Events
The redistributive and regulatory role of the state
Join Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) & Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES) for the redistributive and regulatory role of the state webinar on 15 Nov
Please join our panel of distinguished speakers Prof Sarah Cook (Southern Centre for Inequality Studies), Dr Abigail Osiki (University of the Western Cape), Ms Mery Laura Perdomo Ospina (ILAW Network), and Dr Ruth Caste-Branco (Southern Centre for Inequality Studies) as they discuss among others:
- How social policy can respond to the changing world of work(ers)?
- How the state can extend public services and social protections to historically marginalized sectors?
- What are the possibilities and limitations of the redistributive role of the state?
Ms Seipati Mokhema (Southern Centre for Inequality Studies) will chair what promises to be a robust engagement
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Wealth Inequality & Elites International Workshop
Join the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies at this workshop.
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Book launch: Capital Order, How Economists Invented Austerity and Paved the Way to Fascism
SCIS invites you to a launch of Professor Clara E. Mattei's book, Capital Order, How Economists Invented Austerity and Paved the Way to Fascism on 23 March 2023
Clara E. Mattei is an Associate Professor in Economics at The New School for Social Research of New York City and was a member of the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton in 2018-2019.
Her research focuses on the relationship between fiscal, monetary, and industrial policies in contemporary capitalism. In particular, she studies the logic of austerity policies and how they shape our society.
Her recent book, Capital Order: How Economists Invented Austerity and Paved the Way to Fascism (University of Chicago Press, November 2022) has received widespread acclamation: A Financial Times Best Book of the Year “A must-read, with key lessons for the future.”—Thomas Piketty
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Post-Covid Economic Recovery Learning Series
Dismantling power asymmetries in the global financial infrastructure: Pathways towards a democratic and economically just recovery
SCIS invites you to the Dismantling power asymmetries in the global financial infrastructure: Pathways towards a democratic and economically just recovery webinar on 20 April, 14:00-15:30 (SAST).
This is the first of three learning sessions in the Post-Covid Economic Recovery Learning Series. The overarching objective of this learning series is to influence the international development policy discourse based on the experiences of economies and countries in the global South and to dismantle narratives that have historically deprived communities of the necessary resources for addressing the multiple social and economic challenges that they face.
The learning series will attempt to answer some of the following questions:
- How has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the social and economic landscape of countries in the global South (e.g. economic growth, public finance, poverty and inequality, gender equality, and employment)?
- What are the gaps between what is being discussed at the international level and the reality of what communities are experiencing on the ground?
- What policies are required for protecting livelihoods and building resilient economies in a post-Covid-19 economic recovery?
The Post-Covid Economic Recovery Learning Series is a collaboration of the Ford Foundation Plus Fund Initiative for Economic and the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies.
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International Conference on New Technologies and the Future of Work in the Global South
The three-day New Technologies & the Future of Work in the Global South International Conference will take place from 17-19 July 2023, in New Delhi.
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies at Wits, in partnership with the Institute for Human Development and the International Labour Organisation, are organising a three-day international conference themed New Technologies and the Future of Work in the Global South. The conference is scheduled for 17-19 July 2023, in New Delhi. Click this link for more information. Enquiries: Robin.Drennan@wits.ac.za.
The conference aims to address some important issues and concerns in the wake of technological change and emerging forms of work which have important implications for the future of work and for workers. Apart from academics, scholars and experts from policymaking, civil society, industry, worker's organisations and international organisations will contribute to the deliberations of the three-day Conference.
Research papers related to the conference theme, underpinned by the core question of how to address the issue through the right mix of strategies and policies, are invited from scholars and researchers, from both Global South and North.
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Post-Covid Economic Recovery Learning Series: Towards a Gender Just and Caring Economy
Towards a Gender Just and Caring Economy
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies invites you to the second learning session titled: Towards a Gender Just and Caring Economy. It will focus on the experiences of women and members of the LGBTQIA community and the strategies and opportunities for achieving gender equality in the post-covid recovery. The webinar will take place on 25 May, 14:00-15:30 (SAST).
This is the second of three learning sessions in the Post-Covid Economic Recovery Learning Series. The session will explore issues around employment, land, and livelihoods. It will also look at the importance of a caring economy and the disproportionate and gendered nature of how care is provided and accessed in the global South.
The overarching objective of the Post-Covid Economic Recovery Learning Series is to influence the international development policy discourse based on the experiences of economies and countries in the global South and to dismantle narratives that have historically deprived communities of the necessary resources for addressing the multiple social and economic challenges that they face.
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Professor Keith Hart: Africa and Europe at the Crossroads
SCIS invites you to a hybrid Lunchtime Seminar: Africa and Europe at the Crossroads to be presented by Professor Keith Hart on 16 May, 13:00 - 14:30 (SAST).
Africa and Europe at the Crossroads
https://www.academia.edu/99925313/Africa_and_Europe_at_the_Crossroads
Africa and Europe are actors in a three-act drama: the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries. In 1900 Europe had 25% of the world’s population, Africa 7.5%. In 2100 Africa will have 40%, Europe 6%. The EU’s institutional defects -- its inability to resolve its monetary, economic and political problems -- point to inevitable decline, while Africa’s prospects in an aging world have never been more promising. Africa doubled its population since 1900 in an urban revolution. Its disparate regions now converge on the model of the Old Regime and are ripe for liberal revolution. Fragmented nation-states need to build more effective regional trade federations. African exports, apart from minerals, should focus on supplying the rapidly expanding world market for cultural services. A recent World Bank/IMF conference focused on global demographic change: India now surpasses China, and in 2100 half the world’s children will be African. The Asian exporters already plan for this future, but the West is nostalgic for the world its racist empires once made.
Professor Keith Hart
Keith Hart is Professor of Anthropology Emeritus, Goldsmiths, University of London. He is a full-time writer who has lived and worked in 24 countries on four continents. He has homes in Paris and Durban. Keith believes that engaged intellectuals should try to understand and shape emergent world society. He was Distinguished Visiting Professor at Wits School of Social Sciences (2007); Honorary Professor in the School of Social Development, UKZN (2008-13); and Co-founder and International Director of the Human Economy Programme, University of Pretoria (2011-18).
