DEATHSCAPES AFTERLIVES

DEATHSCAPES AFTERLIVES

One-Day Symposium at UNSW Kensington

By UNSW Centre for Criminology, Law and Justice

Date and time

Mon, 23 Sep 2024 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM AEST

Location

John Niland Scientia Building

John Niland Scientia Building Kensington, NSW 2033 Australia

Agenda

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM

Guest Arrival and Registration

9:00 AM - 9:15 AM

Welcome to Country

9:15 AM - 9:30 AM

Welcome and Introduction


Maria Giannacopoulos

9:30 AM - 11:00 AM

Indigenous Femicide: Panel on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls


Bronwyn Carlson, Marlene Longbottom, Kyllie Cripps, Brooke Fryer

11:00 AM - 11:30 AM

Morning Tea

11:30 AM - 1:00 PM

The Gaza Deathscape


Randa Abdel-Fattah, Jumana Bayeh, Amal Naser, Noam Peleg

1:00 PM - 1:30 PM

Lunch

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM

Colonial Structures in Europe's Deathscapes


Marina Grzinic, Jovita Pristovšek, Asma Aiad and Anahita Neghabat

3:00 PM - 3:15 PM

Afternoon Tea

3:15 PM - 4:30 PM

Decriminalisation and Abolition


Maria Giannacopoulos, George Kev Dertadian, Phillip Wadds

4:30 PM - 4:45 PM

Closing Remarks


Suvendrini Perera and Joseph Pugliese

About this event

The Deathscapes: Mapping Racial Violence in Settler Colonial Societies (2016-2020) project presents new understandings of the practices and technologies, both global and domestic, that enable state violence against racialised groups in settler states. Within the violent frame of the settler colonial state, centred on Indigenous deaths as a form of elimination and the consequent expropriation of unceded Indigenous Country, the deaths of other racialised bodies within the nation and at its borders—including Black, migrant, and refugee deaths—reaffirm the assertion of settler sovereignty. To focus on Indigenous deaths and other racialised deaths is not to collapse the differences between racialised groups but to bring into focus some of the shared strategies, policies, practices and rationales of state violence deployed in the governance of these different groups.

In this one-day symposium, we ask speakers to address how the key issues raised by the Deathscapes project continue to resonate across different Indigenous nations, settler geographies and the larger transnational asylum seeker and refugee deathscapes. We also ask speakers to reflect on the transnational dimensions of the relations of power that shape contemporary deathscapes; on the lines of shared activism and solidarity that continue to challenge and resist the lethal practices of the settler state and so-called “post-colonial” states; and on urgent moves towards the abolition of the settler prison-industrial-border complex.

This one-day symposium will be held in-person at UNSW Kensington (John Niland Scientia Building, Gallery 1).

Event artwork: Dr Tamika Worrell, Department of Critical Indigenous Studies, Macquarie University

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