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CFP Conferences

CFP: InASA Biennial Conference

Conference Dates: 5-7 December 2012, Melbourne

Keynote speakers: Gillian Whitlock, Adrian Franklin, Susan Ryan & Kim Scott

Borders obstruct through a variety of guises – geopolitically, between disciplines, across publics and counter publics. The 2012 InASA Conference will explore the conditions under which borders are breached and enforced. Attention to the transnational circuits of information, technologies, bodies and ideas is increasingly seen against the discontinuities, lapses and blockages that characterize the growing political preoccupation with border security, internet restriction and the trafficking of people and animals. Mobility itself is racialised and subject to the countervailing forces of disparate regimes of gender, class and sexuality. Security, sovereignty and secrets are pitted against protest, asylum and leaks.

Despite Australia’s economic buoyancy throughout the Global Financial Crisis, largely through its resource boom and exports markets to China and India, the nation remains anxious about its borders, and much else besides. The extradition of Wikileaks frontman Julian Assange, the decline of the Murdoch media empire, the loss of servicemen in Afghanistan, the detention of tourists for drug trafficking in Bali, the drowning of dozens of asylum seekers-all point to the ongoing dilemmas of Australia and Australians’ relationships with the region and the world. At home, the decline in the standard of debate around the critical issues of climate change, the place of Indigenous Australians in the Federal Constitution, and local versions of the Occupy movement have reignited debate about the way Australians see themselves and imagine their future. At times fretful and fearful, on other occasions Australia and Australians seem exultant and ascendant.

The 2012 InASA Conference, jointly hosted by Monash University’s History Department and its National Centre for Australian Studies, will provide a forum for much needed complex analysis and discussion around these issues through its theme: Border Breach. The conference is designed to encourage reflection on both Australian effects in transnational circuits of meaning and ideas, but also the inherently interdisciplinary and global nature of Australian studies. The movement of ideas and people across Australian borders is mirrored in the academy, compelling an immensely productive, constantly shifting context for thought and contention that this Biennial InASA conference will showcase.

Panels and papers are invited which address the following themes, in terms of contemporary debates and historical/cultural perspectives:

• Debate: climate change, corporate accountability and democracy

• Mobility: migration, diasporas, refugees and trafficking

• Difference: citizenship and multiculturalism

• Economy: trade, ethics and counter publics

• Finance: crisis, trade barriers and sovereignty

• Security: resistance, protest and hacking

• Communication: cyber activism, media empires, citizen journalism

• Land: resource, territory and place

• Indigeniety: interventions, global and local connections

We also hope to encourage discussion of the future of Australian studies itself. In its 25th year, how is Australian Studies changing to embrace new areas of scholarship such as cultural and media studies, to project Australian research and teaching beyond our borders and the challenge to engage beyond the academy? How might research in Australian studies engage with the broader national debate, through the media, in public policy and in the new national curriculum

Online Abstract Submission via our websiteConference Website: http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/history/conferences/inasa-2012/

 

Email:  InASA2012@gmail.com or join our mailing list

Image Courtesy: http://www.boat-people.org Photo: Tanja Milbourne