Self in the World https://www.berghahnbooks.com/title/HartSelf can be purchased through Ike’s Books, Durban https://ikesbooks.com/. An inspection copy is available in the Department of Anthropology. A colourful Lagos interview with an African slant is at https://bordersliteratureonline.net/globaldetails/keith_hart. For more information, see his website at https://keithhart.academia.edu/.
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Green Transition for Whom? Strategies for achieving climate-resilient economies in the global South
Green Transition for Whom? Strategies for achieving climate-resilient economies in the global South
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies invites you to the third and final learning session titled: Green Transition for Whom? Strategies for achieving climate-resilient economies in the global South.
The webinar will take place on 22 June, 14:00 - 15:30 (SAST). It will be available in English, Spanish, and French languages.
This learning session will reflect on the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic on efforts towards sustainable development in the global South, and the key strategies for achieving a green transition based on the multiple challenges currently facing individuals and communities in these regions. By centering the experiences of women, youth, and communities in the global South, the session takes an alternative approach from the top-down policy recommendations which have dominated the sustainable development discourse.
The session seeks to answer the following question: What would a green, just and inclusive recovery look like based on the experiences of communities and economies in the global South?
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South Africa's Spending Choices
UNICEF and SCIS' Public Economy Project (PEP) invite you to a public seminar titled South Africa's Spending Choices on 27 June from 09:30 to 13:00
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) Public Economy Project (PEP) invite you to a public seminar reflecting on “South Africa’s Spending Choices: a review of the 2023 Budget”.
The overall objective of the seminar is to explore and debate South Africa’s 2023 macro-fiscal framework and spending choices to address poverty, inequality, and socio-economic rights ahead of the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement in October.
The seminar will provide a forum for participants to share the main trends in the expenditure of the South African budget and their implications for public services and the realisation of socio-economic rights.
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Is Inequality Causing Pandemics and, If So, How?
SCIS invites you to a seminar by Dr Matthew Kavanagh titled Is Inequality Causing Pandemics and, If So, How? on 4 July (15:00 - 16:30)
About the seminar:
We are living through multi-pandemic era with rising inequality. Outbreaks from COVID-19 to MPox quickly spread around the world, HIV remains a pandemic we seem not to be able to shake. This comes at a time of mounting inequality within countries and very specific forms of geopolitical inequality between countries. Are these two realities linked? Exploring the economic, social, and political drivers of pandemics, this talk lays out what we know, what we're struggling to know, and the urgency of an inequality-busting rather than inequality-reinforcing approach to pandemic preparedness.
About the speaker:
Matthew Kavanagh, PhD, is the Director of the UNAIDS-Georgetown University Collaborating Centre on HIV Policy and Inequality and special advisor to the Executive Director of UNAIDS. A political scientist by training, he also leads the HIV Policy Lab working to empirically understand and politically shift the policy environment for tackling pandemics.
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Recasting Workers’ Power: Work and Inequality In the Shadow of the Digital Age
SCIS and FES invite you to the launch of Edward Webster and Lynford Dor's book - Recasting Workers’ Power; Work and Inequality in the Shadow of the Digital Age
Join the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies and Friedrich Ebert Stiftung for a hybrid book launch of Emeritus Professor Edward Webster and Lynford Dor's recently published book: Recasting Workers' Power: Work and Inequality in the Shadow of the Digital Age (Bristol University Press / Wits University Press)
There is a widespread view that labour as a counter-hegemonic force has come to an end. This theoretically innovative book based on ground-breaking field work challenges this pessimistic “End of Labour Thesis”. Drawing on labour process theory and the power resources approach the book shows how the power of workers’ is recast as work is restructured. As capital overcomes obstacles to accumulation through various fixes, the working class and its organisations are restructured . By highlighting the struggles of largely precarious and informal workers in sub-Saharan Africa, the book clearly articulates the challenges workers face but suggests some grounds for optimism in the new and hybrid forms of organisation emerging on the shadows of the digital age.
The question raised by these findings is whether these embryonic forms of worker organisation – what the authors call the “Southern trend” – are sustainable and could become the foundations for a new cycle of worker solidarity and union growth. Despite the changes brought about by globalisation and digitalisation, the book shows how informal solidaristic groups among workers continue.
The authors conclude that if traditional unions continue to focus on those workers in stable jobs the growing number of precarious workers will be left without a voice and will have to build their power afresh. The result will be deepening inequality and a diverging labour movement. What has been called “dualization” will shape Southern labour’s future
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Annual Lecture: Recent changes in the global income distribution and their political implications
SCIS invites you to the 2023 Annual Inequality Lecture to be presented by Professor Branko Milanovic
Professor Branko Milanovic will present the 2023 lecture titled Recent changes in the global income distribution and their political implications. The online lecture will take place on September 19th, 16:30 - 18:00 (SAST)
Professor Milanovic will discuss the evolution in global inequality over the past two centuries, with a focus on the most recent 2008-2018 estimates, and will draw political implications of the important changes that are taking place in the global distribution of income. In particular, it will focus on the rise of the middle class in Asia, income stagnation of the rich countries’ middle classes, reshuffling of global income positions, and the emergence of the global plutocracy. It will discuss possible future evolution of global inequality in which the roles of India and large African countries will become increasingly important.
Branko Milanovic is a Research Professor at the Graduate Center, City University of New York (CUNY), Senior Scholar at the Stone Center on Socio-economic Inequality at CUNY, and Visiting Professor at the Institute for International Inequalities at the London School of Economics. His main area of work is income inequality, in individual countries and globally, including in pre-industrial societies.
