Welcome Back! Reading Group and More

Welcome back to a new term at Lancaster University.  There are many interesting events coming up in the next few weeks.  Please note that, due to Covid, most of our events will continue to be online for now

Book Launch: Uncertain Citizenship by Anne-Marie Fortier

The Migrancy Research Collective, in partnership with the Centre for Mobilities Research (CeMore) at Lancaster University, are excited to announce an Author Meets Readers event to launch MRC member Anne-Marie Fortier’s new book Uncertain Citizenship: Life in the Waiting Room.

The event will be held online, 29 June, 1-3pm.  Professor Fortier will respond to a readers’ panel consisting of:  Professor Michaela Benson; Professor Bridget Byrne;      Dr Kamran Kahn; and Dr Gwyneth Lonergan

The event will be chaired by Dr Karolina Follis and Dr Giovanni Bettini.

Please register for the launch at Eventbrite.

Workshop: Globalization, borders, and new geographies of inequality

The cross-faculty Migrancy Research Group at Lancaster University, with the support of the NorthWest Social Science Doctoral Training Partnership (@NWSSDTP), is hosting a workshop for early career scholars and PhD students on the theme of ‘Globalization, borders, and new geographies of inequality’. In the interactive one-day workshop, participants will showcase their work in short presentations and engage a discussion on the changing political geography of borders and emerging research directions in the field. Gathering PhD students and early career researchers from several UK and European universities, one of the main aims of the event is to strengthen and broaden existing networks among researchers investigating from a critical perspective the turbulent politics surrounding migration and borders.

The workshop will take place at Lancaster University, on 19 February 2020 (venue: Seminar Room 3, Faraday Building)

Introducing Manus Prison Theory: Knowing Border Violence

Lancaster University is delighted to be hosting Behrouz Boochani (via live stream) and Omid Tofighian at Lancaster on the 6th of February, from 12-13.30pm, Lecture Theatre 4, Welcome Centre. Please do come along!

Behrouz was incarcerated as a political prisoner by the Australian government on Manus Island from 2013-2017 and then in Port Moresby (Papua New Guinea). His book No Friend but the Mountains: Writing From Manus Prison (Picador 2018) (translated by Omid) has won numerous awards including the 2019 Victorian Prize for Literature.

They will be introducing and discussing their work on ‘Manus Prison Theory’ (details below and in link). The event is free but please do register so we can keep a track of numbers for the room booking.

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/introducing-manus-prison-theory-knowing-border-violence-tickets-90536494091

*****************

Title: Introducing Manus Prison Theory: Knowing Border Violence

Abstract:

Manus Prison theory is a coherent intellectual, creative and political project inspired by four years of ongoing research and organising between Behrouz Boochani and Omid Tofighian in what we refer to as a shared philosophical activity. Similar collaboration, consultation and sharing precede the project and include networks of scholarship and collective action. The theory has experienced a heightened interest and urgency since the release of No Friend but the Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison (Boochani 2018) and after winning prestigious awards. It aims to analyse the detention industry by identifying its connections with other forms of violence and domination; this approach focuses on how systems of oppression are interconnected, mutually reinforcing and multipliable. By considering an intersectional and decolonial approach and framing the analysis of Manus Prison within the discourse pertaining to kyriarchy we expose how border violence is rooted in Australia’s colonial imaginary and pervades socio-political structures and institutions.

Guest Speakers: Behrouz Boochani (joining via live stream) & Omid Tofighian

Discussants: Bruce Bennett, Senior Lecturer in Film Studies & Gwyneth Lonergan, Wellcome Trust Research Fellow in Social Science and Bioethics

Behrouz Boochani is Adjunct Associate Professor of Social Sciences at UNSW, author and journalist. He was incarcerated as a political prisoner by the Australian government on Manus Island from 2013-2017 and then in Port Moresby (Papua New Guinea). His book No Friend but the Mountains: Writing From Manus Prison (Picador 2018) has won numerous awards including the 2019 Victorian Prize for Literature. Boochani is also co-director (with Arash Kamali Sarvestani) of the 2017 feature-length film Chauka, Please Tell Us The Time; collaborator on Nazanin Sahamizadeh’s play Manus; and associate producer for Hoda Afshar’s video installation Remain (2018).

Omid Tofighian is an award-winning lecturer, researcher and community advocate, combining philosophy with interests in citizen media, popular culture, displacement and discrimination. He is Adjunct Lecturer in the School of the Arts and Media, UNSW; Honorary Research Associate for the Department of Philosophy, University of Sydney.

Second MRG Reading Group

Thanks to those who came to the first meeting for the Migrancy Reading group last week.

The second meeting of our reading group will take place on Friday 13/12, 11am-1pm, rather than on 4th December as previously communicated, as that falls during the strike.

Venue:  County Main B082 – MR 1.

Reading for the meeting:

Theme: Biometrics, borders and the autonomy of migration

Scheel, S. 2019. Autonomy of Migration? Appropriating Mobility Within Biometric Border Regimes. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. Chapters 1-2-7

We look forward to meeting in a couple of weeks!

Sandro Mezzadra Workshop and Public Lecture

The Migrancy Research Group at Lancaster University is very pleased to announce that Professor Sandro Mezzadra, political theorist based at University of Bologna and author (with Brett Neilson) of Border as Method (2013) and The Politics of Operations (2019) will be giving a Public Lecture at The Storey Institute in Lancaster, on 19 February 2020 at 6.30pm.

As part of this event, we are holding a workshop with Professor Mezzadra on theme of Globalization, borders, and new geographies of inequality, open to PhD students and early career researchers, to take place earlier in the day on 19 February 2020.  Please find our CFP for this workshop here.  Please share this CFP with anyone who might be interested.

First MRG Reading Group

Our first reading group is coming up: 15 November, 3pm – 4pm, Bowland North B067.

We will be discussing:

Maitland, Carleen F. (2018), Digital lifeline? ICTs for refugees and displaced persons. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Introduction  (The book is available as e-book via OneSearch)

Tazzioli, M. (2019) Refugees’ Debit Cards, Subjectivities, and Data Circuits: Financial-Humanitarianism in the Greek Migration Laboratory. International Political Sociology.

Hope to see all of you there!