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TZID:Europe/Rome
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DTSTART:20240331T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240521T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240521T103000
DTSTAMP:20260415T193546
CREATED:20240418T163800Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240518T182501Z
UID:555-1716282000-1716287400@altsou.com
SUMMARY:Political humanitarianism\, the Black Mediterranean and border violence
DESCRIPTION:WHO?\nBeppe Caccia (Mediterranea)\, David Yambio (Alliance for the Refugees in Libya)\, Ida Danewid (University of Sussex)\, Vivian Gerrand (Deakin University) and others! \nWHAT?\nThis unconference panel is an ‘egalitarian exchange of questions’\, which aims to bring humanitarian organisations into dialogue with university-based activists working for the rights and dignity of migrant people within and beyond Europe. Among other questions\, we will discuss what the historical role of mobility controls has been in capturing and disciplining a mobile workforce\, and how activist-academic discourse can build practically applicable counter-narratives to this. We will critique and formulate political alternatives to today’s humanitarian discourse by exploring non-statist forms of care and communality seen among Mediterranean communities. We will examine new possibilities thrown up by the way the Black Mediterranean and ‘bordered’ violence have changed over the past 20 years. We will centre the role of refugees as protagonists in the fight for human rights\, particularly in the context of Libyan refugees in Italy. These questions\, collectively reflected upon\, will feed into the creation of an action plan for use by university communities who wish to bridge the gap between academia\, humanitarian activism and journalism for migrant rights.  \n  \nABOUT THE SPEAKERS\n\nDr. Ida Danewid is a social and political theorist based in the Department of International Relations at the University of Sussex. Her research interests are in anticolonial political thought\, the black radical tradition\, gender studies\, and histories of internationalism “from below.” She is the author of Resisting Racial Capitalism: An Antipolitical Theory of Refusal (Cambridge University Press). \n\n\n Vivian Gerrand is a scholar of alternative / counter narratives\, migration\, citizenship\, postcoloniality\, radicalisation and resilience who has been studying cultures of migration in Italy since 2003. She lives with European heritage on the unceded lands of the Kulin Nation in Naarm (Melbourne\, Australia)\, where she was born.\n\n\nDavid Yambio (Alliance for the Refugees in Libya) – To be completed\n\n\nBeppe Caccia (Mediterranea)- To be completed\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nREGISTER HERE\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nVenue
URL:https://altsou.com/event/political-humanitarianism-the-black-mediterranean-and-border-violence/
LOCATION:Sala Triaria (Villa Schifanoia) + on zoom\, Florence\, Italy
CATEGORIES:altSOU'24,Hybrid event
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240521T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240521T123000
DTSTAMP:20260415T193546
CREATED:20240418T164533Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240513T101847Z
UID:558-1716289200-1716294600@altsou.com
SUMMARY:Beyond borders? Academic and activist research at EU borders
DESCRIPTION:WHO?\nFederico Alagna (Scuola Normale Superiore)\, Kamila Fiałkowska (University of Warsaw and Badaczki i Badacze na Granicy)\, Giulia Fabini (University of Bologna) and Martina Tazzioli (University of Bologna) \nWHAT?\nThis roundtable focuses on borders and calls for a dialogue that brings empirical\, conceptual and philosophical perspectives together. While Frontex has increased its workforce to control the external borders next to national border guards\, it is also becoming increasingly normal to encounter border controls within the Schengen area itself. External and internal borders of the European Union (EU) are spaces of daily violence and illegal pushbacks\, but also of daily resistance from those on the move and their supporters. How do we tell the story of this resurgence of borders in Europe? Have they always been so present\, or are they just more visible? What is our role as researchers and/or activists doing research at/on borders?  \nThis roundtable invites speakers to share their experiences – as academics and/or activists – at the internal and external borders of the EU. Through a roundtable format\, the event aims at:  \n\nSharing field experiences about the situation at particular borders in Europe\nDiscussing the changing nature of borders and of (re/de)-bordering practices and their effect on people on the move and locals\nReflecting collectively on more critical understandings of borders and migration\nDiscussing how it is possible to navigate political engagements within academic institutions Each participant will make a presentation of their research and/or activist experience of 10 minutes\, after which we will open the floor for discussion.