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Announcements

U.S. Conference Of Democratic Workplaces

The next national worker cooperative conference will take place October
13-15, 2006 in New York City. We are delighted to be able to hold the
conference at the Institute for Worker Education and Labor Studies at
the City University of New York

New York City! Won't that be expensive?

It doesn't have to be. The conference planners are making every effort
to keep the cost of the conference down so that it is accessible to
anyone who wants to come. We have booked a large block of affordable
rooms at the Vanderbilt YMCA and West Side YMCA. We will also offer free
housing at local homes to anyone who wants it. All conference meals will
be provided at an affordable price (we are currently researching
catering options - if you know of a good one, contact the USFWC office).
New York City offers exciting opportunities to connect with new worker
cooperatives, organized labor, community economic development groups,
international movements and presenters. We'll do everything we can to
make it easy to get to and from the city and the conference site. Look
for housing and ride boards online this summer.

What's this conference about?

We're still planning it, of course, but we can tell you a few things for
sure. The conference will offer a mix of workshops on everything from
how to start a worker co-op to personnel policies to franchising and
growth to the state of the economy and how it affects worker
cooperatives. We're also planning a special track of workshops focused
on Building Community Wealth, which will explore how we can strengthen
worker co-ops, as a community-based model of ownership, to address
social and economic inequities. This conference will also be the first
official meeting of the members of the U.S. Federation, at which the
Federation will hold elections, form working groups, and determine our
next steps.

The Commoner N. 11. Spring/Summer 2006
Re(in)fusing the Commons


After ten issues, The Commoner makes the first timid steps toward changing format and organisation, towards making more explicit and visible the practices of cyber commoning it is grounded on. Watch this space, we are slow, but things will happen. Meanwhile, enjoy the edition that our two guest editors, Nate Holdren and Stevphen Shukaitis, have put together, an edition in which the different contributions are traversed by the problematic of commoning.

Commoning, a term encountered by Peter Linebaugh in one of his frequent travels in the living history of commoners’ struggles, is about the (re)production of commons. To turn a noun into a verb is not a little step and requires some daring. Especially if in doing so we do not want to obscure the importance of the noun, but simply ground it on what is, after all, life flow: there are no commons without incessant activities of commoning, of (re)producing in common. But it is through (re)production in common that communities of producers decide for themselves the norms, values and measures of things. Let us put the “tragedy of the commons” to rest then, the basis of neoliberal argument for the privatisation: there is no commons without commoning, there are no commons without communities of producers and particular flows and modes of relations, an insight we have focused on in issue 6 of this journal, entitled “What Alternatives? Commons and Communities, Dignity and Freedom.” Hence, what lies behind the “tragedy of the commons” is really the tragedy of the destruction of commoning through all sorts of structural adjustments, whether militarised or not.

As the guest editors of this issue rightly point out, the question of commoning is linked to the question of “refusal of work,” that magic expression used in the 1970s to highlight the frontline clash of value practices. The term, however, is not meant as a refusal of doing, of commoning, of (re)producing in common, but on the contrary is an affirmation of all this in the only way possible when in the presence of a social force, capital, that aspires to couple its preservation to that of the commoners through the imposition of its measures of things. In these conditions, “refusal of work” as refusal of capital’s measures, and commoning as affirmation of other measures are the two sides of the same struggle. How can we refuse capital’s measure without participating in the constitution of other common measures? And how can we participate in this commonality without at the same time setting a limit, refusing capital’s measure? The setting of a limit to the beast and the constitution of an “outside” are two inescapable coordinates of struggle. It is through the problematic of this polarity that we could read the very diverse contributions of this issue of The Commoner.

