious and fragile. Yet, not taking them seriously is
failing to acknowledge the potential of these spaces of political
organisation to challenge the imperatives of capitalist control and the
colonisation of everyday life.

This discussion panel seeks to bring together cases that illustrate the
ways infrastructure —broadly understood as analytical category and
metaphor—provide a terrain to think critically about politics and the
political. We hope to include contributions from scholars and activists
that explore and question the connections between people and infrastructure
from the vantage point of grassroots struggles against and for
infrastructure. Against the violence embedded in these material worlds. And
for creating alternative infrastructures designed for autonomy,
emancipation, and justice. In doing so we would like to engage in a
collective exercise to explore infrastructure in ways that not simply focus
upon the characteristics of these objects, in its actual materiality, but
that also address the situated experiences of our material lives, the
constitution of infrastructure worlds and concomitantly its shaping of
political practices and experiences as well as its extension into growing
spheres of life.

We welcome historical and contemporary empirical work from a wide range of
sites, and with a variety of theoretical orientations. A series of
questions would be pre-circulated among the participants before the panel
takes place.

Please submit your abstract of no more than 250 words, along with a title,
and your institution to Omar Jabary Salamanca ([log in to unmask]) *by
November 14, 2015.  *

Sponsored by: Cultural and Political Ecology Specialty Group of the
Association of American Geographers

_______________________________________________________
[log in to unmask]
An urban geography discussion and announcement forum
List Archives: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/URB-GEOG-FORUM
Maintained by: RGS-IBG Urban Geography Research Group
UGRG Home Page: http://www.urban-geography.org.uk