\n\nABOUT THE SPEAKERS\n\nGiulia Fabini is a Junior Assistant Professor in the Department of Legal Studies at the University of Bologna. She holds a PhD in Law and Society from the University of Milan and was a student researcher at the Center for the Study of Law and Society at UC Berkeley. Giulia’s research focuses on border control and the interaction between migrants and the police\, migrant struggles\, immigration courts\, and the prison system from a gender perspective. She is currently collaborating on two research projects on police women and the prison police. Giulia acted as the Assistant Editor for the European Journal of Criminology (2017-2020) and she is a member of the editorial boards of Studi sulla questione criminale\, Rivista Antigone\, and Justice\, Power and Resistance. As an activist\, she is an observer of Antigone Association and has the authorization to visit prisons in Emilia-Romagna region. She is part of the European Society of Criminology\, the European Group for the study of deviance and social control\, and the Law and Society Association. Her most recent publication is Governing Immobility in the COVID-19 Crisis in Italy: Non-conforming Behaviors of Migrants Confronting the New Old Processes of Othering\n\n\nKamila Fiałkowska is a researcher at the Centre of Migration Research\, University of Warsaw and one of the coordinators of the Researchers on the Borders (Badaczki i Badacze na Granicy – https://www.bbng.org/) – a grassroots\, inter-university\, interdisciplinary research network created in response to the ongoing humanitarian crisis on the Polish-Belarusian border. Kamila obtained her PhD in 2018 at the Faculty of Political Studies and International Relations at the University of Warsaw. Her research focuses on gender relations in migratory settings\, masculinity studies and family relations\, as well as the construction of national and gender identities. \n\n\nMartina Tazzioli is an Associate Professor in the Department of History and Cultures at the University of Bologna. She holds a PhD in Politics from Goldsmiths\, University of London\, and an MA in Philosophy from the University of Pisa. Martina’s research is situated at the crossroads of Political Geography\, Critical Migration and Border Studies\, and Political Philosophy. She is currently working on three projects: One on memory of border controls and migrants’ struggles\, a related project about counter-mapping and legal geographies of border violence on the central Mediterranean route\, and a research project about social reproduction activities in camps\, with a focus on Greece. Her latest publications include Border abolitionism: migration containment and the genealogies of struggles (2023)\, The Making of Migration. The Biopolitics of Mobility at Europe’s Borders (2019)\, and Spaces of Governmentality: Autonomous Migration and the Arab Uprisings (2015). \n\n\nFederico Alagna is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Political Science and Political Sociology in the Faculty of Political and Social Sciences at the Scuola Normale Superiore and Adjunct Professor of Political Science at the University of Bologna. Federico’s research focuses on the politics of migration in the EU and Italy\, with specific reference to the migrant smuggling policy regime\, the role of civil society actors in the production of migration policies from below\, the criminalisation of people on the move and solidarity initiatives. He is a political activist\, mostly in the migrant solidarity and right to the city movements\, and is part of the sea rescue initiative Mediterranea Saving Humans. In the past\, Federico has also served as Deputy-Mayor for Culture and Public Education of the City of Messina.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nREGISTER HERE\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nVenue
URL:https://altsou.com/event/beyond-borders-academic-and-activist-research-at-eu-borders/
LOCATION:Sala Triaria (Villa Schifanoia) + on zoom\, Florence\, Italy
CATEGORIES:altSOU'24,Hybrid event,Roundtable
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240521T153000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240521T173000
DTSTAMP:20260415T193546
CREATED:20240418T170822Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240512T140320Z
UID:579-1716305400-1716312600@altsou.com
SUMMARY:Intimately Material: Collective Reflexion on the Material Conditions of Academia
DESCRIPTION:Joint event organised in collaboration with the EUI Queer and Feminist Working Group \nWHAT?\nThe workshop is part of the conference “Intimately Material: Violence\, Social Reproduction\, & Queerness in Transition”\, organised by the EUI Queer and Feminist Working Group at the EUI.  \nIn the workshop\, we will interrogate the place of academia and the participants’ lived experiences of doing research. By collectively writing “sick notes”\, we want to discuss themes related to the material conditions of doing research\, such as job uncertainty\, capitalistic approaches to research\, academic mobility\, and social reproduction. Our conclusions will be turned into a collective statement expressing our own experienced materialities and ideas of change. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nREGISTER HERE*\n\n\n*Note that registration to this joint event is via the EUI webpage. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nVenue
URL:https://altsou.com/event/intimately-material-collective-reflexion-on-the-material-conditions-of-academia/
LOCATION:Sala del Capitolo (Badia) + on zoom\, European University Insitute\, Florence\, Italy
CATEGORIES:altSOU'24,Hybrid event,Workshop
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