[p2p-research] Fwd: FW: [My-ci] The Power of Nightmares

Michel Bauwens michelsub2004 at gmail.com
Mon Mar 29 16:12:33 CEST 2010


thanks John!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Howkins <john at johnhowkins.com>
Date: Mon, Mar 29, 2010 at 5:11 PM
Subject: FW: [My-ci] The Power of Nightmares
To: Michel Bauwens <michelsub2004 at gmail.com>


Michel,

I remember saying months ago that FOSS/free-sharing people should apply
their principles to existing political issues as well as culture.

Here’s one example for you! It’s about ‘creativity’ but equally could apply
to FOSS.

John



------ Forwarded Message
*From: *Variant <variantmag at btinternet.com>
*Date: *Fri, 26 Mar 2010 15:37:24 +0000
*To: *<my-ci at orgnets.net>
*Subject: *[My-ci] The Power of Nightmares


*Militarisation of 'creativity' in Scotland : moral and ethical dilemmas
concerning the integrity of creative practitioners
*
"how creativity can help in the study of terrorism and forensic science and
in how the outcome or story from that is told"

...Firstly, let me introduce myself: I'm Wendy Wilkinson and I head up the
Culture Division in the Scottish Government. As well as all things culture,
my remit also includes the creative industries...

However, I'm emailing about a quite separate matter. And it may appear
rather bizarre, but bear with me. I'd like to invite you to an informal
meeting I'm arranging on 8 April, at my office in Victoria Quay, Edinburgh.
And it's to brainstorm/discuss how creativity can help in the study of
terrorism and forensic science and in how the outcome or story from that is
told. This stems from work that Brian Lang, former principal of St Andrews
University, is doing to arrange a conference joining up the centre for study
of terrorism at St Andrews university, with the forensic science centre at
Strathclyde university and the centre for terrorism at the University of
Central Oklahoma. Brian and I are both keen to explore how creativity can
contribute and we recognised the first step would be to consult our own
creative talent here in Scotland. hence my invite. I am planning to invite a
couple of people from the computer gaming industry and perhaps a writer or
artistic director, so a small group and it would be attended by Brian and
the President of the University of Central Oklahoma who is over here for a
visit then.

I do hope that you can attend and would be grateful if you could let me know
what time you may be available on the 8th.

kind regards

Wendy Wilkinson
Deputy Director: Culture
Scottish Government
Victoria Quay
Edinburgh EH6 6QQ





Anthropologists' Resistance to Militarisation

The project [‘Combating Terrorism by Countering Radicalisation’] “provoked a
furious response from academics”, mainly anthropologists, “who claimed it
was tantamount to asking researchers to act as spies for British
intelligence” (Baty 2006). James Fairhead, who works for the ESRC’s
Strategic Research Board and on its International Committee, declared it is
appalling that these proposals were not discussed in any of these committees
(quoted in Houtman 2006). Opposition to the project grew significantly after
the plans were published in the Times Higher Educational Supplement. As a
result, it was withdrawn before its closing date on November 8th 2006.
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/anthropology/documents/marrades.doc


The eleven originators of the Pledge are deeply concerned that the "war on
terror" threatens to militarize anthropology in a way that undermines the
integrity of the discipline and returns anthropology to its sad roots as a
tool of colonial occupation, oppression, and violence.  We felt compelled to
draft the Pledge to say that there are certain kinds of work—for example,
covert work, work contributing to the harm and death of other human beings,
work that breaches trust with our research participants, and work that calls
other anthropologists into suspicion—that anthropologists should not
undertake.  In many ways we are restating the position that Franz Boas
famously articulated in 1919*.  We encourage you to sign the Pledge as a way
to support this position on ethical work in the discipline and as a way to
make a statement to government and military officials, the social science
and other scientific communities, and the broader public that that
anthropologists will not participate in such work or support wars of
occupation.
http://sites.google.com/site/concernedanthropologists/faq


* "A soldier whose business is murder as a fine art, a diplomat whose
calling is based on deception and secretiveness, a politician whose very
life consists in compromises with his conscience, a business man whose aim
is personal profit within the limits allowed by a lenient law -- such may be
excused if they set patriotic deception above common everyday decency and
perform services as spies. They merely accept the code of morality to which
modern society still conforms. Not so the scientist. The very essence of his
life is the service of truth. We all know scientists who in private life do
not come up to the standard of truthfulness, but who, nevertheless, would
not consciously falsify the results of their researches. It is bad enough if
we have to put up with these, because they reveal a lack of strength of
character that is liable to distort the results of their work. A person,
however, who uses science as a cover for political spying, who demeans
himself to pose before a foreign government as an investigator and asks for
assistance in his alleged researches in order to carry on, under this cloak,
his political machinations, prostitutes science in an unpardonable way and
forfeits the right to be classed as a scientist." (Franz Boas, in a letter
to The Nation, 1919)


Workshop of Military Anthropology in the UK
We find other, smaller-scale examples of universities and their academics
seeking to cash in on “terror research” by offering their knowledge as a
source of “protection.” One example involves the “Culture in Conflict
Symposium” at the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom, on 16 – 17 June
2010 <http://www.cranfield.ac.uk/cds/symposia/cic10.jsp><http://www.cranfield.ac.uk/cds/symposia/cic10.jsp>.
It includes a Workshop on “Spatial Sociocultural Knowledge” (read human
terrain) and followed by a one-day Military Anthropology Workshop. There is
no clearer expression of the way academics have become comfortable players
in the pyramid scheme of war corporatism than when they call themselves
“military anthropologists.”
http://zeroanthropology.net/


Protests against British research council: "Recruits anthropologists for
spying on muslims"
A few weeks ago the Association of Social Anthropologists of the UK and
Commonwealth (ASA) passed a resolution that criticized a huge British
research program that recruits anthropologists for “anti-terror” spying
activities, and anthropologist Susan Wright (Danish University of Education)
called for global coordination on this issue.
http://www.antropologi.info/blog/anthropology/2007/protests_against_british_research_counci







-------------------------------------------
http://creativescotland.blogspot.com
Creative Scotland is the proposed merger and expanded
remit of the Scottish Arts Council and Scottish Screen. It is
an avowedly entrepreneurial exploit. Yet marketplace
“truths” require far greater scrutiny, as has been amply
demonstrated in recent months...

-------------------------------------------
Variant
...in-depth coverage in the context of
broader social, political & cultural issues.

1/2 189b Maryhill Road
Glasgow G20 7XJ

   t. +44 (0)141 333 9522
   e. variantmag at btinternet.com
   http://www.variant.org.uk

receive events info & online Variant:
variantforum-subscribe at topica.com
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