We, the Weather Makers
A discussion of the implications of climate change science for political economy and democracy
Tuesday, March 20th, 6pm.
The Westminster Forum
Centre for the Study of Democracy
32-38 Wells Street, 5th Floor
London, W1T 3UW.
( Map )read more here
or download the pdf printable flyer here
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This Month
Month Archive
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Monday, February 12
by
Giovanni
on Mon 12 Feb 2007 04:56 PM GMT
Thursday, November 9
by
Giovanni
on Thu 09 Nov 2006 05:32 PM GMT
Please all note that the next meeting will be Sprawl: the end of the town-country divide Tuesday, 14th November, 6pm James Heartfield Writer, lecturer and director of the think tank Audacity. James, who is studying for a PhD at CSD, will be talking about his latest book, Let's Build, in which he explains why we need five million homes in the next 10 years. We shall also be joined by Nicholas Schoon, Communications Director for the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England. Pressure for new homes could lead to the end of the division between town and country, but today restrictions on new development are geared to maintain it. Will we concrete over the countryside? Is the government serious about building four million new homes? Read the press coverage of the book. 'Superbia suburbia', Daily Telegraph leader, 24 September 2006 'Welcome to "Superbia" - Housing Corporation chief Jon Rouse challenges the high-density urban orthodoxy', europa concorsi, 30 September 2006. Details of this meeting are on the Democracy Club website: http://www.johnkeane.net/dc/dc All are welcome to attend. For further information please contact: Wednesday, September 6
by
Giovanni
on Wed 06 Sep 2006 03:02 PM BST
Talking Across Cultures You may now download and print out the flyer for this event. See the pdf file attached to this post. Regards, the Democracy Club At this event, Isabel Hilton, Becky Hogge, and Caspar Henderson present three perspectives on their work developing China Dialogue .To read more about this talk and access information on schedule time, map and venue of this meeting, please visit the following website: http://www.johnkeane.net/dc/dc_chinadialogue.htm To learn more about the Democracy Club, to read more on our past and upcoming events, go to: http://www.johnkeane.net/dc/dc.htmRefreshments will be provided. All are welcome!
by
Giovanni
on Wed 06 Sep 2006 02:58 PM BST
Caspar Henderson joins Becky Hogge and Isabel Hilton in the upcoming event at the Democracy Club (Talking across cultures, 03 October 2006). Caspar will discuss global and regional environmental issues as they relate to China. He will pay particular attention to climate change, and China's challenges in that context. Caspar Henderson is a contributing editor for Chinadialogue. Early in working life he was a script reader in Hollywood, before moving via development work in Uganda to human rights and environmental journalism in London. He was the first coordinator at the Green College Centre for Environmental Policy at Oxford University, and contributed for some years to BBC radio, The Financial Times, New Scientist and other publications, winning an IUCN-Reuters award for best environmental writing in Central and Western Europe. He was a senior editor at openDemocracy.net until last year. This year he is working on a book about the future of coral reefs, and has also written and edited on UK Energy policy and other issues for New Statesman, the Institute of Physics, Director Magazine, New Scientist and other publications. He is an advisor to Artists' Project Earth. Caspar proposed that Chindialogue choose the environment as a theme. Recent articles Ocean acidification: the other CO2 problem (here) Coral Bones (here) Grains of Sand (here) Potential Energy: a blog from the Institute of Physics (here) Heat and Light: UK Energy Policy in Context (Editor - here) To read more about this talk and access information on schedule time, map and venue of this meeting, please visit the following website: http://www.johnkeane.net/dc/dc_chinadialogue.htm
To learn more about the Democracy Club, to read more on our past and upcoming events, go to: http://www.johnkeane.net/dc/dc.htm Monday, August 14
by
Giovanni
on Mon 14 Aug 2006 07:26 PM BST