Contents

Angela Mitropoulos, Autonomy, Recognition, Movement

Nick Dyer-Witheford, Species-Being and the New Commonism

Precarias a la Deriva, A Very Careful Strike - Four hypotheses

P.M., The golden globes of the planetary commons

George Ciccariello-Maher, Working-Class One-Sidedness from Sorel to Tronti

Silvia Federici, The Restructuring of Social Reproduction in the United States in the 1970s

Ida Dominijanni, Heiresses at Twilight. The End of Politics and the Politics of Difference

"‘This is Forever’: From Inquiry to Refusal
- A Discussion Series Dedicated to Understanding the Current Composition of Political Movements and Struggles Using the Lens of Autonomist Thought.


Presents the First Event in the Series:

Conricerca as Political Action

Friday, June 16th - 7pm - $5 to $10 donation

'Conricerca as Political Action: Inquiry and Italian Social Movements'

@ Bluestockings Books, Cafe & Activism Center

172 Allen St. NYC

After the researcher photographs reality, the moment arises where one can transform it.

This is the main thesis put forth by the concept of conricerca, or co-research, which is yet another concept that draws its origins in the rich history of Italian autonomia, Italian social movements of the 60s and 70s, and the tradition of workers and militant inquiry.

Conricerca is an inquiry into the contemporary class composition of the working class and social struggle. It is not a sociological or academic tool, but rather one for political and radical action.

The discussion will focus on two aspects of conricerca: first on the roots of conricerca as concept and practice inside the history of Italian operaismo of the 1960s and 1970s; the second part will show the contemporary experiences of militant inquiry, primarily the Precarity WebRing, a project within the EuroMayDay movement.

Join Italian activists Gigi Roggero and Anna Curcio for this discussion as part of the ‘This is Forever’: From Inquiry to Refusal discussion series to be hosted by Bluestockings Books. Visit www.teamcolors.blogspot.com for more information on, and an events listing for, the series.

Speaker Bios:

Gigi Roggero (1973) is a movement activist and a Ph.D. student at the University of Calabria. Roggero is co-author of Futuro Anteriore, Gli Operaisti, and Precariopoli, and author of Intelligenze Fuggitive. He was part of editorial collective for the militant review DeriveApprodi.

Anna Curcio (1971) is a movement activist and doctor in the department of sociology at the University of Calabria. She is co-author of Precariopoli, and author of La Paura dei Movimenti and other articles on Global Movement and Labour Conflicts. Curcio participates in the editorial board of the journal PW_R."

Colectivo Incendio, a new Latin American Anarchist Journal

Incendio Publicacion! - English and Espanol
New Bi-lingual Anarchist Journal focused on Latin America!

Incendio is...

An endeavor that some of us have taken up to increase communication with anarchists in Latin America, network, learn from their struggles, illuminate opportunities for solidarity actions, provide a forum for Latin American anarchists to share ideas and analysis, break down the language barrier, and make support efforts more possible.

Table of Contents for issue 1:

news
Venezuela: ASF (alternative social forum)
U.S. eco-resistance: arrests and repression

reviews
Disarmo #11
Aullidos Nocturnos #3

articles
Mexico (Sonora): the border at risk
Cuba: another Cuba is possible
Bolivia: Insurrection in Bolivia
Chile: The Unconquered Mapuche
Strangers Everywhere
Them or us

"Colonial Dreams & Autonomous Zones"

OVNI 2006

Barcelona, May 30–June 4, 2006>

OVNI [observatori de video no identificat] 2006 presents a week-long selection of video, independent documentaries and media archaeological materials dealing with Colonialism and its mutation into Globalisation.

Themes include the occupation and destruction of other worlds and cultures, including also, at a local scale, real-estate violence, colonial tourism and migration...

Autonomy and No Zones, other ways of perceiving and creating realities, communal and internal worlds. Autonomous ways of living and thinking, zones without limits, no zones.


