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<span style="font-size: 18pt;"><strong>Online Discussion: Bringing Structural Analysis Back in a World of Pessimism</strong></span>
<br><strong>(<a href="https://extractivism.de/talks02/">https://extractivism.de/talks02/</a>)</strong>
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<h4>May 11<sup style="line-height: 0;">th,</sup> 2022, 16-20h Berlin | 15-19h London | 11-15h Brasília | 20-24h Dhaka</h4>
<h4><a href="https://uni-kassel.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_nBlhn3D_Q3SG5F42CgWlBQ"><strong>Registration required</strong></a>.</h4>
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The world is in crisis, and recurring events, such as the 2008 global financial crisis up to the current war in Ukraine, reveal that we are experiencing a turning point in history. These crises show that the global system mainly became challenging in economic and political dimensions. The prevailing mainstream doctrines, be Institutionalism, Constructivism, Neoclassic or Neoliberal, have been ill-fated in the Social Sciences, particularly in International Relations, Political Sciences, and Economics, losing much of their explanatory value. In a nutshell, many optimistic predictions concerning growth, development, prosperity, and peace did not materialize. In the face of these crises and humanitarian catastrophes, the pendulum is swinging in the opposite direction, a direction characterized by pessimism, isolationism, populism, and, not least, nationalism. After a years-long requiem of the state and debates about its end, the state revitalized quickly – bringing old issues to share the table with new challenges. While, for decades, mainstream politics and conventional wisdom in the West sough for a neoliberal utopia, the complex reality of class struggles, conflict for resources, predatory consumption of nature, and inequalities on a global scale push us to explore, once again, the role of state and class in development trajectories. Thus, the quest for alternative concepts that balance the old and the new, the agency and the structure, begins, opening the discussion to heterodox approaches.
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<br>With a focus on the Global South, this <strong>Extractivism Talks </strong>intends to revisit structuralist arguments in discussing development theory and development policies. Considering we are arguing that there is a discussion returning, we want to explore the utility of the available tools of analysis as well as what is dire needs to be updated and how so. The goal is to promote a discussion of different scholarly generations between the first wave of scholars working on structuralism, class, and development and upcoming scholars that currently build on these works.
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<strong>This event will take place via Zoom. Please register </strong><strong><a href="https://uni-kassel.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_nBlhn3D_Q3SG5F42CgWlBQ">here</a></strong><strong>.</strong>
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<strong>This event will be streamed live via Youtube.</strong>
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<h2>Panel 1: Revisiting Development: State, Class, and Structure (16-18h Germany)</h2><strong>Hartmut Elsenhans</strong> (University of Leipzig)
<br><strong>Luiz Carlos Bresser Pereira</strong> (Getúlio Vargas Foundation, São Paulo)
<br><strong>Mushtaq Khan</strong> (SOAS, University of London)
<br><strong>Erik Reinert</strong> (Tallinn University of Technology)
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Moderation: Luíza Cerioli (University of Kassel)
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<br><span style="font-size: 16pt;"><strong>Panel 2: Rethinking Structuralism: New Peers, New Approaches (18-20h Germany)</strong></span>
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<strong>Ingrid Kvangraven </strong>(King’s College London)
<br><strong>Sara Stevano </strong>(SOAS, University of London)
<br><strong>Fernando Rugitsky </strong>(UWE of Bristol)
<br><strong>Johanna Siebert </strong>(University of Sussex)
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Moderation: Hannes Warnecke-Berger (University of Kassel)
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We look forward to seeing you!
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Your Extractivism Team
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