Friday 13 April 2012 at 15:15 - 16:45
MEDIA, CULTURE AND CONSUMPTION CONFERENCE AUDITORIUM 1 Molinari, B.
University of Genoa The Civic Service into the University: A New Form of Voluntary
Volunteering in Italy has deep roots, it is a phenomenon that transforms in to a dynamic reality constantly evolving into a variety of explicit forms with different connotation values.
The objective of the paper is to highlight the different connotations that the Civil Service acquires in the Italian context in comparison to the role developed towards the University institutions, particularly in comparison to the studies of the university in Genoa.
According to the findings of this study, the CS would play a supporting role in determining the educational and working life of young people participating.
Those young people who have the opportunity to conduct a "trial period" will acquire proper skills, which the university will recognize through the allocation of credits. conducting such a path, which in some ways is very similar to work environment , triggers a greater awareness with respect to their personal skills and how these have been useful during the development of the service. Carrying out the CS during your time at university also may allow you to reroute your path of study and possibly modify the curriculum. In fact young people are given the opportunity to choose the path of service in a workplaces completely different than their path of studies, or they can attempt to try a workplace in the proximity of their studies.
In this way they build an ongoing dialogue between the institutions of the community service and the university, where young students are the protagonists of the realization of their own skills, they create personalized courses in institutions large enough where they risk losing their own individuality.
Addison, M., Taylor, Y. Placing Research: ‘City Publics’ and the ‘Public Sociologist’
This paper raises questions about who becomes the proper subject for (non)academic attention in a time when ‘city publics’ might be positioned as democratising and open or, conversely, as curtailed and shaped through specific and pre-determined economies of value and use. The use of the city and its residents are echoed in regeneration politics and objectives, attached to and brought forward by specific ‘regenerative’ subjects, now deemed ‘resilient’ and capacitated. Such rhetorics of inclusion and measurable impact are echoed within ideas of a ‘public sociology’, which the engaged researcher should practice as she re-engages differently located spaces and subjects. Here, questions are raised about the place of a ‘public sociology’ as part of a ‘city publics’, where understanding local disseminations and disparities is important in considering where different users, interviewees and indeed researchers are coming from. Having situated the fieldwork site, we initially focus on the expert advisory group and their constructions of the project’s’ ‘use-value’. We then consider the background ‘shadows’ in and out of ‘expert’ space, as a trailing presence of research intentions and trajectories. Ideas of public sociology – as with an open ‘city publics’ often assumes that all users are interested, willing to hear and appear as equal members of a ‘community’. In contrast, the experience of engaging a user group may involve dis-engaging the research- researcher-researched and here we provide disruptions to a straightforward ‘travelling through’ research space as we talk through our research methodologies. We present professional and personal reflections on research experience as well as interpretative accounts of navigating fieldwork.
Richter, A., Spracklen, K Leeds Metropolitan University Cultural Policy, Eventization and Subcultural Use of Leisure Space: A Case Study of A Northern City
Leisure researchers have identified the creeping commodification and privatization of informal leisure spaces (Bramham and Wagg, 2009; Spracklen, 2009). Cultural geographers have provided strong critiques of cultural and economic policies that encourage the gentrification of urban spaces in the name of regeneration or wealth-creation (Chatterton and Holland, 2009; Richter, 2010). In this research project, we wish to explore the impact of privatization and neo-liberal cultural policies on leisure spaces, what we term eventization: the transformation of those spaces from sites of alternative counter cultural and subaltern identity work into sites of passive consumption and hegemonic control. Eventization describes the replacement of free, informal leisure with commodified and corporatised events, carefully managed by private companies and public-sector policy-makers. This transformation of leisure spaces sees a rejection of active (subcultural) alternative identities and communities – anarchists, left- wing/Green) activists, metalheads, punks, Goths, as well as the already marginalised minority ethnic groups and the working class – in favour of passive ‘metropolitan’ consumers. In this project, we use a city in the North of England as a case study to explore the historical development of policies and strategies that have changed the urban landscape and its alternative sub-cultures in this new age of austerity. As well as examining the policy
301 Newcastle University
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