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Renewable energy, the just transition and inequality: insights from SA’s renewables procurement
SCIS & ACF invite you to a webinar on Renewable energy, the just transition and inequality: insights from South Africa’s renewables procurement
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) in partnership with African Climate Foundation (ACF) will be hosting an online roundtable discussion on Renewable energy, the just transition and inequality: insights from South Africa’s renewables procurement on 30 October 2023, 17:00 -18:30 (SAST)
Low- and middle-income countries across the world are facing the dilemma of needing to decarbonise and industrialise in the context of an electricity supply crisis. The transition from fossil fuels to renewable sources of energy is one of the first steps taken in any process of decarbonisation to address climate change. The energy transition is complex and holds significant economic risk. It requires strong governance and a capable state as well as coordination across government, community organisations and the private sector. This mammoth task requires the State to adopt policies that balance social, economic and climate objectives while reviewing past policies that may no longer be appropriate. This paper discusses the de-risking approach and the investment-centred approach to an energy transition, and using the case study of South Africa, argues for the necessity of an investment-centred approach to achieve a transition which supports local development and energy security. In analysing the example of South Africa’s Renewable Energy Independent Power Producers Procurement Programme (REI4P), we highlight important learnings for the energy transition, which provide a useful window into the wider carbon transition.
To hear more, register here.
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Book Launch: Paperless
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies in partnership with Jacana Media invite you to the launch of Paperless - a novel by Buntu Siwisa on 21 Nov '23
Paperless is an émigré, coming-of-age, campus novel with a dash of espionage. It centres on Luzuko Goba, a South African doctoral student at Oxford University. Set almost entirely in Oxford at the turn of the twenty-first century, Luzuko rides three Oxfords – white Oxford, black Oxford, and the underbelly of illegal Oxford.
He navigates the worlds of Africans in Oxford – the illegal immigrants, the undocumented, and the students. Mired in these worlds, he also grapples with his own personal struggles. The writing of his debut novel is a failure. His thesis is not taking shape. His romantic relationship has ended. And then he must also figure out the meaning of his relationship with his political exile father who has just died, a man he had only seen once in his life.
Siwisa captures the tensions between the relentless immigrants’ pursuit of a secure and comfortable livelihood, the complexities of migration, and how you find home in a place set on highlighting why you don’t belong. The novel explores identity and belonging against the canvass of racism and class. It delves deeper into finding oneself in personal and political spaces that collapse into one. It also takes up on the meaning of exile and exilic consciousness against shifting interpretations of African democracies.
This is a book about migrants, legal and illegal, out of time, out of place, on the wrong side of the UK’s department of immigration. Embark on a journey that is anything but straight through these individuals united by their 'paperless' status.
Dr Buntu Siwisa is a Senior Researcher at the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies. With a D. Phil. In Politics and International Relations from the University of Oxford (St. Peter’s College), he has varied work experiences in academia (Politics and International relations), civil service (Foreign relations in southern Africa), and civil society (Peace and Security in Africa; conflict analysis and management).
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The JET P, JET IP and Implementation Plan in South Africa: Implications for inequality and workers
When: |
Friday, 08 December 2023 - Friday, 08 December 2023 |
Where: |
Online Event
South Africa Pavilion at COP28
Blue Zone, Opportunity Petal, Building number: OA20, Pav number: OA20G3 – Dubai Expo City |
Start time: | 13:00 |
Enquiries: | Katrina Lehmann-Grube: katrina.lehmann-grube@wits.ac.za
|
RSVP: | Register here |
Cost: |
Free but registration is required |
The JET P, JET IP and Implementation Plan in South Africa: Implications for inequality and workers session will take place on the sidelines of COP28.
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) at Wits University and the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) invite you to their co-hosted session titled The JET P, JET IP and Implementation Plan in South Africa: Implications for inequality and workers happening on the sidelines of COP28. Join researchers Katrina Lehmann-Grube (SCIS), Boitumelo Molete (COSATU), Brian Kamanzi, Trade Unions for Energy Democracy (TUED) and Lebogang Mulaisi, Presidential Climate Commission (PCC) who will be in conversation.
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Sovereign Debt Seminar
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies' Public Economy Project (PEP) invite you to a webinar on Sovereign Debt on 7 Dec '23, 14:30 - 16:30 (SAST)
Join our upcoming seminar to learn about Sub-Saharan Africa's escalating public debt crisis. Explore the impact of global economic shifts and the COVID-19 pandemic on the
region's debt levels, now nearing 60% of GDP. Discover how African nations are navigating these challenges amidst limited revenue-generating capabilities, rising debt service
costs, and volatile commodity markets. Engage in critical discussions on strategies for sustainable debt management and economic resilience. In conversation will be Leslie Mensah, Economist/Research Fellow, Institute for Fiscal Studies (Ghana), Bernard Njiri, Senior Research Analyst, Institute of Public Finance (Kenya) and Rashaad Amra, Visiting Researcher, Public Economy Project (South Africa).
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Intersectional Development Research Learning Series
SCIS invites you to a webinar, Promoting Intersectional Development Research Learning Series, on 25 April '24 at 2 pm SAST
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to the first of three sessions in the Intersectional Development Research Learning Series. The first session, Promoting Intersectional Development Research, will take place on 25 April 2024. The webinar will start at 2 pm SAST/8 am ET.
The main aim of the session is to understand intersectionality, its origins, and its relevance for addressing the challenges that developing countries in the global South face.
Background
In 2023, SCIS in collaboration with Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC), undertook research to understand intersectionality and its relevance in global South contexts. The project resulted in eight case study reports that illustrated the diverse application of intersectional approaches in multiple countries across the global South.
Promoting Intersectional Development Research Learning Series is an opportunity to learn and share knowledge about the opportunities and challenges of integrating intersectionality in development research to address persistent inequalities around the world.
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Gaza as Epicenter: An Alternative Reading
SCIS & WISER invite you to join us for a special online seminar of the African Political Economy Seminar with Tareq Baconi on 14 May, 18:00 - 19:30 (SAST)
Tareq Baconi will present an online seminar titled Gaza as Epicenter: An Alternative Reading. Baconi is Board President of Al-Shabaka: The Palestinian Policy Network. He serves as book review editor for the Journal of Palestine Studies. Currently, Tareq is working on a book about decolonization in the 21st century. He is also the author of Hamas Contained: The Rise and Pacification of Palestinian Resistance (Stanford University Press, 2018). His writing has appeared in the London Review of Books, the New York Review of Books, the New York Times, the Washington Post, among others. Previously, Tareq served as a senior analyst for Israel/ Palestine at the International Crisis Group based in Ramallah.
