Please circulate widely.
Thank you.
Javier
Dr Javier Caletrío
Mobile Lives Forum
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‘Southern Diaries’
The Mobile Lives Forum is pleased to announce the
creation of a new thematic section of its website entitled ‘Southern Diaries’ with the
aim of promoting mobilities research in the Global South.
Traditionally research has privileged the realities
and problems of societies in the ‘North’ and the aim of Southern Diaries is to
give greater profile to lesser known issues and researchers in southern
societies.
From January 2017 this space will regularly feature
research on a wide range of mobilitiy issues, with a specific emphasis on
people’s aspirations and ways of life and the challenges and opportunities of
ongoing social and cultural transformations for sustainable mobility
transitions.
Public social science
has a key role to play in mobility transitions and, as part of this initiative,
the Mobile Lives Forum would like to invite public sociologists and
practitioners working on mobility-related issues in the Global South to
submit short notes (700 words) about any aspect of their work.
Selected entries will be invited to submit full
texts (1,500 words) for publication in the Mobile Lives Forum’s website and
regular newsletter (reaching +10,000 academic and practitioners all over the
world).
Further information is included at the end of this
email.
The Mobile Lives Forum
Further information
About us
The Mobile Lives Forum is a global think tank created in 2011 to foster critical research and debate about mobility futures. In collaboration with academic and civil society institutions worldwide we bring together practitioners, artists, scholars and the general public to discuss and raise awareness about the plurality of ideas of the good life in contemporary societies and the role of mobility in the pursuit of individual and collective aspirations. Through this dialogue we seek to inform policies for sustainable mobility transitions.
The
Mobile Lives Forum is a not-for-profit organization based in Paris and
supported by the state-owned SNCF (French railways).
Public social sciences
Mobilities research is being produced in multiple
places and with different purposes. Some research is conducted by
well-resourced universities, concerns mostly conceptual matters or high-profile
policy issues, and tends to be disseminated through high ranking British and
North American academic journals or as eye-catching media reports. Behind this
world of highly visible, relatively well funded research, the everyday reality
in poor universities and southern countries is often characterised on the one hand
by intense teaching commitments, and on the other by a vocational engagement
with local communities, neighbourhood associations, labour movements,
environmental associations, and minority groups. While retaining the academic
rigor and methodologies of sociology as a discipline, this style of doing
research seeks to illuminate and address problems through a dialogue with
different sections of the ‘public’. This kind of public engagement involves
varieties of participatory action research and the development of alternative
techniques of collaborative research. Since Michael Burawoy's 2004 Presidential
address to the American Sociological Association, the term public sociology or
public social science is widely used to describe the effort of these researchers
‘working tirelessly and invisibly in the trenches of civic society’. Public
sociology is practiced in every society and exists wherever sociologists engage
in a dialogue with a public. It is however in southern countries where it is
most active. Latin America and South Africa, for example, are today epicentres
of a publicly oriented social science.
Writing public sociology
Writing public sociology is not just writing in an accessible manner, avoiding jargon. It involves a familiarity with the lifeworld of a specific public, taking into consideration the ideas, knowledge, debates, and frames of reference of that public. It is about using a style and developing a content that resonates with the audience one wishes to engage with.
Authors are encouraged to accompany the text with audiovisual material (photos, videos, comic vignettes, sound recordings, etc.) when relevant.
Focus
The focus will be on mobility and sustainability, ways of life and aspirations. Submissions will consist of a short essay that could involve, for example, the description of projects informed by public sociology or the presentation of research that questions assumptions cherished by a particular public, or reorients a public’s focus to issues that are being overlooked. Ideally the case studies described would enrich discussions of mobility in the North.
‘Global South’
There are multiple, changing and contested conceptual and geographical understandings of the notion of ‘Global South’. Acknowledging this plurality of views, the ‘southern perspective’ encouraged by this initiative loosely refers to contexts, experiences and ways of framing research that can illuminate other realities ‘beyond the North’, their particularities but also their connections with other places and experiences. In adopting this loose definition we would also like to encourage submissions from peripheral areas in southern and eastern Europe.
Details
Submissions will be acknowledged on receipt and authors will be notified about the decision.
Submissions should be 700 words. Selected entries
will be invited to submit the full text (1,500 words).
Submissions should be accompanied by a one-page
cover letter including a brief biographical note (up to 100 words) and a brief
introduction to the theme and relevance of the submitted text.
Who can participate: Submissions are encouraged by
anyone engaged in publicly oriented social science working in the Global South.
Scholars from poorly resourced universities in Europe’s periphery and the
Global South are particularly encouraged to submit their work.
Entries should be sent to javier....@mobilelivesforum.org
Please allow two weeks for receipt of submission
acknowledgement.