Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Conflux Festival 2008


Conflux Festival 2008 Call for Proposals -- please distribute widely!

Conflux is the annual art and technology festival for the creative exploration of urban public space.
http://confluxfestival.org

Save the dates: the 2008 festival takes place September 11 - 14 throughout New York City.

To submit a proposal to participate in the festival: http://confluxfestival.org/conflux2008/submissions/

The deadline for submissions is May 31, 2008.

We look forward to seeing you in September!

- Team Conflux

Friday, May 2, 2008

Key Signposts to the Neoliberal University Rat Race


Key Signposts to the Neoliberal University Rat Race

Over the past 25+ years, higher education has been transformed by the neoliberal policies aiming to shrink and privatize the state, and run government services like businesses. How does neoliberalism turn education into a rat race?

SCARCITY
-Competition for scarce education funding has led to increased workloads for faculty and students, but this work speed-up leaves less time to study and think.
-Fewer students can afford college, leading to a re-segregation of higher ed.

QUANTITY OVER QUALITY
-Corporatized measures of university accountability judge quality by numbers of publications and students per faculty, fueling publication inflation and evaluation by bubble forms.

EFFICIENCY
-Emphasizing efficiency in midst of scarcity fuels a two-tier academic labor force featuring a shrinking percentage of tenure-track posts, while relying upon temporary faculty (inc. grad. students) for mass teaching.
-The increasing percentage of temporary faculty has led to cookie cutter content in part because such faculty members have few incentives to create a rigorous or politically challenging classroom.

ACCOUNTABILITY
-Emphasis on quantity and efficiency reinforces existing lines of research, with precious little time or incentive for creative, path-breaking work.
-Publishing has become more an instrument of technocratic university evaluations, and less a matter of peer dialogue and criticism. Are we accountable to peers or to numbers, and who enforces this?

ACADEMIC FREEDOM?
-Scarce funding stifles free intellectual engagement by reinforcing established lines of inquiry.
-Who are our peers? The resegregation of the university further limits who is able to participate in academic conversation within the classroom, and reinforces exclusionary and unaccountable publications.
-Students missing from the university for lack of funding do not have academic freedom.

Monday, April 14, 2008

AGG 2008 - Demilitarizing War and Peace, Boston, April 15th-19th



"Demilitarizing War and Peace"

Boston, April 15-19, 2008

activist geographers grouping

Our memories are militarized when we remember this year as the fifth anniversary of the Iraq War. Yet we often forget that the peace that preceded this war is a history of sanctions and imperialism, and that militarization continues even in places where 'peace has broken out.' These memories and forgettings profoundly shape how we can imagine common peaceful futures.

Here in
Boston – which prepares for Patriot's Day celebrations – we are interested in renewing a conversation about collective practices that construct, in Said's words, "fields of coexistence rather than fields of battle." Since 2006, agg has been creating spaces for building a community-in-formation that engages questions of militarism, daily life, and daily death. How might collective intellectual labor work to demilitarize war and peace (and ourselves in the process)? What can activist-academics do to create possibilities for peaceful commons?

agg lunch/meeting WEDNESDAY 4/16
11:55-12:55pm
The OtherSide Cafe 407 Newbury Street,
Boston, MA 02115
Take the subway from Copley Sq to Hynes Convention
Center/ICA station or walk 0.5 miles (between E Charlesgate &
Massachusetts Ave) Come share/shape the future of the agg!

What's Just? Mapping the State of
Geographies of Justice
FRIDAY 4/18
8:00-9:40am PAPER SESSION 4163
FRIDAY 4/18
10:10-11:40am PARTICIPATORY WORKSHOP
Come network the connections in our work. Local activists
also invited. Central Library,
700 Boylston Street, Copley
Square
. 3 minute walk: North on Ring Rd, Rt on Boylston

What's Activist? The next generation talks praxis
FRIDAY 4/18
2:30-4:10pm Panel session 4404

agg party! FRIDAY 4/18 9pm Peoples Republik, Central Square, 876-878
Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139
Take the Red Line to Central Square Station, then walk 0.3
miles along Massachusetts Ave