Lectures and panels:

// Rene Vautier (Algeria in Flames * Afrique 50 )
// Michael Taussig (Columbia University, NYC)
// Contraplano LAD (Discusion Panel)
// Serra Ciliv (If.Istanbul)

Opening: Tuesday May 30th, 20:30h

Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona
CCCB

Montalegre 5
Barcelona
(34) 93 3064100
ovni@desorg.org


Parallel screenings in the Hall and the Auditorioum: from 17:00h to 24:00h / May 31st to June 4th
//
OVNI Archives consulting: from 12:00h to 23:00h in the Hall
// Lectures and panels: 22:00h Hall
// Free Entrance

Anonymous Comrade writes

Renewing the Anarchist Tradition 2006
Call for Proposals


Call for Proposals (due July 15, 2006)

September 29 to October 1, 2006
at Goddard College, Plainfield, Vermont
http://www.homemadejam.org/renew

We are now accepting proposals for individual presentations and panels for the 2006 Renewing the Anarchist Tradition conference (RAT), sponsored by the Institute for Anarchist Studies. In particular, we encourage people of color, queer, transgender, and intersex people, women, people raising children, indigenous people, people with diverse abilities, working-class people, those outside academia, and others who are frequently underrepresented as speakers (for a variety of reasons) to send in proposals. Also, if you feel alienated when you look at the list of past RAT presentations on our Web site or think that important issues that should be considered through an anarchist lens are being left out, you probably have a presentation proposal to offer. Please get in touch. And please feel free to forward this e-mail to others who may be interested in participating in and/or attending this weekend.

Elisee Reclus Conference

New Orleans, Oct. 27–29, 2006

HUMANITY AND THE EARTH/L'HOMME ET LA TERRE:

THE LEGACY OF ELISEE RECLUS

October 27-29, 2006

Loyola University

New Orleans, LA USA

Last year marked the 175th anniversary of the birth of Elisée Reclus and the 100th anniversary of his death. A conference in New Orleans scheduled on the occasion of this double anniversary was postponed because of the destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina, but it has been rescheduled for this fall. At that time we will gather to discuss the life and work of Reclus and to investigate the ways in which his legacy is relevant to our world today. The conference is planned to coincide with the New Orleans Bookfair, and conference scheduling will allow time for participants to attend that event also.

Book Release
Clandestines: The Pirate Journals of an Irish Exile
By Ramor Ryan,
AK Press 2006



ABC No Rio Thursday 25th May 7.30
Reading, discussion, refreshments
Photo Exhibition featuring Timo Russo's work.

"At once celebratory and self-critical, Clandestines offers a geography lesson of the shadows, where borders are disregarded, revolution is in the air, and adventure is always just around the corner."—Jennifer Whitney, co-author of We Are Everywhere: The Irresistible Rise of Global Anticapitalism

Ramor Ryan is a rebellious rover and Irish exile who makes his home between New York City and Chiapas.

Bike Warrior writes:

Activists Promote Alternative Transportation Through Cross Country Bike Ride

Student activists from two universities will be bicycling cross-country from New York City to Portland, Oregon this summer as part of the Bikes Against Big Oil campaign, to express concern over rising gas prices as oil companies continue to show windfall profits.

Lauren Giaccone, a student at Pace University in New York City, said this about the campaign:

We are riding to spread awareness of alternatives to cars as a primary means of transportation, and to encourage people, especially those living in major cities, not to sit back and let the big oil companies shaft them in this way. People are disillusioned that a solution can be reached in the near future, because the government has done nothing to help them. The government could easily step in to regulate gas prices if it wanted to, and without sacrificing environmental safety standards.

Bill Templer writes:

"Al-Nakba Day"

Bill Templer

Monday May 15 is al-Nakba Day, the day commemorating the Palestinian ‘catastrophe’ of the loss of their land and expulsion in May 1948. This is the most emotional day in the Palestinian calendar. And there will be demonstrations by Jews and Palestinians together, to mark that commemoration of destruction. Like the Israeli activists at zochrot (Remembering), protesting against the crimes of their country at its birth: here.


A strong article by Eitan Bronstein on the Nakba and Israeli reception of it is timely reading today: here.


The site Palestine Remembered has many excellent materials about the Palestine-Israel conflict and especially the war and its ‘ethnic cleansing’ in 1948.

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