Talking Across CulturesTuesday, October, 3rd, 2006, 6 pm, The Boardroom, University of Westminster, 309 Regent Street, London W1B 2UW, Nearest tube Oxford Street ( Map ) Abstracts Isabel Hilton has been covering Chinese affairs throughout her 30 year career as a political journalist. Over that time, the issues surrounding China in the global community have changed. In the 21st century, the world looks on as a rising super-economy further tips the balance against the climate we rely upon for our survival as a species. As China emerges from isolationist policies of the 20th century, the need for conversation between China and the world has never been stronger. It is within this frame of reference that Isabel Hilton conceived of China Dialogue, the world’s first completely bilingual conversation between English and Chinese speakers conducted across the Web. As editor of openDemocracy, Hilton was uniquely placed to see the potential of the Web to foster dialogue between those with opposing viewpoints. But there were significant challenges to taking the same approach to China, not least the country’s renowned policy of censorship of online material. In this presentation, Isabel Hilton discusses how China Dialogue met these challenges, and how in meeting them, she has reconfirmed her belief that dialogue with China is the most important way forward for the region and the world. Becky Hogge has spent the last six months heading the team which constructed chinadialogue.net. In this presentation she discusses the challenges of building a website which engages two different language communities, in an environment where censorship and state scrutiny are issues. By detailing the process behind building chinadialogue.net, Hogge will highlight successful approaches to commissioning websites that aim to foster dialogue. Read more at: http://www.johnkeane.net/dc/dc_chinadialogue.htm Saturday, July 8
by
Giovanni
on Sat 08 Jul 2006 12:06 PM BST
Talking Across CulturesTuesday, October, 3rd, 2006, 6 pm, The Boardroom, University of Westminster, 309 Regent Street, London W1B 2UW, Nearest tube Oxford Street ( Map ) Our guest speakers will be Isabel Hilton and Becky Hogge from the independent online media platform Chinadialogue.net. China Dialogue is designed to facilitate conversation between Chinese and English speakers on the environment. It was launched in June 2006. At this event, Isabel Hilton and Becky Hogge present two perspectives on their work developing China Dialogue . Hilton, who holds a degree in Sinology from the University of Edinburgh and also studied at the Peking Language Institute and the Fudan University in Shanghai, discusses editorial approaches to drawing together two different language communities around a shared topic. Hogge , technical lead on China Dialogue , shows how the Web can be harnessed to enable more discussion across languages and cultures, and shares her experience developing the world's first truly billingual collaborative media platform. read more at: http://www.johnkeane.net/dc/dc_chinadialogue.htm
Saturday, March 18
by
Giovanni
on Sat 18 Mar 2006 03:10 PM GMT
Tom BentleyDo political parties stand in the way of democracy?Tuesday, May, 2nd, 2006, 6 pm Sunday, March 5
by
Giovanni
on Sun 05 Mar 2006 04:16 PM GMT
Muslim cartoon row timeline
The BBC News website outlines key events in the escalating row over the publication of cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad. .
by
Giovanni
on Sun 05 Mar 2006 04:10 PM GMT
From openDemocracy.net:
The cartoon jihad
Muslim and Arab anger over the cartoons has chosen the wrong target, says Hazem Saghieh http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith-europe_islam/cartoon_jihad_3322.jsp
The publication of cartoons of the prophet Mohammed that has offended Muslims, cost lives and polarised emotions worldwide sprang from a particular context of Danish political and media discussion, explains Ulf Hedetoft. http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith-terrorism/blowback_3315.jsp Friday, March 3
by
Giovanni
on Fri 03 Mar 2006 05:21 PM GMT
Dear Tara et al,
The other way is simply not to fall into the Liberal vs Non Liberal binary opposition over this matter, and ask the question of both who and what interests this type of opposition may serve and the real and specific political affects/ effects. This is much as Derrida did when he confronted the discourse of South African apartheid.
In this case it is worth bearing in mind also that:
a) many of the radical Leftist and progressive secular parties in Islamic countries, but especially Iran, have backed the publication of the cartoons because they see them as part of the undermining of theocratic rule ( though this clearly wasn't their intention) - not just Iranian feminist coalitions, in fact, but also all of the Marxist and Socialist parties in Iran of any note. This makes the issue of solidarity much more complex.
b) increasing evidence points to the manufacturing of this as a crisis by vested interests ( the addition of the three forged cartoons to the original page of cartoons to ensure a hostile ruling and reaction) - in a different way this is what Tariq Ali, Homi Bhabha and many others said at the time of the Satanic Verses affair, as I recall from attending the solidarity meetings.
As Salman Rushdie once amusingly remarked, if I recall correctly: 'God is not necessarily on the side of the angels...'
See you and others on the picket line on the 7th perhaps?
