New agendas in social movement studies - Conference announcement and call for papers

New agen­das in social move­ment studies – Confe­rence announ­ce­ment and call for papers

 

Confe­rence announ­ce­ment and call for papers

 

NUI Mayno­oth, Satur­day Novem­ber 26th 2011

 

Centre for Poli­tics, Power and Soci­ety, Dept of Soci­o­logy, NUI Mayno­oth

Rese­arch clus­ter on “criti­cal poli­ti­cal thought, acti­vism and alter­na­tive futu­res”

 

Keynote spea­ker: Cris­tina Fles­her Fomi­naya, Univer­sity of Aber­deen 

“New direc­ti­ons for social move­ment studies?”

Cris­tina Fles­her Fomi­naya has done ethno­grap­hic rese­arch on anti-globa­li­sa­tion networks in western Europe, Spanish Green parties and the British anti-roads move­ment. She has a parti­cu­lar inter­est in auto­no­mous social move­ments as well as the impact of new tech­no­lo­gies on move­ment orga­ni­sa­ti­ons and the poli­tics of memory surroun­ding terro­rist attacks such as 3/11 in Madrid and 9/11 in New York. She has been rese­ar­ching and parti­ci­pa­ting in Euro­pean social move­ments since the early 1990s. Her work has been publis­hed in Contem­po­rary Social Science, Soci­o­lo­gi­cal Inquiry, Soci­o­logy Compass, Inter­na­ti­o­nal Review of Social History, South Euro­pean Soci­ety and Poli­tics, Medi­terrá­neo Econó­mico, Inter­na­ti­o­nal Femi­nist Jour­nal of Poli­tics and seve­ral edited collec­ti­ons.

Dr Fles­her Fomi­naya is a foun­ding editor of Inter­face, one of only four dedi­ca­ted social move­ments rese­arch jour­nals, and a refe­ree for two of the other three. Holder of nume­rous inter­na­ti­o­nal scho­lars­hips and prizes, she holds a PhD from the Univer­sity of Cali­for­nia, Berke­ley and worked in Madrid before taking up her current post in Scot­land. She is co-chair of the Coun­cil for Euro­pean Studi­es’ Euro­pean Social Move­ments Rese­arch Network and a peer revi­e­wer for the IRCHSS post-docto­ral fellows­hip and the CARA mobi­lity fellows­hip scheme.

 

Why new agen­das in social move­ment studies?

Writing on social move­ments in Ireland has often done one of two things – either it has trea­ted social move­ments as a margi­nal “add-on” to suppo­sedly more central ques­ti­ons about Irish soci­ety or it has “applied” theo­ries and concepts which have been borro­wed uncri­ti­cally, usually from the US or Britain, to Ireland. Unsur­pri­singly, such rese­arch has been largely igno­red – in inter­na­ti­o­nal contexts and the rest of Irish acade­mia, by move­ment prac­ti­ti­o­ners and in Irish poli­ti­cal debate.

Between these extre­mes, howe­ver, there is also work which sees collec­tive agency and social struc­ture as funda­men­tally symbi­o­tic, work that rela­tes social move­ment studies to wider social theory, reflects criti­cally on the speci­fics of social move­ments in Ireland and also compa­ra­ti­vely, and enga­ges with wider currents of thought within social move­ment rese­arch inter­na­ti­o­nally as well as that coming from move­ments them­sel­ves.

This confe­rence aims to encou­rage work of this kind, which is not simply “routine science”, resta­ting common assump­ti­ons, but trying to make real contri­bu­ti­ons to wider deba­tes about social move­ments, to the thin­king of move­ment prac­ti­ti­o­ners, and to public unders­tan­ding of the nature of Irish soci­ety. We are inter­es­ted both in discus­si­ons of how we might rese­arch social move­ments – what methods and theo­ries are most useful – and of what we should be rese­ar­ching, in the Irish context and beyond.

Themes

We invite papers addres­sing one or more of the areas below, but we are also open to other rese­arch agen­das which you feel deserve more atten­tion. The confe­rence is open to parti­ci­pants from any acade­mic disci­pline as well as to rese­ar­chers working within social move­ments.

1) Poli­tics, theory and method

What are the purpo­ses of social move­ment rese­arch? How do theo­ries and methods inter­act? What rela­ti­ons­hips (should) exist between rese­ar­chers and move­ments?  What kinds of know­ledge do social move­ments produce? What theo­ries are gene­ra­ted and used by move­ment acti­vists? Does move­ment rese­arch have anyt­hing useful to say to move­ments?

