Degrowth Summer School – Adapting to the times of crisis

Adapting to the times of crisis:

an advanced course on socially sustainable degrowth

Amidst calls for restoring growth as a path out of the crisis, the intellectual and political degrowth movement exposes the impossibility to greening economic growth, or making it equitable. In theoretical terms degrowth implies a radical critique to the western notion of growth- and technology-led development as a single overarching path of organizing social and economic life. It implies revisiting the role of monetary and market-based transactions in society and searching for a way to bring back its human, emotional, non-utilitarian or gift-based traits. In practical terms degrowth requires multiple paths, from the reduction of the need for, and use of, non-renewable resources and related extractive infrastructure, to deepening democratic processes in society. Above all, degrowth brings forward the need for a debate on the political project of society, and especially on the need to break away from the technological and psychological lock-ins placed by the growth and capital accumulation imperative. From ICTA-UAB and Research & Degrowth we have been writing and working on degrowth for several years already, advancing it beyond the general theoretically-defined framework, and trying to foresee its implications for various fields and components of society and life.

The Summer School on Degrowth will offer a range of perspectives located at the core of the concept, looking at its sources, dimensions and policy implications. For this purpose the school will bring together some of Europe’s leading academics in politics, philosophy, ecological economics, ecology and economics that work in the field of degrowth to teach to the next generation of researchers. Teachers in the school include Clive Spash, Barbara Muraca, Joan Martinez-Alier, Nadia Johanisova, Amaia Orozco, Giorgos Kallis, Fabrice Flipo, Francois Schneider and others. The school will be held close to the campus of Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona from July 4-21, 2014. It is organized and coordinated by ICTA (icta.uab.cat) and Research and Degrowth (www.degrowth.org).

The course will be divided in three parts: a first one including an introductory section to a number of degrowth sources, a second one based on the application of degrowth to particular areas (such as social enterprises, infrastructure, environmental conflicts, agroecology, work and macroeconomics) and a third part dedicated to group reflection in the form of assignments, presentations and discussions. The summer school will consist of lectures, field visits and interactive sessions, where students will receive specialized theoretical, methodological and empirical training from expert researchers in complementary fields and be able to engage in discussions with them. Participants will also be expected to present their own work and feedback. Targeted at the master and doctoral level, mainly for students writing or intending to conduct research in the field of degrowth, the summer school will require active participation and a write-up of an essay on one (or more) of the degrowth sources or focus areas.

Summer School Fee and Application The School is funded by the EU Erasmus action, which covers the participation of 28 students from 7 Universities. In addition to those, we open the School to a limited number of external participants, who will pay a small fee of 100 Euros (for covering the costs of their participation). The deadline for Application is April, 30th, 2014. Please send CV + one-page cover letter explaining why you want to be part of this Summer School to Fulvia Ferri fulviafe{@}gmail.com.

For more information, please email Filka Sekulova filka{@}degrowth.net. We expect a high number of applications for a limited number of seats for external participants, so motivation and quality of letter and CV will matter.

Degrowth Summer School

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.