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Free Articles to download in new Paper Symposium on ‘Autonomy and Activism’

Saturday, 21 August, 2010

FREE ARTICLES downloadable in new Paper Symposium on ‘Autonomy and Activism’ published by Antipode, Geography’s radical journal.


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FREE @ http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/anti.2010.42.issue-4/issuetoc

Antipode, Geography’s long standing radical journal of Geography, is pleased to announce a special symposium of papers called: ‘Autonomy: The struggle for survival, self-management and the common’ (Vol 42:4). This symposium has been pulled together by Paul Chatterton, from the University of Leeds, cofounder of the MA in Activism and Social Change (www.activismsocialchange.org.uk) and the ‘Cities and Social Justice’ research group in the School of Geography.

The articles in this paper symposium aim to reflect the rich and creative desire of autonomous political activism that has flourished over the last decade through the anti-globalisation and anti-capitalist movement leading to new tactics and ideas for resistance and alternatives to capitalism such as climate camps, anti-roads protests, social centres, squats, free schools, teach-ins and hacklabs.

These articles are all concerned with the urgent political tasks of promoting self management and building practices and spaces embedded in commoning as survival routes out of the capitalist present. They are framed by a backdrop of the need for urgent change. Their concepts, case studies and provocations invite us to dwell further on this preoccupation and to force solutions into existence. The hope is that the papers presented here will stimulate much needed further writing, research and action from academics, campaigners and activists on the desire for autonomy – a desire that points to survival routes out of this capitalist present through building capacity for self management and the development of the common.

Contributors to the Special Symposium are leading academics and activists from across the world directly involved in the practice and theory of autonomous politics. They include:

John Holloway who lives in Mexico and is author of several landmark books on autonomous Marxism including most recently ‘Crack Capitalism’ (Pluto, 2009) and is one of the leading commentators on the Zapatista insurrection.

Gustavo Esteva is writer and activist and author of numerous books including the classic text ‘Grassroots Postmodernism’ (Zed Books). He is currently involved in many grassroots struggles in Oaxaca, Mexico, including the Oaxacan Popular Peoples Assembly (APPO) and “La Universidad de La Tierra” (“The University of the Land”)

Chris Carlsson and Francesca Manning. Chris Carlsson has been an activist and writer in San Francisco for a number of decades and was involved in setting up the magazine Processed World in the 1980s. He is a dedicated nowtopian, developing this idea in a recent book (Carlsson, 2008). Francesca Manning is pursuing these ideas at the CUNY Graduate Centre.

Massimo de Angelis is Professor of Political Economy at the University of East London and is author of one of the key books on commoning and value struggles (De Angelis, 2007). he is also editor of the website and online publication ‘The Commoner: a web journal of other values’ (www.thecommoner.org.uk

Jai Sen, writer and activist from India who has been involved in the World Social forum Movement since its inception, continues this theme with an article on open space. Sen is Director of ‘India Institute for Critical Action: Centre In Movement’.

The Free Association who are a writing collective based in several locations some of whom are involved in publishing the magazine ‘Turbulence: Ideas for Movement’ and write at www.freelyassociating.org.

All the papers are FREE to download in Volume 42:4 and include:

- Paul Chatterton. Autonomy. The struggle for survival, self-management and the common

- Gustavo Esteva. The Oaxaca Commune and Mexico’s coming insurrection

- Chris Carlsson and Francesca Manning Nowtopia: Strategic Exodus?

- John Holloway Crack capitalism. The Crisis of Abstract Labour

- The Free Association. Antagonism, neo-liberalism and movements. Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast.

- Jai Sen. On open space Explorations towards a vocabulary of a more open politics

- Massimo De Angelis The Production of Commons and the “Explosion” of the  Middle Class

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/anti.2010.42.issue-4/issuetoc

Special issue on ‘Cities, Justice, Conflict’ out now

Tuesday, 25 May, 2010

I have just contributed an article to a special issue called  ‘Cities, Justice, Conflict’ in the journal Urban Studies.

My article is called ‘ and can be downloaded here.

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The Point is to Change it! New book out now.

Sunday, 11 April, 2010

I have helped pull together a book through the journal ‘Antipode’ i co-edit. The book was pulled together to celebrate 40 years of the journal. The chapters also appear as an issue of the journal and the articles can be downlaoded here.

