APOLOGIES FOR CROSS-POSTING

 

CALL FOR PAPERS

 

Association of American Geographers Conference 2016

 

SESSION TITLE

 

The Mont Pelerin Plague? Revisiting and Rethinking Neoliberalism

 

OUTLINE

 

>From its initial conceptualization in Mont Pelerin in 1947, neoliberalism
has now become a ubiquitous term in geography, and elsewhere; it is used to
theorize everything from the development of ecosystem services through urban
regeneration to financialization (Springer, Birch & MacLeavy 2016). Across a
range of disciplines it is conceptualized in various ways as, for example, a
geographical process; a form of governmentality; the restoration of elite
class power; a discourse; a political project of institutional change; a set
of transformative ideas; a development policy paradigm; a radical political
slogan; an epistemic community or thought collective; an economic ideology
or doctrine; a particular form of violence; and so on. Such variety and
diversity in intellectual analysis (i.e. an explanatory framework) and
substantive topic (i.e. a thing to explain) have produced a glut of
concepts, theories, and analyses. While this medley might be seen as a
necessary - and fruitful - outcome of such a hybrid and heterogeneous
process, it also has the potential side-effect of leaving us more confused
than enlightened. It is increasingly difficult, on the one hand, to parse or
synthesize this intellectual (yet often contradictory) abundance and, on the
other hand, to apply it to policy or practical issues facing diverse
communities, societies, organizations and individuals around the world. It
also risk becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy, where despite our
hesitancies, we come to believe that there really is no alternative. A body
of literature is emerging that is critical of current conceptions and
understandings of neoliberalism, highlighting these issues (e.g. Boas &
Gans-Morse 2009; Barnett 2009; Weller and O'Neill 2014; Flew 2014; Birch
2015; Venugopal 2015). 

 

QUESTIONS

 

It is time to take stock of what we are left with by adopting neoliberalism
as a key spanner in our analytical toolkit. Consequently, the aim of this
session is to revisit and rethink neoliberalism as an abstract concept and
as an empirical object. We invite contributors to critically revisit
dominant conceptions of neoliberalism, to rethink how we use neoliberalism
as an analytical and methodological framework, and to offer new ideas about
how to productively (re)conceptualize neoliberalism. Below we outline some
broad questions that contributors might like to engage with, although others
are welcome:

 

1.      How conceptually useful has neoliberalism been in geography?
2.      How has the concept of neoliberalism evolved over the last two
decades?
3.      How are we plagued by neoliberalism, or are we plagued by its
ongoing prioritization? 
4.      Does neoliberalism represent the most useful or critical way of
understanding the current state of the world?
5.      Does neoliberalism need updating as a critical concept in ways that
take us beyond hybridity and variegation?
6.      What is missing from debates on neoliberalism in contemporary
geographical scholarship?
7.      What makes neoliberalism such a popular analytical framework in
geography?
8.      Are there alternative ways to conceptualize neoliberalism?
9.      Are we in need of finding alternative conceptions that break with
the language of 'neoliberalism' altogether?
10.     What might new visions beyond neoliberalism yield in terms of our
collective political future?

 

ORGANISERS

 

Kean Birch (York University, Canada)

Simon Springer (University of Victoria, Canada)

 

ABSTRACT SUBMISSION

 

If you would like to participate in the session, please submit an abstract
(250 words max) by 19 October 2015 to both [email protected] and
[email protected]. If you would like to participate in other ways (e.g.
discussant) then please feel free to contact us as well.

 

Please note: once you have submitted an abstract to us, you will also need
to register AND submit an abstract on the AAG website (I always forget this
detail! ~ KB). The AAG abstract deadline is 29 October 2015:
http://www.aag.org/cs/http://www.aag.org/cs/annualmeeting/how_to_submit_an_a
bstract
<http://www.aag.org/cs/http:/www.aag.org/cs/annualmeeting/how_to_submit_an_a
bstract>  

 

 

 

Kean Birch

Business & Society Programme

Department of Social Science

4700 Keele Street

York University

Toronto

Canada

M3J 1P3

 

Tel.: (+1) 416-736-2100, ext. 30126

 

NEW BOOK: We Have Never Been Neoliberal
<http://www.zero-books.net/books/we-have-never-been-neoliberalC:/Users/esous
er/Documents/Admin>  (2015), Zer0 Books.

 

Associate Editor, Science as Culture <http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/csac> 

Twitter: @keanbirch <https://twitter.com/keanbirch> 

Personal website: http://www.keanbirch.net/ 

 

 <http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/csac20/current> SAC

 

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