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Pluralising Social Reproduction Approaches

Social Justice
Feminism
P016
Shirin Rai
SOAS University of London
Laura Horn
University of Roskilde
Gender and Politics
Monday 09:00 – Thursday 15:00 (25/03/2024 – 28/03/2024)
This Workshop aims to pluralise Social Reproduction Approaches (SRA) through decentring the Global North. Social reproduction is defined as the re/production and maintenance of life itself. Its importance has been brought to the fore as result of Covid-19, as activities from cleaning to caring have come to be recognised as key to maintaining societies. However, the resurgence in SRA has largely drawn on processes and analyses in the Global North. This Workshop will learn from experiences from the Global South to develop a truly global research agenda that speaks to the challenges that processes of life-making are facing worldwide.
The work of care and SR has never been as visible as during the Covid-19 pandemic and its aftermath, when the importance of nature, value and costs of care and social provisioning became apparent (Mezzadri 2022; Stevano et al. 2022; Akhter et al. 2022). The pandemic also revealed how deep inequalities in access to resources between and within the Global North and South differently impacts people’s ability to undertake SR in different parts of the world. SR offers an important theoretical framework for understanding the gendered division of labour that underpins who does paid/unpaid social reproductive work, how it is valued, and the resources allocated to supporting it (see for example, Bhattacharaya, 2017). However, most of these debates are theorised from experiences and localities in the Global North. This Workshop aims to explore what current SR debates can learn from the experiences of the Global South as well as from engaging with intersectional perspectives to develop new conceptual and methodological ways of thinking about social reproduction. We seek to build on existing debates about SR, to pluralise their theoretical premises by working across disciplinary boundaries, to expand the underpinning empirical cases, and develop new methodologies to build a global progressive agenda able to speak to the challenges that processes of life-making are facing worldwide. This global reframing through pluralising SRA will enable us to also re-imagine policy initiatives at a multi-scalar level.
Akhter, S., Elias, J. and Rai, S. 2022. Being cared for in the context of crisis: Austerity, COVID-19 and Racialized politics. Social Politics 29 (4), 1121–1143, https://doi.org/10.1093/sp/jxac035 Bhattacharaya, Tithi (2017). Social Reproduction Theory: Remapping Class, Recentering Oppression. London: Pluto Press. Mezzadri, A. (2022). Social reproduction and pandemic neoliberalism: Planetary crises and the reorganisation of life, work and death. Organization, 29(3), 379–400. https://doi.org/10.1177/13505084221074042 Stevano, Sara, Franz, Tobias, Dafermos, Yannis and Van Waeyenberge, Elisa (2021). 'COVID-19 and Crises of Capitalism: Intensifying Inequalities and Global Responses.' Canadian Journal of Development Studies /Revue canadienne d’études du développement, 42 (1/2), 1-17.
1: Framing: How does SR account for experiences of life-making in global capitalism; why does it need pluralising?
2: Conceptualising: What do we understand by SR; how does this relate to other conceptual frameworks, such as care?
3: Locating: How, if at all, does location matter when it comes to SR?
4: Researching: What methods/methodologies can build alternative practices of knowledge building/creation on SR?
Title Details
Social Reproduction beyond the ‘proper job’: For a Spatially sensitive 'SRT' beyond Productivity Functionalism View Paper Details
Depleting the Pacific Labour Reserve: Transnational Social Reproduction and Uneven Development in the PALM Scheme View Paper Details
From burden to protagonist: Renewing conceptualisations of social reproduction through attention to marginalised children View Paper Details
Centring Social Reproduction through Decentring and Decolonising ‘Malestream Economics’ View Paper Details
An intersectional feminist approach to affordable housing and social reproduction View Paper Details
Women workers’ everyday experiences of social reproduction in Turkey: A relational, holistic approach View Paper Details
Social reproduction as a terrain of class struggle? View Paper Details
Community-based social protection before the gaze of the state View Paper Details
Pedagogies of Unlearning: Continuities and changes in how domestic workers unlearn cheapening in their everyday work life in expatriate households in Dar es Salaam. View Paper Details
Intimacy in (the time of) crisis: Tracing the linkages between the intimate, the state and crises of social reproduction under the sanction regime in Iran View Paper Details
Social Reproduction in the Settler Colonial Context View Paper Details
Working Lives and Labour Agency in the Mauritian Garment Industry View Paper Details
Migrant Labour and Social Reproduction between the Gulf and India View Paper Details
When the state protects me not, I shall keep my sister safe. Social reproductive role of feminist movements under the realities of a polycrisis. View Paper Details
Social reproduction of waste View Paper Details
Pluralising Social Reproduction Approaches View Paper Details
Theorizing Social Reproduction through China’s Internally Colonized Uyghur Community: The Need to Reconcile Exploitation and Oppression View Paper Details