You can also buy the book on Wiley’s website.

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Talk in Geneva ‘The right to the city: the right to nightlife’

Thursday, 25 February, 2010

On April 4th I will be speaking at the Electron Festival (Festival of Electronic Culture) in Geneva

More information here

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Drax’s future debated on BBC Look North

Tuesday, 12 January, 2010

Just before Christmas, I appeared on the regional BBC Look North evening News in a series organised by BBC Look North weatherman, Paul Hudson.  The series was part of the countdown to the UN Climate change talks in Copenhagen last December. The BBC wanted to profile Drax powersation as it is one of the main reasons why the Yorkshire region has the largest carbon footprint in the UK.

You can watch the clip below. Scroll to about 5 mins in for the start of the Drax feature. In this clip, the production manager at Drax powerstation, Peter emery states that Drax will reduce its carbon emissions by 20% by 2011 based on 2006 figures. This seems a huge and promising decrease, and I am currently seeking clarification on these figures.


I also did a follow up interview on Look North two days later, in response to the launch of a new multimillion pound nuclear research facility in the Yorkshire region. Again i made a similar argument that we need to make a transition to a low carbon economy not through coal or nuclear, but through demand reductions, energy efficiency and a shift to renewables. Watch how well those arguments were received!


There is no environmental crisis: the crisis is democracy

Monday, 7 December, 2009

Here is an article I wrote in the run up to the UNFCC conference in Copenhagen happening right now. It has been published on the Red Pepper magazine’s website here.

New Special Issue of ACME online journal pubished ‘Corporate Involvement in Geography’

Wednesday, 21 October, 2009

ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies
Volume 8, Issue 3, 2009

http://www.acme-journal.org/Volume8-3.htm

Corporate Involvement in Geography
Guest edited by Paul Chatterton and Larch Maxey

Introduction: Whatever Happened to Ethics and Responsibility in Geography? Paul Chatterton and Larch Maxey, Pg. 429
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/ChattertonMaxey09.pdf

Dancing on a Double Edged Sword: Sustainability within University Corp. Larch Maxey, Pg. 440
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Maxey09.pdf

Education and the Enclosure of Knowledge in the Global University. Silvia Federici, Pg. 454
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Federici09.pdf

Teaching What We (Preach and) Practice: The MA in Activism and Social Change.  Stuart Hodkinson, Pg. 462
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Hodkinson09.pdf

Corporate Social Responsibility in Higher Education. Ed Brown and Jonathan Cloke, Pg 474
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/BrownCloke09.pdf

Spies in the Information Economy: Academic Publishers and the Trade in Personal Information. David Murakami Wood, Pg. 484
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Wood09.pdf

Lessons from the Campaign against Elsevier. “We won, but how did we win?” Tom Stafford, Pg. 494
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Stafford09.pdf

In Arms’ Way: Arms Company and Military Involvement in Education in the UK. Anna Stavrianakis, Pg. 505
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Stavrianakis09.pdf

Time to Shell Out? Reflections on the RGS and Corporate Sponsorship.  David Gilbert, Pg. 521
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Gilbert09.pdf

Corporate Social Responsibility: Between Civil Society and the Oil Industry in the Developing World. Felix Tuodolo, Pg. 530
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Tuodolo09.pdf

Everywhere You Go, Can You be Sure of Shell? Emily Johns, Pg 542
http://www.acme-journal.org/vol8/Johns09.pdf

Course at Ragmans Lane Farm Easter 2010

Wednesday, 21 October, 2009

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Tools for Social Change

A Trapese Short Course at Ragman’s Lane Farm, Easter 2010

Sat 27th March- Sat 3rd April 2010

Drawing on the ‘Do It Yourself Handbook’ (handbookforchange.org) this week long
course will provide training in grassroots organising, including consensus decision
making, popular education and effective campaigning. It will also explore how these
tools can be used to set up long term projects e.g. land projects, social centres, community
gardens and how we can work together effectively to achieve social change.

Who: Trapese is a popular education collective who have been organising interactive workshops
which aim to inspire action since 2004.

To register please contact us before 27th

January 2010 at www.trapese.org

Cost: £175-350 pounds depending on income.