Steve
Tuesday, February 28
by
Giovanni
on Tue 28 Feb 2006 12:41 PM GMT
Dear all,
Just to provoke, It seems that the discussion on the free speech here is chained into whether there should be some limits on free speech or not, to speak freely!. I do not think that those who advocate for freedom of speech are free of their will. Since economic, political and military power demarcates the limits of what is free and what is not, we are only speaking what is told us. Anything outside this demarcation is not taken into account and is ignored. It is a rhetoric of liberals (The word 'liberal' has semantically a problem to be solved) that by freedom of speech they make their argument magic. It is a precondition not to speak evil! in a liberal society as to be liberal. So, liberalism itself limits freedom of speech. Because no one cares about freedom of speech, as everbody has been freed long time ago. There is no one in prison in a liberal society (Austria is an exception). Because everyone is liberal whereas we see a lot of people in the prisones in the partly liberal or authoritarian countries, because of the diversity that those countries have.
Mehmet
by
Giovanni
on Tue 28 Feb 2006 12:39 PM GMT
If we find 'bittersweet ironies' in It strikes me as breathtakingly naive to imagine that giving up the right to speak freely means that the government official who controls what may or may not be said will do it in favour of minorities? Isn't it just, if not more likely that governments will use the restrictions on free speech to restrict minority opinion? Unless you are confident against all experience that you can control the censor, then it would make more sense to have no censorship. It is all a question of who you trust, your fellow citizens, or the state. I go with the citizens. And in any event, how can we expect people to move from a prejudiced to an enlightened view if we forbid them from saying what they think. You cannot coerce people into changing their minds, you have to persuade. Make the state the judge of what is best and you make us all into babies.
James Monday, February 27
by
Giovanni
on Mon 27 Feb 2006 02:31 PM GMT
The whole debate is kind of false. To say that speech should or could be limited in some ways is to deny the power of self-determination and critical self-interpretation, self-questioning so to speak.
The whole debate on free speech can be illustrated with the Foucault 's concept of governmentality. The dismantling of welfare-state forms of intervention is accompanied by a restructuring of techniques of governing, which transfer the leadership capacity of state apparatuses and instances to the population, to "responsible", "prudent" and "rational" individuals. This development relates primarily to the self-government, self-discipline and self-controlling individuals. So, if we self-govern ourselves, obviously we cannot allow this critical self-questioning such as free speech..
The problem of the concept of governmentality in this context lies primarily in the appearance of an inescapable totality, which seems to leave a defeatist withdrawal and individual exodus (Bartleby) as the only "forms of action" possible. Foucault, however, also sees a possibility specifically in the indissoluble linking of power and self-techniques. This possibility is developed in his Berkeley lectures from 1983 in the genealogy of a critical stance in western philosophy within the framework of the problematization of a term that played a central role in ancient philosophy: (parrhesia means in Greek roughly the activity of a person "saying everything"), freely speaking truth without rhetorical games, even when this is hazardous. The parrhesiastes speaks the truth, not because they are in possession of the truth, which he makes public in a certain situation, but because they are taking a risk. The clearest indication for the truth of the parrhesia consists in the "fact that a speaker says something dangerous - something other than what the majority believes." According to Foucault's interpretation, though, it is never a matter of revealing a secret that must be pulled out of the depths of the soul. Here truth consists less in opposition to the lie or to something "false", but rather in the verbal activity of speaking truth: "the function of parrhesia is not to demonstrate the truth to someone else, but has the function of criticism: criticism of the interlocutor or of the speaker himself."