The seminar will proceed on the basis that all participants have read the articles hyperlinked below:
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Technological Upgrading and Educational Composition of the Workforce
SCIS invites you to a hybrid seminar with Dev Nathan titled Technological Upgrading and Educational Composition of the Workforce on 17 May, 09:00 -10:30 (SAST)
In the global production system, there is a division of labour, based on a division of knowledge between lead (headquarter) firms and contract suppliers. While lead firms have, so far, largely been located in the Global North, some countries of the Global South have advanced along to progress from supplier to headquarter firms. This paper studies the manner in which the skill requirement or educational composition of the workforce changes in this process of technological advancement. The countries studied are China, India, and South Korea with the USA taken as the comparator country. The paper starts with the overall trajectory of technological development in these countries. It then analyses the ways in which firm-level R&D, taken as the indicator and driver of firms’ technology development strategies, is related to changes in productivity and the educational composition of the workforce. The paper shows that there is a broad positive correlation between the three variables, R&D investment, labour productivity and educational composition of the workforce. It points to the need to advance this analysis to look at other workforce indicators, such as the gender composition, wages, the quality of employment and the nature of supervision. At a methodological level, the paper argues that it is necessary to look at the role of a firm within a GVC to understand the composition of its workforce.
Professor Dev Nathan is a 2023/2024 Cameron Schrier Equality Fellow at the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS). He is also with the Institute for Human Development, Delhi, and a Visiting Scholar, The New School for Social Research, New York. Research Director at GenDev Centre, Gurgaon, he is Series Co-editor of Development Trajectories in Global Value Chains, Cambridge University Press.
Just Out: Reverse Subsidies in Global Monopsony Capitalism. 2022
Witch Hunts: Culture, Patriarchy and Structural Transformation, 2020
GVCs and Development in Asia: Challenges of Upgrading and Innovation, 2018
Labour in Global Value Chains in Asia, 2016
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The Role of Fiscal Think Tanks
The Public Economy Project at SCIS invites you to The Role of Fiscal Think Tanks seminar on 16 May, 15:00 - 17:00 (SAST).
The Public Economy Project at the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies invites you to the launch of their Working Paper, The Role of Fiscal Think Tanks in Fiscal Policy: Global patterns and lessons for South Africa. The launch seminar titled the Role of Fiscal Think Tanks, will be looking at the vital role of fiscal think tanks in today's turbulent fiscal and democratic landscapes. Drawing from Philipp Krause's paper on Fiscal Institutions, we will discuss some important institutional differences that shape fiscal policymaking and how those differences affect a think tank’s role. Lastly, we will consider the most important types of fiscal think tanks that have emerged, with reference to some country examples, and make some suggestions for implications for South Africa.
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Seminar: Digital Technologies Reshaping Inequalities in the Post-Apartheid Housing Market
SCIS invites you to Julien Migozzi's seminar, Segregation “bit by bit”: Digital Technologies Reshaping Inequalities in the Post-Apartheid Housing Market
Urban Studies Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Oxford University, Julien Migozzi, will present a seminar titled Segregation “bit by bit”: Digital Technologies Reshaping Inequalities in the Post-Apartheid Housing Market on 24 May 2024, 09:00 10:30 (SAST).
Migozzi will discuss how the digitalisation of the housing market reshapes urban segregation and social stratification in post-apartheid South Africa. I use a mixed-method framework that weaves in-depth fieldwork with the analysis of property sales and census data in the Cape Town metro area. I first unpack how the housing market, previously structured upon the racial categorization of people and places, was reconfigured as a flow of data through the adoption of digital technologies, especially credit scoring, allowing the real-time and automated classification of home seekers. I then explore how the spatial evolution of housing prices and mortgage lending intersect with and affect patterns of urban segregation. Finally, I demonstrate how in the context of racialized indebtedness and enduring segregation, the roll-out of digital technologies enabled a selective financialization of housing that operates “bit by bit” through the use of credit scores: on the one hand, I examine how lending practises remain highly selective, tracing mortgage securitization at the neighbourhood level; on the other, I situate how digital platforms allowed the unprecedented rise of institutional investors and enabled the surge of the rental market. This market shift shapes contemporary patterns of urban change while consolidating housing wealth inequalities engineered by racial capitalism. Finally, I discuss how the digital re-mediation of the market encourages us to re-think the contemporary mechanisms of segregation in the era of algorithmic sorting and rentier capitalism
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Onward To Liberation: Samir Amin and the Study of World Historical Capitalism
SCIS invites you to a seminar titled Onward To Liberation: Samir Amin and the Study of World Historical Capitalism on 31 May 2024, 09:00 - 10:30 (SAST).
You are warmly invited to a seminar by Dr Salimah Valiani titled Onward To Liberation: Samir Amin and the Study of World Historical Capitalism.
Samir Amin (1931-2018 ), Africa's preeminent radical economist, did pioneering work on a question still relevant: How to understand the world as an interconnected whole. Trade and financial liberalisation,
migration, and borderless ecological destruction have made this question increasingly apparent to the global majority in the 21st century. But as early as 1957, Samir Amin began tracing the dynamics of
world inequality in what he called accumulation on a world scale. Often referred to as a Marxist, Amin’s thinking sparked much of what would come to be known as world-systems analysis. World-systems
analysis draws from Marx’s historical materialism, and other concepts, without reifying Marx’s thought as a reading of world history.
In her paper, Valiani demonstrates that passing through Marx, eurocentric economic history, historical sociology, and international relations, the collective oeuvre of Samir Amin and his world systems interlocuteurs is eclectic theoretically and methodologically. Working through multiple disciplines, world-systems analysis employs class, surplus, race, coloniality, hegemony, and other concepts to trace world inequality from 1492, thus contributing to understanding long term social change in the service of the ongoing task of human liberation
Dr Salimah Valiani is a senior researcher at SCIS on the Climate and Inequity Research Project.
