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<DIV><FONT size=2><FONT size=3>(please forward to appropriate
listserves)<BR><BR>ANNOUNCEMENT - FIRST PUBLIC NOTIFICATION (15
December)<BR><BR>THE UKZN CENTRE FOR CIVIL SOCIETY and PARTNERS
PRESENT:<BR><BR>A COLLOQUIUM ON THE ECONOMY, SOCIETY AND NATURE<BR>With tributes
to Harold Wolpe and Guy Mhone, and the Rosa Luxemburg Political Education
Seminar 2006<BR><BR>28 February - 4 March 2006<BR>University of KwaZulu-Natal,
Durban, South Africa<BR><BR>In cooperation with partners who have indictated
in-principle support - The Harold Wolpe Memorial Trust, The Open Society
Initiative of Southern Africa, The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation and the journal
Capitalism Nature Socialism - CCS will be opening thematic research projects on
'Economic Justice' in 2006. We are anxious to launch this theme by reviewing
some of the finest traditions of national, regional and international
political-economic theory and contemporary analysis, and invite you to join us.
We seek inputs from individuals and organisations who would like to
participate.<BR><BR>We are mainly concerned with market-nonmarket interactions
and new forms of 'primitive accumulation'. Ideas about a supposed 'dual economy'
in South Africa (and indeed the region and world) are now being debated at the
highest political/policy levels. This is an opportune time to discuss whether
formal markets and the informal economy plus other aspects of society and nature
are really as divorced as is often argued.<BR><BR>Three scholar-activists -
Harold Wolpe in South Africa, Guy Mhone in Southern Africa and Rosa Luxemburg in
Europe - developed consistent arguments about the way markets systematically
exploit 'nonmarket' opportunities, in other modes of production, in society
(especially women's unpaid labour) and in the natural environment.<BR><BR>At
three scales of analysis, we want to pick up their stories, review past and
contemporary contributions on their legacies, and assess whether current and
future political-economic scenarios require new insights:<BR><BR>* SOUTH AFRICA
is a crucial site to explore how the apartheid economic system evolved into a
still racialised, highly gendered, increasingly unequal and ecologically
disastrous system of capital accumulation. For Harold Wolpe, these relations
could be understood partly as the 'articulation of modes of production'. Wolpe
died in 1996; a decade later, the intellectual memorial on 28 February is one of
several major events devoted to recalling his contributions, with its focus on
Wolpe's political-economic writings. (Another conference sponsored by the Wolpe
Memorial Trust will be held in September.) From the 1960-80s debates about
apartheid and capitalism, we have much to learn about the current
conjuncture.<BR><BR>* SOUTHERN AFRICA faces increasing polarisation, both within
and between the countries of the region. For Guy Mhone, this represented a
problem of 'enclavity', by which economic linkages were truncated and
state policies distorted, to meet the needs of global and regional business
interests, not the majority. Mhone passed away on 1 March 2005, so a year later,
the Open Society Initiative of Southern Africa will assist us in remembering his
exceptionally fruitful career. Experts from other regions - including Latin
America and South Asia - will also join us, for comparative purposes and to
build intellectual solidarity required at a time India-Brazil-South Africa
connections are deepening.<BR><BR>* THE GLOBAL SCALE is characterised by a
system based not upon the inter-imperial rivalry of a century ago, but instead
in part upon vast new forms by which the 'North' loots the 'Global South' and
the world environment. By arguing - in her 1913 book The Accumulation of Capital
- that this process was not accidental but a necessary outcome of economic
processes, and by showing how the theory applied to 19th century South Africa,
to German colonialism in Namibia and to Belgian control of the Congo, Rosa
Luxemburg gave hints about how to understand the subsequent imperialist project.
The Southern African Regional Office of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation is
assisting so that on 2 March, not only the strengths but also the weaknesses of
her approach are discussed, at a time of international revival of interest in
her work.<BR><BR>Many local/regional - and several international - social
scientists will be addressing the problems associated with market exploitation
of nonmarket (society and nature) from 28 February through 2 March, in an event
open to the public. From 2-4 March, activists from across KwaZulu-Natal, South
Africa and the region are especially invited to help move from analysis to
praxis, with open discussions and strategy debates in the framework of the Rosa
Luxemburg Political Education Seminar. <BR><BR>National, regional and
international internet-based streaming and participation from other centres are
also being explored.<BR><BR>To get involved, or for more information, please
contact Patrick Bond: </FONT><A href="mailto:bondp@ukzn.ac.za"><FONT
size=3>bondp@ukzn.ac.za</FONT></A><FONT size=3> .
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