Wednesday 30 January 2013

Two seminars by Laurence Davis at Maynooth

Details of two seminars by Laurence Davis at Maynooth, one on the contested meanings of democracy and one on the anarchist contribution to contemporary social movements. Both events are free and open to all.


Wednesday, February 6th
NUIM Dept. of Sociology seminar
Auxilia seminar room, north campus, NUI Maynooth; 2.45 - 4 pm




Will the Real Democracy Please Stand Up?:
Debating Democracy, Active Citizenship, and Politics of Work, Technology, and Social Equality at the Dawn of the 21st Century
The practice of democracy in ostensibly democratic contemporary societies is now the object of withering criticism from across the political spectrum. Conservatives advocate technocratic government to implement and administer a deeply unpopular politics of austerity, liberal democrats lament a growing “democratic deficit” and a crisis of citizen participation, and disaffected citizens across the globe have taken to the streets in their millions to denounce plutocracy masquerading as democracy and to call for “real democracy” in its stead. Underlying many of these criticisms, however, is a dubious unstated assumption: namely, that democracy is a singular and monolithic political project that has lost its way. Against this view, I argue in this paper that the concept of democracy is and always has been an object of fierce struggle between those at the centre and those at the periphery of political and economic power, so much so at the present moment in time that it is helpful to draw an analytical distinction between mainstream forms of democracy, in which rule by the people is practiced through political institutions that secure mass citizen consent to be governed over, and democracy from below, in which rule by the people is practiced through creative efforts to achieve mass self-government in all areas of life. In the course of the paper I will elaborate on these distinctive models of democracy, and consider their possible ramifications for the practice of democracy in everyday life, from the home to the workplace and the community.



Wednesday, February 13th
MA in Community Education, Equality and Social Activism seminar

Auxilia seminar room, north campus, NUI Maynooth; 2 - 4 pm

Political Ideologies and Contemporary Social Movements: the Anarchist Turn

Anarchism is one of the most vital impulses of contemporary radical politics, yet its role as a source of creative inspiration for resurgent grassroots radicalism - from the global Occupy and European Indignado movements, to worldwide anti-austerity and anti-capitalist mobilisations, interconnected alter-globalisation movements, deep green ecological and climate justice campaigns, student struggles, and countless experiments in co-operative production and distribution, alternative media and art, and collective living - is still widely unacknowledged or misunderstood. This seminar presentation will offer a very different view of the subject by identifying some of the integral connections between anarchist ideology and contemporary social movement practice.




Dr. Laurence Davis
is College Lecturer in Government at University College Cork, where he teaches in the areas of citizenship and human rights, democracy and citizen participation, political theory and ideologies, the governance of science and technology, and U.S. politics. A Series Editor of the new Contemporary Anarchist Studies book series published by Continuum/Bloomsbury Press and a founding member of the U.K. Anarchist Studies Network, his recent publications include Anarchism and Utopianism (Manchester University Press, 2009), co-edited with Ruth Kinna, and The New Utopian Politics of Ursula K. Le Guin’s Dispossessed (Lexington Books, 2005), co-edited with Peter Stillman, as well as numerous articles and book chapters on political and social theory and ideologies, democracy and active citizenship, and the politics of art, work, and love.

Tuesday 29 January 2013

Shell to Sea pub quiz, Wed Feb 27th

Pub quiz in the Global Bar of the Russell Court Hotel (Camden Street, Dublin 2) in aid of Shell to Sea. 
Wednesday February 27th, 8 pm on.

10 euro a head. Advanced booking is recommended (theresa.okeefe AT nuim.ie)

It promises to be night of entertainment and merriment organised and hosted by the NUI Maynooth Community Education, Equality and Social Activism learning group and the Equality Studies Centre, UCD.

3 euro drink promotions on the night.

Fully accessible.

More details as soon as we get 'em!

Monday 21 January 2013

Ailliliú Fionnuala at Maynooth

Special performance of Ailliliú Fionnuala by Donal Kelly for NUI Maynooth. 

Monday February 4 @ 7:30 in Classhall F, Arts Building, North Campus
(# 35 on map available here).
This event is open to the public and admission is free.

Facebook event here.
 
