FYI
Best Regards, Ishtiaque
Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed Assistant Professor Department of Computer Science University of Toronto, ON, CA web: https://www.ishtiaque.net/
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Development Seminar devsem@utoronto.ca Date: Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 5:48 PM Subject: Development Seminar Lecture by Dr Derek Hall: Neoliberalism's Commodification on Nov 3, 2017 @ 12pm, AP367 To: DEVSEMEVENTS-L@listserv.utoronto.ca
Friday, November 03, 2017
12:00PM to 2:00PM
Department of Anthropology, AP367 19 Russel St Toronto, M5S2S2
Abstract: The idea that the world is moving towards, or has already arrived at, a condition often referred to as ?the commodification of everything? has become a staple of media, activist, and scholarly commentary in the early 21st century. Critical political economists have variously identified the commodification of everything as an empirical condition characteristic of mature capitalism, as a structural tendency inherent to capitalist social relations, and as an neoliberal ideological project. In this talk, I challenge the idea that universal commodification is a neoliberal goal in two ways: by inquiring into what the implications of the existence of markets for everything would be for market relations themselves, and by asking why it is that neoliberal states and international institutions criminalize and pathologize a wide range of markets that have flourished in some non-neoliberal societies. I focus in particular on possible markets in some of the most fundamental elements of human societies, including violence, power, and credentials, and draw on empirical evidence from early modern Europe and contemporary Eastern Asia.
Speaker: Derek Hall is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science and the Balsillie School of International Affairs at Wilfrid Laurier University. His research interests include the political economy of food, agriculture, land and the environment in Eastern Asia, and the theory and history of capitalism. He is the author of Land (Polity, 2013) and, with Philip Hirsch and Tania Murray Li, of Powers of Exclusion: Land Dilemmas in Southeast Asia (NUS Press and University of Hawai?i Press, 2011). In 2009-10 he was an S.V. Ciriacy-Wantrup Research Fellow at the University of California Berkeley.
Co-Sponsored by the Development Seminar and the Center for South East Asian Studies at the University of Toronto
Website: https://utdevsem.wordpress.com/2017/10/25/neoliberalisms-commodifications/
Registration Link: http://anthropology.utoronto.ca/events/devsem-derek-hall/
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