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Seminar: Older Persons, Care Needs and Social Grants
SCIS warmly invites you to a seminar with Prof Elana Moore titled Older Persons, Care Needs and Social Grants on 11 June 2024, 14:00 - 15:00 (SAST)
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) is pleased to welcome Professor Elena Moore who will discuss her latest research on Older Persons, Care Needs, and Social Grants.
Older persons in South Africa are aided by government-funded non-contributory pensions. The seminar will draw on a recent report that tells the story of the financial lives of older person grant beneficiaries and raises questions for reviewing ageing policy and better meeting the needs of older persons. A lot of the research on the Older Persons Grant focuses on the poverty-alleviating aspects of the grant, especially at a household level. There has been little attention paid to the outcomes for older persons at an individual level, particularly in relation to their needs such as their care needs, access to health, nutrition, assistive devices etc. Policy makes the assumptions that older persons get the grant, therefore they don’t invest more on funding services, even though it is widely known that the grant is used for households not older persons alone. The report therefore examines how the older persons’ needs are being met especially in relation to the actual outcomes that are possible given the amount of money that is available. For a more detailed understanding of state financing of elder care, please read the Funding Elder Care in South Africa report alongside this report.
About the speaker:
Professor Elena Moore is with the Department of Sociology at the University of Cape Town. She is author of Generation, Gender and Negotiating Custom in South Africa (Routledge, 2022), Divorce, Families and Emotion Work (Palgrave, 2017) and (with Chuma Himonga) Reform of Customary Marriage, Divorce and Succession in South Africa (Juta & Co. 2015), as well as numerous journal articles and book chapters. She is also a recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award 2021, University of Cape Town. Moore obtained a Wellcome Career Award, 2023-2028 to develop and grow a research programme in Family Caregiving of Older Persons In Southern Africa (www.familycaregiving.org.za)
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Intersectionality and Grantmaking: Transforming Global Development Research
SCIS invites you to the Intersectional Development Research Learning Session titled Towards Intersectional Grantmaking, on 27 June 2024, 2:00 -3:30 pm SAST
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies warmly invites you to the second Intersectional Learning Session - Intersectionality and Grantmaking: Transforming Global Development Research. The webinar is the second in a three-part Intersectional Development Research Learning Series. The Learning Series provides an opportunity to learn and share knowledge about the opportunities and challenges of integrating intersectionality in development research to address persistent inequalities around the world.
This second Intersectional Learning Session will explore:
- The developments in development research that have led to increased interest in intersectionality
- The role of intersectionality in grantmaking
- Best practices
- Considerations for applying intersectional approaches at the programmatic level
- Challenges and potential opportunities for addressing inequality and persistent power asymmetries in the global development architecture
Background
In 2023, SCIS in collaboration with Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC), undertook research to understand intersectionality and its relevance in global South contexts. The project resulted in eight case study reports that illustrated the diverse application of intersectional approaches in multiple countries across the global South.
Promoting Intersectional Development Research Learning Series is an opportunity to learn and share knowledge about the opportunities and challenges of integrating intersectionality in development research to address persistent inequalities around the world.
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Sweetening the Deal: The Political Economy of Land Redistribution in South Africa’s Sugar Sector
SCIS invites you to a seminar by Alex Dyzenhaus titled Sweetening the Deal: The Political Economy of Land Redistribution in South Africa’s Sugar Sector
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to a seminar presented by Alex Dyzenhaus titled Sweetening the Deal: The Political Economy of Land Redistribution in South Africa’s Sugar Sector on 26 July 2024, 13:00 - 14:30 (SAST).
Abstract:
Under what conditions do land transfers occur under land reform? Theories of land redistribution focus on demand-side explanations for land transfers where the state allocates land in exchange for support from voters or rural elites. In this article, I argue that land transfers under market land redistribution are driven by supply-side characteristics of landholders. Using the case of South Africa’s sugar sector, I show that landholders chose to sell their land via redistribution when they had the economic incentive to preserve existing state-support frameworks and had collective capacity from centralized institutions. To understand when and why land redistribution occurs, one must pay attention to the landholders’ relationship to the state and their internal sectoral organization. In some cases, landholders may have an incentive to redistribute their land.
About the speaker:
Alex Dyzenhaus is a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow in Political Science at the University of Toronto and a Fellow in Democracy and Development at the Mandela School at the University of Cape Town. His research focuses on the political economy of land reform in South Africa and Kenya. His current project looks at how market forces interact with political imperatives to redistribute land and how existing institutions and firms that govern agriculture set parameters that dictate how and when land redistribution occurs.
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SCIS Annual Inequality Lecture | The Political Economy of Global Inequality: A Drama in Three Parts
SCIS invites you to the Inequality Lecture to be presented by Prof Sanjay G. Reddy titled The Political Economy of Global Inequality: A Drama in Three Parts
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies invites you to its Annual Inequality Lecture. Professor Sanjay G. Reddy will present the 2024 lecture titled The Political Economy of Global Inequality: A Drama in Three Parts, on 15 August 2024, 16:30 - 18:00 (SAST).
The first part of the drama involves the deep history of global inequality, including factors such as markets, institutions, technology, and force. Although the role of different factors is debated, we should view this history in terms of political economy and not just economics – in other words, political factors are essential to understanding how we got here. The second part is that which we have been experiencing in recent decades. This period was shaped by the creation of a global institutional legal order through which trade and capital flows could greatly expand, a growing role for finance, economies of scale generated by technology and globalization, and entrenchment of private property rights in new forms. While some of these developments were inequality decreasing many were inequality increasing contrary to the predictions of many mainstream economists. The third part of the drama has yet to be written. We are the actors in this drama and can choose our lines.
About the speaker:
Sanjay G. Reddy is a Professor of Economics at the New School for Social Research in New York. His work has been centrally concerned with inequality within and between countries -- studying unequal outcomes, how they are produced in the interaction of economic, political, and social forces, and how they might be addressed.
