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To Make Live or Let Die? Emergent Assemblages for the Protection of Surplus Populations - Tania Li Lecture

Tuesday, 2 February 2010, 15:30 - 17:00

Library Seminar Rooms 1 & 2, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK

Large numbers of people in the global south have no access to land or a living wage. They are 'surplus' to the needs of capital, and not plausibly described as a labour reserve. What are the social forces that might assemble to keep these people alive, and why would they do so?

In this special keynote talk within CCIG Forum 10, Tania Li examines this question by contrasting a conjuncture in India, where a make-live program has emerged under the rubric of a citizen’s “right to food,” and Indonesia, where persistent myths about community self sufficiency combined with the massacre of the organized left in 1965 leaves surplus populations radically exposed.

Tania Li is Professor of Anthropology and Canada Research Chair at the University of Toronto, Canada. She has published widely on questions of rural development, indigeneity, class and community, with a focus on Indonesia. Recent publications include “Practices of assemblage”(Economy and Society) and The Will to Improve: Governmentality, Development and the Practice of Politics, Duke University Press 2007.

A reception will follow this event from 17:00 onwards.

Registration

Please RSVP your attendance for this event to Sarah Batt, a.s.c.batt@open.ac.uk.

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Tania Li poster OU format.pdf29.94 KB
To Make Live or Let Die, abstract Tania Li.pdf7.88 KB
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