Michel Foucault, Diskurs und Wahrheit, Berlin 1996, p.14 (discussion of parrhesia)
http://foucault.info/documents/parrhesia/) – very revealing ]
Best, Julia
by
Giovanni
on Mon 27 Feb 2006 02:28 PM GMT
It seems to me that in arguing that it is not a matter of free speech but of incivility v solidarity one simply avoids engaging in the substantive arguments for and against. What if for example if large groups of 'liberal fundamentalists' got together and started protesting that the governments of say, Saudi Arabia or Algeria should resign because their policies towards women were fundamentally uncivil and offensive to the principles of liberalism? It seems that if we accept that governments are answerable to people other then their own citizens in this way then this would not be objectionable. By calling the argument something else, these most obvious issues are just avoided before we even get onto the more important arguments for free speech. For example, in the hypothetical case above, whose feelings have the most value, who will decide on this etc. Personally, as a liberal fundamentalist, I am against the way in which women in Saudi Arabia are treated, for example. However, I also believe in democracy and self-government, and am prepared to accept that other governments have a right to govern in a way which I find objectionable or offensive. Tara
by
Giovanni
on Mon 27 Feb 2006 11:19 AM GMT
Dear all,
If you don't have a chance to read Fish's assault on Free Speech (highlighting the easy slippage between postmodernism and enlightened authoritarianism) - there is an interview link below: http://www.lib.latrobe.edu.au/AHR/archive/Issue-February-1998/fish.html Best wishes, David Chandler
by
Giovanni
on Mon 27 Feb 2006 11:18 AM GMT
Dear Abdelwahab,
Salaam and many thanks. This is a very good and subtle piece, which serves to highlight - as an American Supreme Court judge once put it - that there are times and contexts in which the principle of freedom of speech provides a refuge for rogues. I have done quite a lot of work on the genealogy of the free speech principle, itself a European Protestant invention of the early seventeenth century. Amidst all the recent trumpet blasts in favour of Free Speech, nobody seems to have spotted the bitter-sweet ironies associated with its Christian origins - in particular the ways in which Milton and others appealed to freedom from pre-publication censorship in order better to round on Catholics, Jews, Muslims and others considered unworthy or incapable of exercising the 'Reason' supposedly given by God. The remembrance of such precedents understandably prompted the distinguished American literary critic, Stanley Fish, to incite uproar of late by proposing that there isn't such a thing as free speech, and that that's a good thing. No doubt your fine points will come up during at Democracy Club talk by Bhikhu Parekh. All good wishes, Professor John Keane Sunday, February 26
by
Giovanni
on Sun 26 Feb 2006 05:52 AM PST
read the full article on openDemocracy.net http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith-terrorism/old_europe_3269.jsp Friday, February 24
by
Giovanni
on Fri 24 Feb 2006 04:21 AM PST
Dear All,
Please find below link to Dr. Abdelwahab El-Affendi article in the Muslim News on the Cartoons controversy, where Dr. E-Affendi argues that the question is not one of free speech, but of human solidarity against incivility: http://www.muslimnews.co.uk/paper/index.php?article=2320 The way out of the Danish quagmire: Not an apology, but a resignation By Abdelwahab El-Affendi The Danish Prime Minister, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, should be very, very sorry. Not because a Danish newspaper has offended most Muslims and many others beside, but because he has presided over the destruction of his country's international reputation, in particular in the Muslim world. Within just three months, Denmark's image has plummeted in status from that of a squeaky clean Scandinavian nation that hardly offends anybody, to a status down there below the US and Israel in the ranks of Muslim demonology. Things have deteriorated so much that even American-occupied Iraq took the "revolutionary" step of cancelling all reconstruction contracts granted to Danish companies. When things get that far, and when even Saudi Arabia decides to withdraw its ambassador, and the Afghan Parliament issues condemnations, you know that you have a problem on your hands. Thursday, February 23
by
Giovanni
on Thu 23 Feb 2006 07:34 AM PST
In terms of thinking about why one might argue for free speech the following comment piece by Professor David Cesarani from Royal Holloway in yesterday's Guardian might be of interest for anyone coming to the next Democracy Club. He argues in defence of David Irving's conviction, and why the classic liberal arguments for free speech are no longer relevant today.
David Cesarani, The Guardian There is no martyrdom in this pathetic denouement read the whole article:
by
Giovanni
on Thu 23 Feb 2006 06:49 AM PST
Professor Lord Bhikhu Parekh, On Hate Speech, Tuesday, March, 7th, 2006, 6 pm. Read more
by
Giovanni
on Thu 23 Feb 2006 02:01 PM GMT
The Club is based at CSD (Centre for the Study of Democracy), University of Westminster. Regularly, usually once or twice a month, we host a meeting with a guest speaker addressing topics relating with the subject of democracy. The aim of the Democracy Club is to openly share and compare views on Democracy without being constrained by the sometimes too tight Academic rules. As prof. Keane wrote, the Democracy Club strives "overall to be an open space for differently-minded people a non-partisan association of scholars and others who do not make presumptions about what democracy is or can be, but instead are bound together by a strong sense that democracy matters, that it is a fragile and precious way of life, and that its fate is now, for the first time in its history, surrounded by uncertainty on a global level ." To learn more about the Democracy Club, to read more on our past and upcoming events, please visit the following web address: http://www.johnkeane.net/dc/dc.htm |
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