2) What are “social move­ments” anyway?

How can we unders­tand “move­ment” not just as a type of semi-formal orga­ni­sing, but in ways that allow “social move­ments” to include micro-level resis­tance at one end or indeed revo­lu­tion at the other? How do we relate unders­tan­dings of social move­ments in the 19th or early 20th century as trying to create or trans­form states and insti­tu­ti­ons to contem­po­rary assump­ti­ons about move­ments as accep­ting given struc­tu­res? How can we say somet­hing useful about where the boun­da­ries of one move­ment end and anot­her begin? How do soci­e­ties change through collec­tive action, and how can we know?

3) Criti­cal cultu­ral analy­sis

How do past strug­gles and inhe­ri­ted tradi­ti­ons shape social move­ments today? How can we inte­grate discourse, language and culture into the analy­sis of social move­ments? How are move­ments and their discour­ses gende­red, clas­sed and raci­a­li­sed? What is the impor­tance of emotion and affect; trauma, stress and sustai­na­bi­lity in shaping move­ment dyna­mics and outco­mes? And how can social move­ment rese­arch trans­form cultu­ral and lite­rary studies which often ask these ques­ti­ons without asking after the prac­ti­ca­li­ties of orga­ni­sing, stra­tegy and strug­gle?

4) Unders­tan­ding social move­ments in Ireland

Do Irish move­ments really operate in a context like the US and UK, or should we be looking to move­ments in Medi­ter­ra­nean soci­e­ties or Latin America for compa­ri­sons and concepts? What kind of “move­ment soci­ety” is Ireland in inter­na­ti­o­nal compa­ri­son – perip­he­ral, post-colo­nial, conser­va­tive? How does the role of (nati­o­na­list, Catho­lic, farmers’, labour) move­ments in crea­ting the state enable and cons­train contem­po­rary move­ments? What does the Irish case tell us about move­ments more broadly and how can it help us unders­tand move­ments elsew­here?

5) Social move­ments in the 2010s 

How has the crisis shaped social move­ments – themes, actors, rela­ti­ons­hips between move­ments, with parties and the state? Will models of social part­ners­hip and mains­tre­a­ming survive auste­rity and coer­cion? What ‘new’ forms of mobi­li­sa­tion are evident – new tech­no­lo­gies, new tactics, and new kinds of rela­ti­ons­hips between move­ment actors? How are global move­ments chan­ging (e.g. trans­na­ti­o­nal anti-capi­ta­lism; the Arab Spring; dias­po­ric social move­ments)? Why has the move­ment response to the crisis in Ireland been so muted?



 

Abstracts and papers

We invite abstracts (up to 250 words) on any of the themes above or addres­sing other themes in social move­ment studies which you feel deserve grea­ter rese­arch. Abstracts should include a title, your email address and insti­tu­ti­o­nal affi­li­a­tion if any (inde­pen­dent scho­lars and move­ment prac­ti­ti­o­ners are welcome to submit). Please send abstracts to Theresa O’Ke­efe at <theresa [ punto ] okeefeatnuim [ punto ] ie (theresa[dot]okeefe[at]nuim[dot]ie)> by Octo­ber 1st 2011.

Papers (up to 10,000 words inclu­ding bibli­o­graphy) should be submit­ted by Novem­ber 14th 2011. Papers which are submit­ted by the dead­line will be inclu­ded in a CD-ROM for all confe­rence parti­ci­pants, as an imme­di­ate “state of the art” collec­tion of who is doing what in Irish social move­ment studies. (This does not, of course, prevent you using rewor­ked versi­ons of the paper as the basis for arti­cles, book chap­ters etc.)

Papers which are submit­ted in time will also be consi­de­red for inclu­sion in an edited volume with an acade­mic publis­her.

 

Confe­rence infor­ma­tion

Detai­led infor­ma­tion will be made avai­la­ble in due course, but this will be a one-day (Satur­day) confe­rence at NUI Mayno­oth. The event is being orga­ni­sed on behalf of the Criti­cal Poli­ti­cal Thought, Acti­vism and Alter­na­tive Futu­res rese­arch clus­ter at NUI Mayno­oth with an orga­ni­sing commit­tee of Dr Theresa O’Ke­efe and Dr Laurence Cox (Dept. of Soci­o­logy, Nati­o­nal Univer­sity of Ireland Mayno­oth) and Dr Cris­tina Fles­her Fomi­naya (Dept. of Soci­o­logy, Univer­sity of Aber­deen).