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2nd International Conference on Cultural
Political Economy: Putting Culture in its Place in
Political Economy
Centre for Globalisation
Education & Social Futures University of Bristol
Graduate School of Education
University of Bristol 35 Berkeley Square
Clifton, Bristol BS8 1JA
United Kingdom
Further information available at: www.cpe2016.com For enquiries, please contact: [email protected]
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
Page 1
2nd International Conference on Cultural Political Economy: Putting Culture in its Place in Political Economy
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
Wednesday, 24 August 2016 18.00 – 20.00 Pre-conference reception
sponsored by the Graduate School of Education, University of Bristol Welcome to the University of Bristol: Professor Paddy Ireland, Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law, University of Bristol Location: 4th Floor foyer, Graduate School of Education
Thursday, 25 August 2016 8.30 – 9.00 Registration
Location: 4th Floor foyer, Graduate School of Education
9.00 – 9.30 Welcome -‐ Professor Susan Robertson and Professor Roger Dale, Centre for Globalisation,
Education & Social Futures Location: Room 4.10, Graduate School of Education
9.30 – 10.45 Keynote lecture Civilizational analysis and cultural political economy: points of contact and open questions Roger Dale, University of Bristol Chair: Janja Komljenovic, University of Bristol Location: Room 4.10, Graduate School of Education
10.45 – 11.00 Coffee break
11.00 – 12.30 Parallel sessions 1 SESSION 1A Chair: Gulzhan Azimbayeva Room 4.01
Revolts in the Sorting House: the cultural political economy of upper secondary education reform Amelia Peterson, Harvard University
SESSION 1B Chair: María Lucía Guerrero Farías Room 4.02
Commodification and capitalist subjectivation Anna-María Murtola, Auckland University of Technology
SESSION 1C Chair: Susan Robertson Room 4.07
Merchands, Planners and Middlemen: Hyperistanbul and the Role of Urban Transformation in Post-Crisis Turkey Annalena Di Giovanni, University of Cambridge
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Panacea or problem? A critical cultural political economy account of school based management reforms Ritesh Shah, University of Auckland The educational governance of families in India: rights, markets, and parenting Arathi Sriprakash, University of Cambridge & R. Maithreyi, Centre for Budget and Policy Studies, Bangalore
The construction of poverty as a problem. Analysis of two Chilean Conditional Cash Transfers programmes Patricio Olivera, University of Bristol
The Tech City imaginary and post-recession London Edward Jones, University College London Mapping Policy Formation through Public Interventions: Exploring the Textually-Mediated World of Toronto’s Core Service Review Chris Hurl, Durham University
12.30 – 13.30 Lunch
13.30 – 15.00 Parallel sessions 2
SESSION 2A Chair: Janja Komljenovic Room 4.01
The Strange Non-Death of Neoliberalism in Japan - A Discourse Analysis of Abenomics at its Early Stage Shu Shimizu, Doshisha University The market and its 'public': how the bounds of knowledge(s) write modes of authority into economy and society Oliver Kessler, Erfurt University & Timo Walter, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
SESSION 2B Chair: Aliandra Barlete Room 4.02
Global Citizenship Education and Cultural Exchange – A Postcolonial Reading on an International Higher Education Partnership Anu Lainio, Aarhus University Post-conflict citizenship education? A case-study in Bogotá, Colombia María Lucía Guerrero Farías, University of Bristol
SESSION 2C Chair: Narasimham (Nam) Peri Room 4.07
Commodification of Higher Education in Kazakhstan: Cultural Aspects and Institutional Legacies Gulzhan Azimbayeva, University of Bristol Addressing the cultural questions of Arab Higher Education: accessing meanings and practices through civilisation analysis Clare Walsh, University of Bristol Harmonisation, Socialisation and Mutual Learning for Regionalising Higher Education and Repositioning Southeast Asia Que Anh Dang, University of Bristol
15.00 – 15.15 Break
15.30 – 17.00 Parallel sessions 3
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SESSION 3A Chair: Jana Bacevic Room 4.01
An encounter between Gramsci, Marx, Foucault and Bergson David Kreps, University of Salford Public-private partnerships in education as an economic, political and cultural phenomenon: exploring Gramscian theoretical contributions Georgia Sobreira dos Santos Cêa, Federal University of Alagoas An Antipodean Post-structuralist Political Economy Nick Lewis, University of Auckland
