Insurrection as Recognition: Urban Riots for Love, Rights, and Solidarity
Affiliation
IDRAC Business School Lyon; University of ChesterPublication Date
2019-09-03
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Show full item recordAbstract
Insurrection is theorised as a form of resistance in and around organisational life, often functioning to promote more sustainable forms of organisation and organising. However, urban riots, as a form of insurrection, are typically narrated through nonconformity, social injustice, and immigration, which often deny (1) riots as having a political message or form (i.e. they are ‘pure violence without claim’), and (2) rioters as having affirmative needs or qualities (i.e. they are ‘primitive rebels’). This study draws on publically available narratives and deploys the relational ontology of Axel Honneth to re-cast riots and rioters as responding to violations in basic human need for ‘recognition’, that is, as expressed through ‘love, rights, and solidarity’. In doing so, we hope to sit in contrast with the dominant insurrection and rioting scholarship, to explore as well as inspire alternative ways of organisation and organising in contemporary circumstances which are grounded in affirmative relationality.Citation
Chabernet, D., Lichy, J. & Wall, T. (2019, September). Insurrection as Recognition: Urban Riots for Love, Rights, and Solidarity. Paper presented at the British Academy of Management Conference, Birmingham, United Kingdom.Publisher
British Academy of ManagementAdditional Links
https://www.bam.ac.uk/bam2019-proceedings.htmlhttps://www.bam.ac.uk/bam2019-proceedings/critical-management-studies/developmental-papers.html
Type
Conference ContributionLanguage
enISBN
9780995641327Collections
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/