Location: Ragman’s Lane Farm Forest of Dean, a sixty acre farm in

Gloucestershire teaching people how to use land sustainably.
More info: www.ragmans.co.uk and www.trapese.org

The Bigger Picture

Monday, 19 October, 2009

There is a pretty amazing event on this Saturday organised by the New Economics Foundation amongst others. Its all at:

http://thebiggerpicture2009.org/

I am doing a couple of things there which include:

1. Speakers corner: Resistance is futile? Can protest save the planet in time? 14.00 – 15.15

Direct action from environmental campaigners is increasingly hitting the news, and there are victories to be claimed. Media coverage from high profile cases such as the Kingsnorth Six and the Drax coal train mean protest is rarely out of the news. With Ed Miliband claiming he wants a movement akin to a new suffragettes, is this wave of protest having an impact on policy makers- and can it make a difference in time?

With John Sauven, Executive Director of Greenpeace, Ann Pettifor, member of the Green New Deal Group and nef fellow and Dr Paul Chatterton, Leeds University.

Chaired by Nick Deardon, Director of the Jubilee Debt Campaign.

2. Workshop Building Your Own community: a DIY Guide 15.30 – 16.30

Short course at the Centre for Alternative Technology, Wales

Monday, 14 September, 2009

Click for leaflet

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I am running a short course in November. We have a great line up of speakers. Spread the word.

EMERGENCY PLANET EARTH! Environmental crises, definitions and responses Tues 10 - Sun 15 Nov 2009

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NEW SHORT COURSE in November 2009 led by the University of Leeds @ the Centre for Alternative Technology, Wales – the UK’s leading ecocentre

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Want to learn more about the urgent environmental issues of our times?

Want to engage with practitioners who are at the forefront of developing solutions?

Want to tap into cutting edge, radical teaching and research with one of the UK’s most respected universities and the UK’s leading ecocentre?

Then this module is for you!

Teaching staff from the MA in ‘Activism and Social Change’ (www.activismsocialchange.org.uk) based in Geography at the University of Leeds are beginning an exciting new partnership with CAT to deliver this short course. CAT is one of Europe’s leading ecocentres, undertaking practical research and teaching into ecological issues. It is based in the town of Machynlleth on the edge of Snowdonia National Park. This collaboration is particularly timely as CAT is launching a major new educational initiative and resource this summer called WISE (the Wales Institute for Sustainable Education). WISE will provide a state-of-the-art environmental education centre, featuring 24 en suite study bedrooms, 200 seat rammed earth lecture theatre workshops, seminar rooms, laboratory, restaurant and bar.

++ Module Logistics and costs

This course will take place in mid November 2009 and will be taught over one week, from Tuesday evening to Sunday afternoon.

Registration for this course costs £300 unwaged, £475 waged and £650 company rate and includes full board accommodation, tuition and materials.

Accommodation will be on our main site, in small simply furnished rooms, which contain 2-5 bunk beds. We have a few single rooms available for an extra £10 per night. There are common rooms available for relaxation, with facilities for making drinks. Meals are served in our wholefood vegetarian restaurant.

++ Module Content

The module will be delivered by staff from the University of Leeds and CAT and will involve a mix of lectures, seminars, evening reading groups, debates and films, student led presentations, guest speakers and site tours and a social on Saturday evening.

++ Sessions include:

Issues

1. Introduction: understanding rapid change

2. Climate Change: emergency code red?

3. The Energy crisis and peak oil

4. Environmental Justice: living in a toxic society

5. Land matters: the industrialisation of food and agriculture

6. Mid point reflection and summary

Responses

7. Green capitalism and the corporate response

8. Government frameworks for change: from the local to the global

9. Grassroots civil society responses: localisation and transition towns

10. Social movements for change: radical ecological direct action

++ To register

Tel: 01654 705981 Email: course@cat.org.uk or www.cat.org.uk/courses for online booking.

To reserve a place, send a non-returnable deposit cheque to CAT Charity Ltd for £100 or ring or email with credit card details. Further details and invoices will be sent shortly before the course. The balance of the course fee is due before the start of the course. Residents of SY20 or SY23 should enquire about special non residential rates.

++ More information

For more information on the MA in Activism and Social Change see: www.activismsocialchange.org.uk or email the Programme Director: Dr Paul Chatterton p.chatterton@leeds.ac.uk