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Dear colleagues, we hope you will consider submitting an abstract for what
we hope will be a pair of sessions at the 2016 Royal Geographical Society
conference
<http://www.rgs.org/WhatsOn/ConferencesAndSeminars/Annual+International+Conference/Annual+international+conference.htm>,
to be held in London from 30 August to 2 September. Please circulate this
CFP (also available via this link <http://bit.ly/1NHXwAb>) to relevant
colleagues.

In the years since the global financial crisis, geographers and other
social scientists have developed parallel bodies of work on housing,
largely in the global North, and farmland, primarily in the global South.
While geographically and thematically distinct, these lines of inquiry are
nevertheless linked by a shared focus on processes of financialization.
However as the concept of financialization has assumed the status of the
next ‘globalization’ or ‘neoliberalization’, such analyses risk not only a
loss of analytic coherence and diminishing theoretical returns, but also a
tendency to reify finance as a totalizing, hegemonic and a-historical force
(Christophers, 2015). By contrast, a focus on the operations of capital
(cf. Mezzadra and Neilson, 2013, 2015) emphasizes the situated and variable
processes by which finance encounters rural and urban landscapes, the
materialities characterizing such relations, and the resulting tensions and
contradictions—while keeping sight of how these specific operations
coalesce into more general tendencies.

This session has a dual motivation: first, to highlight research that
attends to how financialization is actually accomplished in the present,
historicizing how it has played out in the past, and how this process is
subject to fragmentation and problematization; and second, to provide a
space for intentionally linking finance-oriented research on land
(including agricultural land) and housing across the North-South divide. We
explicitly invite papers that advance methods of inquiry and abstraction
for opening the black box of finance so as to gain a better understanding
of the land-housing-finance nexus, which we consider a long-overdue
endeavour.

Please send abstracts of 250 words for this paper session to both session
organizers by 1 February 2016:

Desiree Fields, University of Sheffield ([log in to unmask])

Stefan Ouma, Goethe University Frankfurt ([log in to unmask])


*References *Christophers, B. (2015). The limits to financialization.
*Dialogues
in Human Geography, *5(2), 183-200.

Mezzadra, S. and Neilson, B. (2015). Operations of capital. *South Atlantic
Quarterly*, 114(1), 1-9.

Mezzadra, S. and Neilson, B. (2013). Extraction, logistics, and finance:
Global crisis and the politics of operations.*Radical Philosophy, *178,
8-18.

-- 
Desiree Fields
Lecturer in Human Geography
Erasmus and Study Abroad Coordinator and Student Experience Officer
Department of Geography

University of Sheffield

Western Bank

Sheffield

S10 2TN


https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/geography/staff/desiree_fields/home

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