Programme
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The Problem of Climate Change and The Analogy of Development
SCIS invites you to a seminar with Benjamin H. Bradlow titled The Problem of Climate Change and the Analogy of Development on 30 July 2024, 12:30 - 14:00 (SAST)
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to a seminar with Benjamin H. Bradlow titled The Problem of Climate Change and the Analogy of Development on 30 July 2024, 12:30 - 14:00 (SAST).
Abstract:
A comparative sociological approach to the problem of mitigating climate change requires reaching for historical analogy of comparison cases that highlight the social basis for switching points in large scale development trajectories. I argue that late industrializing developmental “catch-up” is such an analogy that can help illustrate the sociological foundations of when and why these switching points yield dramatic shifts in developmental outcomes. I proceed to analyze what carbon-based economic growth in the authoritarian East Asian “tigers” (South Korea, Taiwan, Japan) and democratic cases in Brazil and India over the past half century tell us about the possibilities for a transition away from carbon-based economic growth. In doing so, I present tentative findings from ongoing field-based research in the automotive sector in Brazil and South Africa, and each country’s efforts to transition from gas-powered to electric battery-powered vehicles.
About the speaker:
Benjamin H. Bradlow is an Assistant Professor of Sociology and International Affairs at Princeton University, jointly appointed in the School of Public and International Affairs and Department of Sociology. He is a CIFAR Global Azrieli Scholar (2024-2026), in the research program on "Humanity's Urban Future." Bradlow's research makes connections between climate change, urbanization, industrial change, and the political challenges to democracy that confront societies across the globe.
His first book, Urban Power: Democracy and Inequality in São Paulo and Johannesburg, will be published in October 2024 with Princeton University Press (Princeton Studies in Global and Comparative Sociology). Bradlow compares the divergent politics of distributing urban public goods — housing, sanitation, and transportation — in two mega-cities after transitions to democracy: São Paulo, Brazil, and Johannesburg, South Africa. He is currently researching a new comparative book project that examines industrial transitions from carbon in the Global South. This work explores how middle-income countries with export-oriented, internal combustion engine automobile manufacturing sectors are navigating a rich world transition to electric vehicles.
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The Great Reshuffling
SCIS invites you to a seminar with Prof. David Hughes titled The Great Reshuffling on 2 August 2024, 09:00 - 10:30 (SAST).
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies invites you to a hybrid seminar with Professor David McDermott Hughes titled The Great Reshuffling on 2 August 2024, 09:00 - 10:30 (SAST).
Abstract:
The Global North should brace for a demographic and cartographic reshuffling. The current trajectory of climate and fossil fuels may render much of the Global South uninhabitable. Heat waves, combined with political collapse and economic inequality, are already driving people across the sea and desert. Migrants are also crossing borders – with a high death toll. What would it take to remove those international boundaries and the entire system of exclusion and xenophobia underwriting them? The very question seems quixotic. But what is necessary must be possible, at least to imagine. David Hughes imagines a right of free passage independent of territory – and against the grain of nationalism, sovereignty, and indigenous entitlements. He will draw upon ethnography conducted on the Zimbabwe-Mozambique border (in the 1990s) and on the Spain-Morocco border (in the 2010s). In both places, hosts incorporated migrants with care and at the bottom of social hierarchies. There is no utopia here: the great reshuffling will revive archaic forms of domination and servitude from local to planetary scales. Even so, reshuffling beats is surely preferable to suffering in place.
About the speaker:
David Hughes is a Professor of Anthropology at Rutgers University. He has worked as an activist scholar of race, inequality, and natural resources since the late 1980s. In southern Africa, he worked for a variety of NGOs and wrote ethnographies of settler colonialism and land reform: From Enslavement to Environmentalism (2007) and Whiteness in Zimbabwe (2010). Then, in Trinidad and Tobago, he carried out ethnography on petroleum geologists, publishing Energy without Conscience (2017). His fourth book, Who Owns the Wind?, proposes a post-oil energy transition more just than the current one (not) taking place. Hughes has served as president and chief negotiator of Rutgers AAUP-AFT, his faculty labour union. He currently serves on the Climate Justice Task Force of the American Federation of Teachers.
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Mining Global Decarbonisation for Development in Africa? Regional Geopolitics and the Question of SA
SCIS invites you to a seminar with Michael Smith titled Mining Global Decarbonisation for Development in Africa? Regional Geopolitics and the Question of SA
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to a seminar with Michael Smith titled Mining Global Decarbonisation for Development in Africa? Regional Geopolitics and the question of South Africa in Africa, on 23 August 2024, 09:00 - 10:30 (SAST).
Abstract:
Research into the geopolitics of ‘critical’ mineral mining is expanding, with a predominant focus on conflicts related to access and control of renewable energy supply chains among global powers. However, there remains a notable dearth of analysis concerned with addressing how the geopolitics of global decarbonisation relates to regional relations and configurations of power. This absence is concerning given the relatively widespread acceptance that regional development strategies should be embraced by economies seeking to leverage their ‘green’ transition mineral endowment for industrialisation and development. This paper revisits the debate on character and role of the South African state in Africa, from the vantage point of the mineral intensity of global decarbonisation and the competitive dynamics of the contemporary global political economy. By examining South Africa's role in contemporary Zambia in the context of increasing international competition for access and control of Zambia's 'green' mineral reserves, the paper highlights the ambiguity of South African state action and the evolving and dynamic relations it forges with domestic and international class and state forces.
About the speaker:
Michael Smith is a Lecturer in Economic Development at the School of Economics at the University of Cape Town. He is also a PhD Candidate in Sociology, York University Canada. Michael's research interests include the geopolitics of the green transition, critical mineral mining and South Africa's evolving economic and political role in Africa.
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Film screening of Survey City
SCIS invites you to a seminar with Professor Sanjay titled Film Screening of Survey City
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to a seminar with Professor Sanjay Srivastava titled Film Screening of Survey City on 30 August 2024, 09:00 - 10:30 (SAST).
