15th and 16th September 2022 1pm – 6.30pm GMT+1
We are hosting a two half-day online workshop to bring together abolition feminist organizers and researchers, and members of the public to engage in dialogue transcending institutional boundaries to explore Abolition Feminism (AF) as a framework for imagining alternative futures and a praxis.
++++++ Registration links below++++++
Background
We are at a critical moment following the expansion of police powers during COVID-19 under the Coronavirus Act 2020 in the UK, the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement where across the world activists called for the abolition of the police. And more recently, the #KillTheBill movement in the UK challenges the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 that followed the kidnap, rape, and murder of Sarah Everard by a police officer. AF voices who challenge carceral responses to GBV and locate them within structural rather than individual harms have also breached the mainstream media.
In this workshop, we explore AF responses to GBV that are deeply rooted in the work and activism of Black feminists and feminists of colour. AF and the conjecture of issues prompt us to revisit Audre Lorde’s incisive criticism of mainstream white feminism: “The master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house” (Lorde 1978 [1984], 111).
R v Couzens [2021] has reignited concerns about how societal dependencies on the police and the criminal legal system in response to GBV remain largely unquestioned in the UK. The response to this case by survivors, organizers, activists, the general public, and simultaneously, the police at the vigil for Sarah Everard has emphasised the importance of deconstructing the relationship between GBV and the State in the UK.
It has prompted us to consider in concert the following questions:
- What are our attachments and relationships with the police and other criminal legal institutions such as the prison?
- Whose interests are served and protected by the police and the criminal legal system?
- What level of harm to marginalized people and genders is produced by a reliance on criminal legal institutions?
- How do we envision gendered and sexual justice in the intersectional sense in the UK?
- What strategies to GBV are there beyond the police and criminal legal institutions?
- What challenges and negotiations are involved in creating a world without criminal legal institutions and carcerality?
This workshop is intended to provide space for organizers and the academic community to engage with the complexity of these questions and to bring us a step closer to the Abolition Feminism horizon.
We are excited to see you there.
Flick Adams, Fabienne Emmerich, Jodie Beck, molly ackhurst, nic aaron, and S Lamble
Schedule
15.9.22 (1- 5.30 pm GMT+1) | Day 1: Revisiting the Roots and Mapping the Evolution of Abolition Feminism | 16.9.22(1- 6.30 pm GMT +1 | Day 2: Abolition Feminism in the Everyday: Reimagining and Navigating Tensions |
1pm | Keynote address Alison Phipps (20 min +15 min Q&A) | 1pm | Keynote address Lola Olufemi (20 min + 15 min Q&A) |
135pm | Break | 135pm | Break |
145pm | Session 1 (1 hour): GBV, Carcerality and Abolition Feminism (Chaired by S Lamble) | 145pm | Session 1 (1 hour): Living Everyday Abolition (facilitated by Cradle) |
245pm | Break | 245pm | Break |
255pm | Session 2 (1 hour): Embedding Abolition Feminism and Anti-Carceral Approaches (Chaired by Jodie Beck) | Session 2 (1 hour): Community Accountability (facilitated by Cradle) | |
355pm | Break | 355pm | Break |
425pm | Session 3 (1 hour): Inside-outside solidarity with Anti-carceral Solidarity | 425pm | Session 3 (1 hour): Navigating our desires (facilitated by Abolitionist Futures) |
530pm | Close | 525pm | Break |
535pm | Endnote address Ruth Wilson Gilmore and Craig Gilmore (20 min + 15 min Q&A) | ||
615pm | Closing | ||
630pm | Close |
Registration Day 1 – 15.09.2022
Registration Day 2 – 16.09.2022