International Conference

February 23rd and 24th, 2012

“Models and their Effects on Development paths: an Ethnographic and comparative Approach to knowledge transmission and livelihood strategies (MEDEA)”

Organization: Universitat de Barcelona

Prof. Susana Narotzky

Dept. Antropologia Cultural, Història d'Amèrica i Àfrica

Universitat de Barcelona

C/ Montealegre 6-8

08001 Barcelona, Spain


Thursday 23 February 2012

9h30: Presentation. Victoria Goddard & Susana Narotzky

10h-11h: Keynote speech.

“Company and contract labour in an Indian public sector steel plant”

Prof. Jonathan Parry (London School of Economics)

11h-11h15: Coffee Break

11h15-14h [2h45]: Session 1: Critical events: restructuring, privatisation, globalisation

Crucial transformations of hegemonic economic models have spread around the globe in the last decades, following critical events (economic crises, political transitions). Their impact on people’s everyday economic practices needs to be tackled both in terms of changes and continuities, in order to understand how they promote adaptation, resistance or creativity.

3 papers + 1 respondent + debate:

·  Don Kalb (Central European University, Budapest) “Critical junctions: spaces and places for project-making”

·  Laura Perelman (Instituto de Desarrollo Económico y Social, Buenos Aires) “Continuities and discontinuities of economic models and workers’ perception of model changes in Argentina”

·  Ubaldo Martínez Veiga (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia) “A reassessment of Spain’s integration in the EEC: restructuring, privatization and democratic governance”

·  David Ost (respondent) (Hobart and William Smith Colleges) “From Class to Culture, or Class As Culture?”

·  Chair: Paz Benito del Pozo (Universidad de León)

14h- 16h: Lunch

16h-18h45 [2h45]: Session 2: Work and collective action

Labour claims and struggles change over time as a result of the transformation of production structures and of capital-labour relations. Collective action adopts many different forms according to previous memories of struggle and actual conditions of possibility in each regional context.

3 papers + 1 respondent + debate:

·  Gonzalo Díaz Corvetto (Universidaded de Brasilia) Paper title missing

·  Juraj Buzalka / Michaela Ferencova (Comenius University – Bratislava) “Populist mobilisations in central and eastern Europe”

·  Sharyn Kasmir (Hoftra University – New York) “The Saturn Automobile Corporation and the disorganization of labor”

·  Enrico Gibellieri (respondent) (European Steel Technology Platform) “European stakeholders and industrial transformation”

·  Chair: Vera Trappmann (Universitat Magdeburg)

19-20h: Welcome Cocktail

Friday 24 Februrary 2012

9h30-1145 [2h15]: Session 3: Memory and knowledge transmission

Continuities and discontinuities need to be addressed in the transmission of skills, memories and values across generations, including professional skills and training, the use of technologies (not only machines but also management and work organisation strategies), representations of work (and of what a worker is), and memories and abilities for collective mobilisation.

3 papers + 1 respondent + debate:

·  Patricia Vargas (Instituto de Desarrollo Económico y Social, Buenos Aires) “Learning to work and struggle through the generations of SOMISA steel plant”

·  Elena González-Polledo (Goldsmiths College – University of London & Universitat de Barcelona - FBG) “New models of work organization and tensions in knowledge transmission patterns in Arcelor-Mittal plant, Asturias”

·  Manos Spyridakis (University of Peloponnese) “Work and Social Reproduction in the shipbuilding industry of Piraeus”

·  Kazimiera Wódz - Sphere project (Respondent) (Univeristy of Silesia – Katowice) “Post-industrial landscapes and memories. The Silesian Case” (co- author Dr. Monika Gnieciak)

·  Chair: Lydia Morris (University of Essex)

11h45-12h: Coffee Break

12h-14h [2h]: Session 4: Reconfiguring livelihoods

Ethnographic accounts of industrial work need to be complemented with household strategies aimed at earning a living. The impact of changing models and restructuring will reconfigure individual, firm and family practices, within and outside the specific spaces of work and income provisioning.

2 papers + 1 respondent + debate:

·  Irene Sabaté (Universitat de Barcelona) “Getting by beyond work, or the multiplicity of livelihood strategies among heavy industry workers and their families in Ferrol, Spain”

·  Fulvia d’Aloisio – Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli “Postfordist work organization and daily life in a gender perspective: the case of FIAT-SATA in Melfi (Southern Italy)”

·  Carmen Bueno (Universidad Iberoamericana, México, DF) (Respondent) “Global dynamics, localresponses to industrial innovation and livelihood transformations”

·  Chair: Rosana Guber (Instituto de Desarrollo Económico y Social, Buenos Aires)

13h45-15h30: Lunch

15h45-17h45 [2h]: Session 5: Models circulation

Local, regional and national development paths are exposed to the influence of economic models that circulate as knowledge artefacts together with international flows of commodities, capital and people. Models are both productive of actions and effects, while being themselves the outcome of specific negotiations of meanings and relationships, as they are formalized.

2 papers + 1 respondent + debate :

·  Flávia Lessa de Barros/ Gustavo Lins Ribeiro (Universidade de Brasilia) “Capital, global governance and the circulation of models”

·  Edoardo Mollona / Arianna dal Forno (Università di Bologna) “Experimental models of privatization”

·  Douglas Holmes (Respondent) (University of New York - Binghampton) “Performative models: an economy of words”

·  Chair: Andrea Fumagalli (Università di Pavia)

18h-19h15: Roundtable: Models and their Effects on Development Paths

·  Victoria Goddard (Goldsmiths College – University of London)

·  Luis Reygadas (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana – Iztapalapa)

·  Costis Hadjimichalis (Harokopio University – Athens)

·  Susana Narotzky (Universitat de Barcelona)

·  Chair: Frances Pine (Goldsmiths College – University of London)

19h15-19h30: Closing Words

* Each session: 20min per paper + 10min specific questions + respondent 15mn + 30 min debate