call for international conference jan 2016-1

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January 20, 21 and 22, 2015 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Rethinking Cities in the Global South: Urban Violence, Social Inequality and Spatial Justice Organized by the Centre for Urban Policy and Governance, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai with Instituto de Pesquisa e Planejamento Urbano e Regional, Rio and University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban CALL FOR ABSTRACTS SUBMISSIONS OPEN FROM MAY 15 TH 2015 DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION JULY 31ST 2015, 6.00 PM E.S.T. Submit to: cupg.tiss@gmail. com TATA INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES Opposite Deonar Bus Depot, V N Purav Marg, Mumbai, Maharashtra -400 088

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  • January 20, 21 and 22, 2015

    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Rethinking Cities in the Global South: Urban Violence, Social Inequality and Spatial Justice

    Organized by the Centre for Urban Policy and Governance,

    Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai with Instituto de

    Pesquisa e Planejamento Urbano e Regional, Rio and

    University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban

    CALL FOR

    ABSTRACTS

    SUBMISSIONS

    OPEN FROM

    MAY 15TH 2015

    DEADLINE

    FOR

    SUBMISSION

    JULY 31ST

    2015, 6.00 PM

    E.S.T.

    Submit to:

    cupg.tiss@gmail.

    com

    TATA INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES

    Opposite Deonar Bus Depot, V N Purav Marg, Mumbai,

    Maharashtra -400 088

  • CALL FOR ABSTRACTS

    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

    Rethinking Cities in the Global South: Urban Violence, Social Inequality and Spatial Justice

    January 20 to 22, 2015 Tata institute of Social Sciences

    Mumbai

    CONCEPT NOTE

    At a time when the global south is being reconstituted by the force of urbanization there is

    simultaneously hope and despair. Hope in that cities of the global south are our future - they

    present opportunities for economic growth, a better quality of life, provide multiple

    possibilities of being and becoming, and offer freedoms to express, participate and collectively

    decide these futures. And despair in that southern cities, with widely different histories and

    diverse development trajectories, are characterised by degrees of unevenness, spatial

    polarization, social inequality and debilitating poverty.

    Both these positions are informed by theories, concepts, approaches and methodologies that

    have emerged predominantly from the global north. Given that the empirics of urbanization is

    shifting definitively to the global south, there is an urgent need therefore to stimulate

    comparative conversations, actively build knowledge and analysis, and consolidate empirical

    and theoretical studies about the urban. This requires a critical, grounded and southern

    perspective, by privileging conversations focused on southern narratives, experiences, and

    voices that challenge and engage with the existing scholarship on cities, exploring continuities

    as well as disjuncture with cities in the developed countries.

    This conference seeks to include voices from the ground to better understand the aspirations,

    the strategies, the actions and the agency of communities and people in actively seeking to

    align with the urban transformation, or to influence the restructuring process, to seek strategic

    spaces to consolidate their tenuous claims to space, identity and livelihood, and the protests or

    violence they resort to in response to their exclusion from the body politic of the city in violent

    and repressive ways. In bringing divergent viewpoints and multiple voices situated across a

    range of cities in the global south, this international conference seeks to contribute to recent

  • theorizations on the heterogeneous processes of urbanization and urban restructuring that have

    been emerging from urban scholars working in Latin America, Asia, and South Africa.

    The conference themes include:

    Theorizing spatial justice in cities of the global south, the different histories and

    legacies of spatial (in)justice in different urban contexts

    Theorizing urban violence in cities of the global south, examining the everyday and

    episodic nature of urban violence, violence as repression and violence as protest, violent

    state versus extra-legal modes of violence

    Theorizing the role of the state, and state-society interaction in the restructuring of cities

    in the global south, interrogating the role of urban planning, governance and policy and

    the possibility of insurgent, radical and progressive planning in countering the spatial

    (in)justice

    Re-examining and reimagining the south, what constitutes the global South? In the

    new world order, what kind of strategic space is being sought by the global South?

    What kind of political and economic alignments are being crafted across civil society

    groups, across social movements, across academia, across nations?

    Deciphering the variety of outcomes, (both intended and unintended) from the socio-

    spatial transformations in cities of the global south at different levels - from the street

    level, to the neighbourhood level and to the city and city-regional level, understanding

    spatial restructuring engendered through mega urban infrastructure projects and mega

    events and its implication on people, places and the city, with a particular focus on

    ethnic and religious minorities, women and the poor

    Debating the contradictions between justice and efficiency in shaping urban futures

    Narratives of peace production in cities of the global south

    Analysing the stories of the people, by the people and for the people in trying to counter,

    resist, influence and deal with urban restructuring and the learnings they can share of

    their struggles

  • ABOUT THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

    The conference is being organized by the Centre for Urban Policy and Governance at the Tata

    Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai in partnership with Instituto de Pesquisa e Planejamento

    Urbano e Regional, Rio and University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban as the culmination of a three

    year research on People, Places and Infrastructure: Countering Urban Violence and

    Promoting Peace in Mumbai, Rio and Durban funded by the International Development

    Research Centre, IDRC as part of their Safe And Inclusive Cities project. The major theoretical

    frameworks, empirical findings, and case studies from the project will be shared during the

    course of the conference through specific panels and presentations as well as field visits in

    Mumbai.

    This conference invites academics, students, community activists, trade unions, political

    activists, urban practitioners, state actors, planners, engineers, architects, policy makers, and

    NGOs who are engaged in research, advocacy, campaigns and movements to promote social

    and spatial justice in cities situated in the global south. The two and half day international

    conference to be held in the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai hopes to provide a space

    to facilitate a discussion and deliberation across groups and individuals with diverse opinions

    about these issues, to sow the seeds of a global south-south network cutting across these issues,

    and to develop an urban agenda for the global south.

    The conference will feature international speakers, urban academics and activists from the

    global south as well as local urban practitioners and students. There will be paper presentations

    and panel discussions, plenaries and key note addresses. The organizers also hope to enliven

    the conference venue through poster and photography exhibitions, local music, street art and

    plays. Conference participants will be given a sneak peek into the Maximum Citys diverse

    neighbourhoods through field trips organized in collaboration with local non-governmental

    organisations and community groups.

  • CALL FOR ABSTRACTS AND SELECTION PROCESS

    We invite interested authors, academics, students, practitioners and activists for paper

    presentations.

    Abstract submission

    The abstract submission will be open from the 15th of May 2015. The deadline for abstract

    submission is July 31st 2015, 6.00 pm E.S.T. Abstracts for proposed papers should be 500

    words and should be submitted at the following id: [email protected]

    Abstracts should contain the following information:

    1. A synthesis of the issues to be addressed in the paper, the key arguments underlying

    them, the empirical and/or the theoretical basis, and the structure of the paper in 500

    words.

    2. The contact of the author(s): Name(s), affiliation, address, and an e-mail address

    Final paper

    Upon selection by a Selection Committee, authors will receive more detailed instructions about

    the full paper by 30th of September 2015. The final paper will be around 20,000 characters

    long. It is due by the 15th of December 2015, 6.00 pm E.S.T. The full papers have to be

    submitted to the following id: [email protected]