ABSTRACT:
Ayesha and her family live in a Delhi Basti (informal settlement). She is desperate to obtain legal title of her tiny house at the precarious edges of the city. There are frequent rumours of demolitions as the land is classified as ‘illegally occupied’. Ayesha and her neighbours are always trying to find ways of becoming permanent residents of the city where they were born and have lived.
For Basti residents access to legal title to land depends on inclusion in multiple government surveys that promise these. The promises most frequently arrive at election time. The film focuses on crucial survey-related documents intended to provide security of tenure but declared ‘lost’. Between the lost documents and their eventual discovery in a government office, lies the story of a locality, its people, their anxieties and the mysterious relationships between government records and citizens. This is the story of Delhi’s Border Basti.
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Towards a gender just transition: Principles and perspectives from the global South
SCIS invites you to the launch of a Working Paper titled Towards a gender just transition: Principles and perspectives from the global South on Aug 30th
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS)' Climate and Inequality Project invites you to the launch of its Working Paper titled Towards a gender just transition: Principles and perspectives from the global South. The webinar will take place on 30 August 2024, 12:00 -14:00 (SAST).
The Climate and Inequality team's Professor Imraan Valodia, who is SCIS Director and Wits University Pro VC for Climate, Sustainability, and Inequality, and researcher, Julia Taylor, will take us through the findings of the working paper during a conversation with the Presidential Climate Commission's Lebogang Mulaisi and Economics Emeritus Professor Maria S. Floro from the American University in Washington DC, and Nonresident Senior Fellow at Brookings Institution.
Abstract:
This paper argues that ensuring a transition that delivers gender justice is both critical and urgent. Without explicit attention to, and clear prioritisation of gender justice across transition policies, climate change ‘solutions’ risk replicating or reinforcing structural gender inequalities. Examples of such risk include women’s continued limited access to economic opportunities, employment and social protection; their over-representation in precarious work; and women’s primary responsibility for social reproduction and care.
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Effects of Public Investment in the Green & Care Economies & Public Infrastructure in South Africa
SCIS invites you to the launch of a Working Paper titled The Effects of Public Investment in the Green and Care Economies and Public Infrastructure in SA
The Public Economy Project (PEP) at the Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to the launch of their Working Paper titled The Effects of Public Investment in the Green and Care Economies and Public Infrastructure in South Africa. The webinar will take place on 5 September 2024, 13:30 - 15:00. Join our speakers Professor Ozlem Onaran and Dr. Cem Oyvat, Adam Aboobaker, and Kate Phillip in what promises to be an insightful session.
Abstract:
This paper argues that a comprehensive combination of policy tools is required to trigger the necessary and urgent level of public investment needed to confront the complex crises of growth, inequality, care, and climate change in South Africa. South Africa confronts considerable macroeconomic policy challenges, most notably the need to attain sustainable and inclusive economic growth. According to the National Treasury, South Africa's growth averaged a mere 1.75% per annum between 2010 and 2019, a figure that drops further if the COVID-19 impacted years of 2020 and 2021 are taken into account. The South African National Treasury asserts that fiscal policy encompasses decisions involving the level and composition of government spending, tax revenue generation, and government borrowing, if any. Since 2013, a strategy of fiscal consolidation has been pursued with the aim of slowing the rate of growth in public spending while also enhancing tax revenues. However, the self-defeating consequences of actual reductions in public spending have resulted in a decline in public expenditure on public services, primarily due to the rapid growth in spending on debt service costs. Conversely, this paper contends that increasing, rather than cutting, public expenditure on the care economy, green economy, and public infrastructure would enhance South Africa's GDP and employment levels and result in changes in public debt/GDP ratios. This study advocates for the adoption of expansionary fiscal policy choices in conjunction with clearly defined development targets and coordinated fiscal, monetary, industrial, labour, and social policies.
To read the Working Paper: Click here
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Re-enforcing Inequalities: The Political and Social Consequences of Internal Migration
SCIS invites you to a seminar with Professor Gabriele Spilker titled Re-enforcing Inequalities: The Political and Social Consequences of Internal Migration
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) warmly invites you to a seminar with Professor Gabriele Spilker titled Re-enforcing inequalities: The political and social consequences of internal migration. This hybrid session takes place on 13 September 2024, 09:00-10:30 (SAST).
Abstract:
Many countries in the Global South experience large flows of internal, rural-to-urban migration with oftentimes ambivalent consequences. While urbanization can drive economic growth and improve public services, it also presents economic, social, and political challenges, often intensifying inequalities between locals and migrants This paper explores when migrants perceive discrimination and how this varies based on their reasons for migrating. Using original survey data from Kenya and Vietnam, we find that migrants who relocate for economic opportunities or to escape environmental hardships report fewer inequalities than locals or social migrants. A possible explanation is that these migrants have lower expectations of their new living conditions, leaving less room for disappointment.
About the speaker:
Gabriele Spilker is a Professor of International Politics – Global Inequality at the Department of Politics and Public Administration and co-speaker of the Excellence Cluster "The Politics of Inequality". Spilker completed her PhD at ETH Zurich as part of the National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR) “Challenges to Democracy” in 2009. Before joining the University of Konstanz, she was a Fritz Thyssen Fellow at the Weatherhead Center of International Affairs at Harvard University (2011-2012), a postdoctoral researcher in the “International Political Economy” group at the Center for Comparative and International Studies (CIS) at ETH Zurich (2012-2013) as well as Assistant/Associate Professor of International Politics (2014-2020) and Professor for Empirical Research Methods at the Department of Political Science and Sociology of the University of Salzburg (2020-2021). Her main research interest concerns the societal-level consequences of climate change, for instance, in terms of migration and protest.
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Enough! A Modest Political Ecology for an Uncertain Future
SCIS invites you to a seminar titled Enough! A Modest Political Ecology for an Uncertain Future, which will be presented by Professor Mary Lawhon on 20 Sep 2024
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to a hybrid seminar with Professor Mary Lawhon titled Enough! A Modest Political Ecology for an Uncertain Future on 20 Sep 2024 on 20 September 2024, 09:00 - 10:30 (SAST).