PANEL: A Cultural Political Economy of Civilizational Turns Room 4.02
The Civilizational Turn: Why Civilization, Why Now, Why Not? Some CPE Reflections Bob Jessop, Lancaster University A Cultural Political Economy of the Neoliberal Empire: Changing Civilizational Meanings/Practices and the Politics of (Re-)Orientalisms in Coalition Building Ngai-Ling Sum, Lancaster University Reflections on the presentations Martin Jones, University of Sheffield
SESSION 3C Chair: Clare Walsh Room 4.07
Education and benchmarking: evaluation, regulation and performativity Mario Azevedo, State University of Maringa "Canaries in the mine": Creative industries as new cottage industries Patrick Collins, National University of Ireland Galway When the Shadows Dance: A Cultural Political Economy of Policy Determinants in the Spaces of Work and Learning at the Workplace Narasimham (Nam) Peri, University of Bristol
19.00 – 21.00 Dinner (pre-booked) Location: El Puerto, 57 Prince Street, Bristol, BS1 4QH
Friday, 26 August 2016 9.00 – 10.30 Parallel sessions 4
SESSION 4A Chair: Rosa Vasilaki Room 4.01
Multiple paths toward education privatisation in a globalising world: A Cultural Political Economy approach Clara Fontdevila, Autonomous University of Barcelona
SESSION 4B Chair: Gulzhan Azimbayeva Room 4.02
The meta-pragmatics of market and prices Timo Walter, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
SESSION 4C Chair: Arathi Sriprakash Room 4.07
“When I hear the word culture…”: situating ‘culture’ in critical cultural political economy Jana Bacevic, University of Cambridge
Page 4
Marketization, Commodification and Financialization in Higher Education: the case of Brazil Cristina Helena Almeida de Carvalho, University of Brasilia and University College London & Tristan McCowan, University College London The materiality and semiosis of inequality and class warfare in contemporary Spain: From Critical Discourse Analysis to Corrupt Discourse Analysis David Block, ICREA/University of Lleida
On Behavioural Aspects of the Institutional-Evolutionary Political Economy, Motions of Capitalism and Culture Change Theodore T. Koutsobinas, University of Patras
Co-Producing Transformational Knowledge and Culture: the general intellect in practice Joel Lazarus European Modernity and the rise of comparative studies: Revisiting our tradition in bewildered times Stavros Moutsios, Aarhus University
10.30 – 10.45 Coffee break
10.45 – 12.15 Keynote lecture and a panel discussion Chair: Susan Robertson, University of Bristol Southern theory: A conversation about knowledge Raewyn Connell, Professor Emerita, University of Sydney Facilitated panel discussion
-‐ Roger Dale, University of Bristol -‐ Rosa Vasilaki, London School of Economics -‐ Arathi Sriprakash, University of Cambridge
Location: Room 4.10, Graduate School of Education
12.15 – 13.15 Lunch
13.15 – 14.45 Parallel session 5 SESSION 5A Chair: María Lucía Guerrero Farías Room 4.01 Pedagogies of peacebuilding in the Kono region of Sierra Leone: a civilisational approach Sean Higgins, University of Amsterdam “Agents of peace or conflict?” Exploring “agency” of educators and youth in conflict-affected contexts inspired by the SRA (Strategic Relational Approach) and
SESSION 5B Chair: Roger Dale Room 4.07 Aesthetics, Perception and Processes of Bildung Dirk Michel-Schertges, Aarhus University The Crisis of Work, Anti-work and Cultural Political Economy William Stronge, University of Brighton
Page 5
CCPE (Critical Cultural Political Economy) Mieke T.A. Lopes Cardozo, University of Amsterdam The local turn in migration management: the IOM and the engagement of local authorities Younes Ahouga, University of Geneva
The new politics of British local governance: from multilevel governance to multispatial metagovernance Martin Jones, University of Sheffield & Bob Jessop, Lancaster University
14.45 – 15.45 Guided discussion: Where do we go from now? Chair: Nick Lewis, University of Auckland Discussants:
-‐ Bob Jessop, Lancaster University -‐ Ngai-Ling Sum, Lancaster University -‐ Jana Bacevic, University of Cambridge
Location: Room 4.10, Graduate School of Education
15.45 – 16.00 Wrap up and goodbye
-‐ Professor Susan Robertson, Director of the Centre for Globalisation, Education & Social Futures
Location: Room 4.10, Graduate School of Education