Pirate Care
19th & 20th June 2019
The Centre for Postdigital Cultures (CPC), Coventry University, UK invites contributions to its second annual conference, which
will explore the phenomenon of ‘Pirate Care’. Presentations and talks will be
complemented by a film programme tackling the main theme of the conference.
The term Pirate Care condenses two processes that are particularly
visible at present. On the one hand, basic care provisions that were previously
considered cornerstones of social life are now being pushed towards illegality,
as a consequence of geopolitical reordering and the marketisation of social
services. At the same time new, technologically-enabled care networks are
emerging in opposition to this drive toward illegality.
Punitive neoliberalism (Davies, 2016) has beenrepurposing,
rather than dismantling, welfare state provisions such as healthcare, income
support, housing and education (Cooper, 2017: 314). This mutation is
reintroducing ‘poor laws’ of a colonial flavour, deepening the lines of
discrimination between citizens and non-citizens (Mitropolous, 2012: 27), and
reframing the family unit as the sole bearer of responsibility for dependants.
However, against this background of institutionalised
‘negligence’ (Harney & Moten, 2013: 31), a growing wave of mobilizations
around care can be witnessed across a number of diverse examples: the recent
Docs Not Cops campaign in the UK, refusing to carry out documents checks on
migrant patients; migrant-rescue boats (such as those operated by Sea-Watch)
that defy the criminalization of NGOs active in the Mediterranean; and the
growing resistance to homelessness via the reappropriation of houses left empty
by speculators (like PAH in Spain); the defiance of legislation making homelessness illegal (such as Hungary’s
reform of October 2018) or municipal decrees criminalizing helping out in
public space (e.g. Food Not Bombs’ volunteers arrested in 2017) .
On the other hand, we can see initiatives experimenting with
care as collective political practices have to operate in the narrow grey zones
left open between different technologies, institutions and laws in an age some
fear is heading towards ‘total bureaucratization’ (Graeber, 2015: 30). For
instance, in Greece, where the bureaucratic measures imposed by the Troika
decimated public services, a growing number of grassroots clinics set up by the
Solidarity Movement have responded by providing medical attention to those
without a private insurance. In Italy, groups of parents without recourse to
public childcare are organizing their own pirate kindergartens (Soprasotto),
reviving a feminist tradition first experimented with in the 1970s. In Spain,
the feminist collective GynePunk developed a biolab toolkit for emergency
gynaecological care, to allow all those excluded from the reproductive medical
services — such as trans or queer women, drug users and sex workers — to
perform basic checks on their own bodily fluids. Elsewhere, the collective
Women on Waves delivers abortion pills from boats harboured in international
waters – and more recently, via drones - to women in countries where this
option is illegal.
Thus pirate care, seen in the light of these processes -
choosing illegality or existing in the grey areas of the law in order to
organize solidarity - takes on a double meaning: Care as Piracy and Piracy as
Care (Graziano, 2018).
There is a need to revisit piracy and its philosophical
implications - such assharing, openness, decentralization, free access to
knowledge and tools(Hall, 2016) - in the light of transformations in access to
social goods brought about by digital networks. It is important to bring into
focus the modes of intervention and political struggle that collectivise access
to welfare provisions as acts of custodianship (Custodians.online, 2015) and
commoning (Caffentzis&Federici, 2014). As international networks of
tinkerers and hackers are re-imagining their terrain of intervention, it
becomes vital to experiment with a changed conceptual framework that speaks of
the importance of the digital realm as a battlefield for the re-appropriation
of the means not only of production, but increasingly, of social reproduction
(Gutiérrez Aguilar, et al., 2016). More broadly, media representations of these
dynamics - for example in experimental visual arts and cinema - are of key
importance. Bringing the idea of pirate ethics into resonance with contemporary
modes of care thus invites different ways of imagining a paradigm change,
sometimes occupying tricky positions vis-à-vis the law and the status quo.
The present moment requires a non-oppositional and nuanced
approach to the mutual implications of care and technology(Mol et al., 2010:
14), stretching the perimeters of both. And so, while the seminal definition of
care distilled by Joan Tronto and Berenice Fisher sees it as ‘everything that
we do to maintain, continue, and repair “our world” so that we can live in it
as well as possible’ (Tronto & Fisher, 1990: 40), contemporary feminist
materialist scholars such as Maria Puig de La Bellacasa feel the need to modify
these parameters to include ‘relations [that] maintain and repair a world so
that humans and non-humans can live in it as well as possible in a complex
life-sustaining web’ (Puig de La Bellacasa, 2017: 97). It is in this spirit
that we propose to examine how can we learn to compose (Stengers, 2015) answers
to crises across a range of social domains, and alongside technologies and care
practices.
We invite proposals for 20 minute presentations on the theme
of Pirate Care as outlined above. We welcome submissions addressing a wide
range of topics in response to one or more of the following sub-themes:
- Criminalisation of Care: including responses to legal attacks to NGO work in the Mediterranean; state-sanctioned violence against healthcare practitioners (Buissonniere, Woznick, and Rubenstein, 2018); the erosion of reproductive medicine provisions and self-determination rights for women; campaigns to decriminalize sexwork and regularize domestic workers.
- Care Struggles: histories of grassroots and autonomous organizing around care / for access to care. Examples might include histories of workers’ mutualism; Black Panthers’ free clinics; ACT UP and AIDS organizing around medical research; feminist struggles for free abortion rights; marginalized constituencies and underground solidarity networks.
- Hacking Care: care practice in relation to technologies and tools, open softwares and oppositions to the patent regimes. Relevant stories might include: open source medicine; right to repair and medical devices; open pharma; open science; biohacking practices.
- Piracy as Care: focused on practices of civil disobedience that deliberately defy intellectual property and other laws in order to care for practices, ecologies, or constituencies. Examples include shadow libraries’ use of internet to support or coordinate around specific social reproductive needs; tinkering and readaptation of technological objects; and digitally-supported systems to support better care of common goods.
We welcome contributions from academics, practitioners,
artists, and activist alike. The programme of talks will be accompanied by a
film programme addressing the conference theme. Film submissions for inclusion
are also welcome.
Proposed contributions for papers should include:
- a short abstract (max 350 words);
- a short biographical note ( max 150 words)
Please be aware that our facilities will allow for a proper
theatrical screening; the digital format is preferred but you can reach out the
conference organisers at the email below in case your prospect submission is in
other formats.
Please send your submission no later than April 1st, 2019 to piratecare@gmail.com
A notification of acceptance will be circulated by mid-April
2019.
Limited travel funding will be made available to conference
participants on a needs-based basis. Details on how to apply for this will be
made available following paper acceptance.
The conference will be a child-friendly environment.
About the CPC: The Centre for Postdigital Cultures (CPC) explores how
innovations in postdigital cultures can help us to rethink our ways of being
and doing in the 21st century. Our research draws on cross-disciplinary ideas
associated with open and disruptive media, the posthumanities, and the
Anthropocene to promote a more just and sustainable ‘post-capitalist’ knowledge
economy.
More detail here.
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