Abstract:
There is enough for all! But how do ‘we’ make this happen? This talk, drawn from a recently published book, argues creating such a future is not about producing more or living with less. Instead, it starts with rethinking our politics, economics and approach to livelihoods. We will briefly chart the key contours of development and environmental studies (modernist and arcadian) before advancing the idea of a ‘modest imaginary’. The talk tacks between conceptual contours, concrete examples, proposed inventions, and personal narrative, and shows how the book is deeply rooted in Mary’s work in and beyond South Africa. Enough! proposes delinking livelihoods from work through a redistributive basic income, which enables enough without overreliance on modern states. It also enables us to prevent conflicts over jobs, reduce some types of production, and deploy resources towards building postcapitalist worlds.
About the speaker:
Mary Lawhon is a Professor of Political Ecology in the School of Geosciences at the University of Edinburgh. Her research interests are in urban political ecology and theorizing from cities in the global south. She has a PhD in Geography (Clark University), an MEnvDev from the UKZN, and a BSc in Environmental Studies (University of Kansas). Lawhon has published more than fifty articles and book chapters on topics such as urban infrastructure in African cities (particularly waste and sanitation), environmental politics in South Africa, and the politics of work and distribution. She has written two books (Making Urban Theory: Learning and Unlearning through Southern Cities and Enough! A Modest Political Ecology for an Uncertain Future), and is wrapping up a third (Environmental Solutions for the Anthropocene).
She is currently working with Professor Cathy Sutherland and colleagues at UKZN on the politics of off-grid sanitation in eThekwini.
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Book talk of Professor Vivek Chibber's The Class Matrix
SCIS invites you to Prof Vivek Chibber's book talk on The Class Matrix on 9 October 2024. This event will be moderated by Prof Daryl Glaser.
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to a talk on Professor Vikek Chibber's book titled The Class Matrix on 9 October 2024. The hybrid event will be moderated by Professor Daryl Glaser. It will occur online and in person at North Lodge, SCIS Seminar Room, Parktown Management Campus, Parktown, 2193.
About the author
Vivek Chibber is Professor of Sociology at New York University and the author of Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital and Locked in Place: State-Building and Late Industrialization in India. He is a contributor to the Socialist Register, American Journal of Sociology, Boston Review, New Left Review and the editor of Catalyst Journal.
About the moderator
Daryl Glaser is a Professor of Political Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. He is the author of Politics and Society in South Africa (Sage 2001) and the editor of Mbeki and After (Wits University Press 2010) and Twentieth-Century Marxism (Routledge 2007). Glaser has published widely in
international journals including Political Studies, Politics and Society and Review of International Studies, and in African and Southern African area studies journals including, for example, Journal of Southern African Studies and African Affairs.
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Workshop on Promoting Intersectional Development Research
When: |
Wednesday, 16 October 2024 - Thursday, 17 October 2024 |
Where: |
Online Event Parktown Management Campus North Lodge, SCIS Seminar Room – Parktown Management Campus |
Start time: | 9:00 |
Enquiries: | melody.madubeko1@wits.ac.za |
RSVP: | Join us |
Cost: |
No Cost |
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies in partnership with Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC) host a workshop.
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies in partnership with Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC) is proud to host a workshop on Promoting Intersectional Development Research, marking the conclusion of the 2023 project. This two-day event will bring together funders, researchers, and organisations from the Global South to explore how intersectionality can be leveraged to address inequalities worldwide.
Participants will engage in dynamic discussions about the opportunities and challenges that intersectionality presents, as well as share insights on developing practical and actionable recommendations for integrating intersectionality in development research.
Register here!
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Housing discrimination in India from a socio-legal perspective
SCIS invites you to a hybrid seminar titled Housing discrimination in India from a socio-legal perspective on 25 October 2024.
The Southern Centre for Inequality Studies (SCIS) invites you to a hybrid seminar titled Housing discrimination in India from a socio-legal perspective on 25 October 2024. Rowena Robinson, who is a Professor of Sociology at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT Bombay, will present this seminar.
Abstract: ‘Private acts’ and structural inequality: Law and housing discrimination
Housing discrimination may well be regarded as one of the great unmentioned crises that looms large over urban India. In contrast to those postcolonial countries where racial or ethnic discrimination is generally recognized in academic writing, here in the first decades after Independence there was little scholarly acknowledgment of socio-economic disadvantage across ethnic and religious communities, or interest in mapping it. This paper focuses on housing discrimination against Muslims in urban areas against the background of marginalization, conflict, and violence. Apart from manifest inequality, it has implications for the idea of fraternity, the crucial third in modern democracy’s triptych. How does the Indian legal system, and particularly, its constitutional structure frame this issue? It is placed here within the context of a sociological understanding of the cumulative disadvantageous effects of what are legally considered ‘private acts’ and, thus, brings a distinct perspective to the examination of vertical versus horizontal rights. While South Africa for instance seems to apply constitutional law directly to such domains, in other countries public policy in the form of equal opportunities legislation has been the chosen instrument for tackling similar forms of discrimination. The paper argues that public activism could be significant in embedding values socially and making durable the legislation arising therefrom. At the same time, it calls on the notion of ‘demosprudence’ to contend that in the context of deep-rooted structured inequalities a primary judicial step triggered by the mechanism of social action litigation may be necessary.
About the speaker:
Rowena Robinson is Professor of Sociology at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT Bombay and has taught earlier at Delhi and Jawaharlal Nehru Universities. Her current areas of research include minority studies, structural inequality and ethnic conflict, constitutional law, civil society and public policy. Among other publications, she is author of Boundaries of Religion (OUP, 2013) and Tremors of violence (Sage, 2005) and editor of Minority Studies (OUP, 2012). She is co-editor of Margins of Faith: Dalit and tribal Christianity in India (Sage, 2010) and of Religious conversion in India: modes, motivations and meanings (OUP, 2003) and has also published widely on the above research themes in academic journals.
Register: Meeting Registration - Zoom
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