Written and performed by Donal O’Kelly, directed by Sorcha Fox, and designed by Robert Ballagh, Ailliliú Fionnuala takes place on the shore of Sruwaddacon Estuary in Erris, North Mayo, where the Shell high-pressure raw gas pipeline is currently under construction.

Ambrose Keogh works for Shell. When the Tunnel Boring Machine he named Fionnuala sinks into the bog in Erris Co. Mayo, he is magically confronted by Fionnuala of the Children of Lir. Fionnuala puts a geas on him – he’s bound to tell the truth about Shell’s operations in Erris, such as the attack on Willie Corduff in the Shell site at Glengad. During his ordeal, Ambrose comes face to face with his primary school classmate, Malachy Downes, now an anti-pipeline activist, and echoes from the past resound.

Ambrose Keogh was the silent minion in Donal O’Kelly’s international success Bat The Father Rabbit The Son, premiered by Rough Magic in 1988, and touring to acclaim in Edinburgh, New York and Australia. A quarter of a century later, Keogh’s found his niche in the corridors of power, at the heart of the Shell/Corrib gas project.

A writer and actor, Donal O’Kelly’s previous award-winning solo plays include Catalpa, Joyced! and Bat The Father Rabbit The Son. Other plays include The Cambria, Jimmy Gralton’s Dancehall, The Adventures Of The Wet Señor, Vive La, Operation Easter, Asylum! Asylum! and The Dogs.

“Cuts a swathe through Shell/State propaganda, allowing audiences to access the truth of what’s happening in North Mayo” Hot Press
“A stirring piece of theatre” Irish Theatre Magazine
“Highly entertaining while packing a punch” Exeunt Magazine
“O’Kelly performs superbly” Sunday Independent 

“Digs for truth beneath the controversies” Irish Times 
“Why a drill and a play are at the centre of Irish democracy” Irish Independent

Supported by the justice and human rights organisation Afri.Hosted by the MA in Community Education, Equality and Social Activism.

Thursday 17 January 2013

Radical communications and social justice event

An evening of discussion with
Firoze Manji
(founder of Pambazuka News)
Margaret Gillan (coordinator for Community Media Network)

Irish Aid Volunteering and Information Centre
27 - 31 Upper O'Connell St., Dublin 1
Monday 28th January, 6 - 8.30 pm



Poster here

Facebook event here

Too often communication about social justice issues is left to commercial and state media, whose agendas are often very different from those of the people affected. Social movements often struggle to create appropriate forms of communication which build links between people and communities, enable alternative voices to be heard and do not simply imitate official media. This evening brings together two leading figures in radical communications to share their experiences in Africa, Ireland and globally and to discuss how to broaden the spaces of possibility.

Firoze Manji, a Kenyan, is the founder and former editor-in-chief of Pambazuka (www.pambazuka.org), a pan-African website, newsletter and network committed to the struggle for freedom and justice. With a million readers and some 3500 writers, activists, bloggers, public intellectuals, artists and social movements writing for Pambazuka News, it has grown to be recognised as the platform for debate, discussions and organising in Africa. Firoze will shortly be joining the Council for the Development of Social Science Research (www.codesria.org) as head of their documentation and information centre in Dakar, Senegal. Amongst other positions, he is a visiting fellow at Kellogg College, University of Oxford.

Margaret Gillan, community activist, studied fine art in Belfast from 1975-8, which raised questions for her around class, oppression and voice. She then taught and worked on independent media in England from 1979-93. After returning to Ireland she worked as Coordinator of Community Media Network (www.cmn.ie) for 16 years. CMN aims to increase visibility for community media activity, supporting initiatives to build a network of community-based media activists working for social justice. She represents CMN on the Committee of Management of Dublin Community Television (www.dctv.ie), a community media co-op and platform founded by CMN. In 2010 she completed a participatory action research PhD project developing community television in Ireland. CMN's funding was cut in March 2012. The core group continues on a voluntary basis to organise for community access to media.

The facilitator Laurence Cox is co-editor of the open-access social movements journal Interface (interfacejournal.net) and co-director of the MA in Community Education, Equality and Social Activism at NUI Maynooth (ceesa-ma.blogspot.ie). He is currently co-editing the last letters of executed Nigerian author and campaigner Ken Saro-Wiwa.

