Event overview
This Is The Modern World? An expedition through the REF and other ‘neoliberal’ times
Goldsmiths welcomes Professor Daniel Neyland to perform his Inaugural lecture.
Daniel Neyland (co-authors: Vera Ehrenstein and Sveta Milyaeva)
Goldsmiths, University of London
In this talk I carry out an expedition into those conditions of problem resolution often labelled ‘neoliberalism’ (a term that loses as much as it gains in usage). Here we will encounter a number of market-based interventions (evidence trading, outsourcing, league tables, competitive tendering) presented as a basis for efficiently and effectively allocating scarce (mostly public) resources. One means to make sense of these interventions, I will suggest, is to orient our expedition through Latour’s (1993, 2013, 2016) work on Modernism. And like all the best (and some of the worst) expeditions we will be confronted with questions of our own reflexive complicity in the composition of the Modern world we are exploring.
Latour (1993, 2013, 2016) suggests that The Moderns are pre-occupied with a singular temporal trajectory that seeks to resolve problems through breaking with a failed past to make progress toward a better future. Holding steady this singular trajectory requires the purification of matters into separate containers – nature/society, fact/value, human/non-human, science/politics – that then provide a basis for resolution and progress. That The Moderns have always been overwhelmed by hybridity, plurality, intricacy and impurity, destroying the possibility of neat containment, stands testament to their failure – to accomplish Modernity and to provide an adequate basis to resolve matters of concern.
Drawing on 5 years of ethnographic research, the presentation will begin with the EU Emissions Trading System and a Modernist drive to purify and singularise the nature of environmental problems into a more or less singular, progress-based (cap and trade) solution that is later overwhelmed by plurality. We then move to a Social Impact Bond that transforms children at-risk into a private investment fund from which returns must be earnt. Here impurity is partly kept at bay by a contract structure that promotes singularity by keeping actions focused on returns on investment. However, it turns out that this requires sacrificing efficiency and effectiveness. We will end our expedition by engaging with market-based interventions in Higher Education – namely the UK REF. Here The Moderns appear to run rampant, defying overwhelming hybridity by discounting the outside world through a relativist assessment system. In the end it is relativism, I suggest, that underpins this partial success for The Moderns.
The lecture will be followed by a drinks reception.
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Dates & times
Date | Time | Add to calendar |
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21 Feb 2017 | 5:30pm - 7:30pm |
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