In continuity with the previous workshops aim to build a space for reflection and find from the various productions and practices of social movements, views and perspectives of research that in this instance to recognize the map of actions, processes and conflicts in the region. Thus, from different backgrounds and approaches to try to reset the puzzle of the complex and dynamic political, social, economic and cultural from which networks are conflicting and transformations within the same social movements and groups in Latin America. The practices of social movements must be understood as part of the conflicting patterns that are woven from the transformation in the forms of accumulation within the system capitalist. In this sense, is fundamentally a socio-historical reading key that allows us to relate a look at long-term perspective and at the same time, recent history to understand the past establishing operating in the present and future that is projected practices of resistance and hope of collective struggle, but also in the practices of the dominant. Identified three areas to consider: 1 - Recognize productive conversion processes in recent decades associated with the new forms of land use and forms of expropriation and destruction of natural energy and social energy (changes in working practices loss of jobs, eviction of the urban poor, rural land expropriation and indigenous people before the advance of monoculture) begin to mark the conflicting scenarios in the region. 2 Address the process of institutionalization of social movement demands that were deepened in recent years. In this sense, understanding the relationships between the demands of the movements, the channels of institutional politics and the media rewrite the protests and collective actions, ranging from the invisible to the demonization-lets complicate the scenario where conflicts are resolved . This arc goes from the constitutions from multi referendums and other experiences in Bolivia and Ecuador to cooptation by states emerging experiences. 3 - Just as the production, processing and augment the practices of resistance and rebellion also escalated forms of repression and fear. We need a recognition of certain geopolitical changes that are related to the processes mentioned above: we refer to strategies of control and threat as are the criminalization, militarization, and the use of codes of protests by the dominant groups. We propose, then, open the debate about the various social conflicts and re-register a reading of the political process in the region are at different stages in dispute. Also, understand the characteristics of these processes that are tying and at the same time, put them in dialogue with other historical experiences with other practices of resistance in other settings, allows us to account for the density of the debate.
the foregoing call on teachers, students, researchers and activists different groups, social movements to participate in this meeting.
Symposia Proposals
Proposals for Symposia, Presentations, publications and audiovisual projects are due on February 15, 2010 in e-mail of the Organizing Committee: 2jornadaslatinoamericanas @ gmail.com You should send a summary of the proposal with a maximum of 500 words. Each symposium should also propose how the table and supporting activities such as workshops, conferences, audiovisual presentations of publications, etc. The presentation should include the names, contacts and membership proposed institutional coordinators. Approval will be made by the Organizing Committee and the Academic Committee. The details of symposia will be published on the website of the conference (http://jornadaslatinoamericanas.blogspot.com/) and will be announced via e-mail as of March 31, 2010.
Model presentation
Title symposium
Summary
-up-not mandatory-
coordinators institutional affiliation
Schedule
Academic Committee
Scribano Adrián (Center Advanced Studies Implementation Unit CONICET)
Alberto Betancourt Posada (Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico) Alberto
Bonnet (Universidad Nacional de Quilmes, Argentina)
Alexis Meza Sánchez (University Arcis, Chile)
Claudia Girón (Movement of Victims of State Crimes, Colombia).
Cleria Botelho da Costa (University of Brasilia, Brazil)
Queipo Ernesto Mora (Universidad del Zulia, Venezuela)
Montysuma Marcos (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil)
Monica Gordillo (Universidad Nacional de Córdoba-CONICET)
Rachel A. May (University of Washington , USA)
Laverdi Robson (Universidade Estadual do Oeste do Parana, Brazil)
Sara Ortelli (CONICET-UNCPBA, Argentina)
Organizing Committee
School of History, Faculty of Philosophy and Humanities, National University of Cordoba.
Program on Collective Action and Social Conflict. Center for Advanced Studies - EU / CONICET. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba.
Anthropology and History Program working capital ratio. Center for Advanced Studies - EU CONICET. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba.
Research Team "Conflicts and forms of social mobilization within a paradigm flexibilizer." CIFFYH. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba.
Ph.D. in Social Studies from Latin America. Center for Advanced Studies. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba.
II Chair in American History, School of History, Philosophy and Humanities, National University of Cordoba.
Contemporary Latin American Issues Chair, Department History, Faculty of Arts at the University of Buenos Aires.
General Chair in Contemporary American History, Faculty of Humanities, National University of Mar del Plata.
Chair in American History III B, Department of History, Faculty of Arts at the University of Buenos Aires.
Human Rights Watch in the Andean Region, Trasandinos and Centro de Estudios Latinoamericanos , Faculty of Social Policy and National University of Cuyo.
School of History and Social Sciences, Universidad Arcis, Chile.
Center Contemporary Latin American Studies, Faculty of Humanities and Arts at the Universidad Nacional de Rosario.