Admission is free but places are limited - please RSVP to laurence.cox@nuim.ie
Event co-hosted by

Dublin Multicultural Resource Centre (www.dmrc.ie)
Association of African Students in Ireland (asaireland.blogspot.ie)
MA in Community Education, Equality and Social Activism (ceesa-ma.blogspot.ie)

Monday 14 January 2013

Declan Ganley threatens to sue Irish activist blogger

Declan Ganley is threatening to sue Anglo: not our debt campaigner and radical blogger Mark Malone over this post. The previous post isn't bad either! Expect this story to continue on Mark's excellent blog soundmigration.

Patricia Hill Collins at UCD this March

UCD Women’s Studies, Annual Public Lecture
Lecture Theatre L, UCD
Arts Block, 6.30pm
Wednesday 20th March 2013
All Welcome
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? INTERSECTIONALITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE 
Prof. Patricia Hill Collins, University of Maryland and University of Cincinnati

UCD Women's Studies is delighted to host Prof. Patricia Hill Collins at the university for a public lecture entitled Where Do We Go From Here? Intersectionality and Social Justice.
Prof. Hill Collins will return to two central questions posed by previous work: first, how can we reconceptualise race, class and gender as categories of analysis and, second, how can we transcend the barriers created by our experiences with race, class and gender oppression in order to build the types of coalitions essential for social change? In revisiting these questions in the context of the new millennium, she will examine how a revitalised understanding of social justice might catalyse new approaches to intersectional scholarship and political practice.

 This is a free but strictly RSVP event. Please email us at ucdintersect@gmail.comto reserve a place.

 Patricia Hill Collinsis Distinguished University Professor of Sociology at the University of Maryland, College Park and Charles Phelps Taft Emeritus Professor of Sociology within the Department of African American Studies at the University of Cincinnati. Her award-winning books include Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment (1990, 2000) which received both the Jessie Bernard Award of the American Sociological Association (ASA) and the C. Wright Mills Award of the Society for the Study of Social Problems; and Black Sexual Politics: African Americans, Gender, and the New Racism (2004) which received ASA's 2007 Distinguished Publication Award. She is also author of Fighting Words: Black Women and the Search for Justice (1998); From Black Power to Hip Hop: Racism, Nationalism, and Feminism (2005); Another Kind of Public Education: Race, Schools, the Media, and Democratic Possibilities (2009); and The Handbook of Race and Ethnic Studies (2010) edited with John Solomos. Her anthology Race, Class, and Gender: An Anthology, 8th edition (2013), edited with Margaret Andersen, is widely used in undergraduate classrooms in over 200 colleges and universities. Professor Collins has taught at several institutions, held editorial positions with professional journals, lectured widely in the United States and internationally, served in many capacities in professional organizations, and has acted as consultant for a number of community organizations. In 2008, she became the 100th  President of the American Sociological Association, the first African American woman elected to this position in the organization’s 104-year history. Her most recent book, On Intellectual Activism (2013), a collection of essays and speeches on major themes from her work, namely, Black feminism, critical education, public sociology, racial politics and intellectual activism, has just been published by Temple University Press. She is currently working on a manuscript with the working title Intersectionality and the Politics of Knowledge.

Social justice media conference (Dublin, March)

An initial announcement of NEARfm's social justice media conference in Coolock on March 9th here.

Tuesday 8 January 2013

Zapatista announcement

There's a remarkable communique from the Zapatistas around a powerful silent mobilization last winter solstice when they took over 5 Chiapan towns (peacefully) - an incredible show of strength in more senses than one. They are promising new international initiatives for adherents to the Sixth Declaration of the Lacandona Jungle. Not always easy to get hold of Zapatista news in English but this site seems pretty up-to-date, and this is pretty good.


Youngstown Center closes, working-class studies continues

A sad piece of news here: the Center for Working-Class Studies at Youngstown is closing, with one of its founders retiring, the other moving and the University unwilling to replace them and keep the Center open.

As the founders say, "what they could never kill went on to organize" - and both their blog and the Working-Class Studies Association will continue, at least in the US. Not so clear what will happen on this side of the pond. After various efforts over the past decade and more, Strathclyde now has a Centre for the Study of Working-Class lives. There are elements of working-class studies (in this sense of a focus on experience, both individual and collective) in Ireland but attempts at bringing these together haven't been successful. And yet, as Thompson says, experience breaks through...