Borders & Bridges: An AES/APLA Spring 2020 Conference!

 

FINAL-postcardfront.jpgAES/APLA 2019: Borders/Bridges
March 26-28, 2020
Austin, TX

In the current historical moment, many countries are experiencing resurgent racism, nativism, and authoritarian politics. As global economic instability and demographic changes transform entire nation-states, demagogues are testing the limits of political and legal systems, inflaming followers by scapegoating ethnic and religious minorities, immigrants, and refugees for social problems. In the United States, these trends take a variety of shapes, including efforts to politically polarize the citizenry, rising white nationalism, draconian immigration policies, attempts to restrict the movement of those seeking asylum, and proposals to extend a separation wall across the entire US-Mexico border. Such phenomena are reminiscent of the early 20th century, when prospective immigrants from East Asia and Eastern Europe were practically excluded from the United States. Despite these developments, many groups and individuals are attempting to heal the wounds of xenophobia and fear by building bridges of empathy, compassion, and cross-cultural understanding. They are also crafting new legal responses, engaging in political activism, and creatively reimagining citizenship in these challenging contexts.

How should anthropologists respond, at a time when so many political figures around the world prefer to build barriers rather than bridges, to sow hostility rather than humanity? For our Spring 2020 meeting, we invite anthropologists and other scholars and activists to join the American Ethnological Society (AES) and the Association for Political and Legal Anthropology (APLA) to consider the cultural, historical, legal and political implications of these troubling transformations. In a national election year, Austin–the capital city of a border state undergoing tectonic political shifts–is a particularly appropriate site to reflect upon and challenge these global trends.

This conference is co-sponsored by the University of Texas at Austin’s Department of Anthropology and College of Liberal Arts. It will take place at the Thompson Conference Center, on the UT Austin campus. For questions about the conference, email us at 2020aesconference@gmail.com.

Registration Fees and Proposal Submissions

Registration remains open until the final day of the conference. Register HERE. Graduate and undergraduate students, we have a deal for you! AES membership is free if you sign up between now and March 26, 2019. This would normally be $12, but it’s free for a whole year. It also will also get you a $5 discount on the APLA spring meeting registration because you can register for at student “member” rate ($40) rather than the student “non-member” rate ($45). To do this, register at the AAA’s portal, then become an AES member by either joining or renewing your membership. Enter the code “AES2020” at the checkout on the join/renew form.

Registration fees for the conference are as follows:

Advance       On-site

Non-student members                   $140                 $145

Non-student non-members          $155                 $160

Student members                           $  40                 $  45

Student non-members                   $  45                 $  50

To submit your proposal and abstract, use the AAA Meetings Portal.


Plenaries:

Plenary Session 1: 
Contested Territories: Ethnography at the Edges

  • Jason Cons (University of Texas, Austin)
  • Miguel Díaz-Barriga and Margaret Dorsey (University of Richmond)
  • Christen Smith (University of Texas, Austin)
  • Jacqueline Solway (Trent University)
  • Susan Terrio (Georgetown University)

Plenary Session 2
Crossing Boundaries, Building Bridges

  • Carolyn Rouse (Princeton University)
  • Nancy Scheper-Hughes (University of California, Berkeley)

Plenary Session 3
Fronteras/Frontiers: Anthropology and Activism along the Southern Border

  • Richard Flores (University of Texas, Austin)
  • Ricky Garza (Texas Civil Rights Project)
  • Martha Menchaca (University of Texas, Austin)
  • Claudia Muñoz (Grassroots Leadership)

 

Conference Program – Coming soon

Hotel Information

The Thompson Conference Center does not have any sleeping rooms for attendees. However, the AAA is offering a customized, user-friendly online portal which will allow you to find hotel accommodations near the conference site. Visit the hotel portal here.

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