Collective memories, Human Rights and resistance

 Collective memories, Human Rights and resistance

4th Cohort | Virtual modality (2022-2023)

VIRTUAL MODALITY

Specialization: 40 credits, 360 lecture hours

International course: 9 credits, 90 lecture hours

Duration: September 2022 to August 2023

The accreditation and certification of the Specialization and the International Course will be carried out by the Latin American Council of Social Sciences (CLACSO) and by the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO Brazil).


GENERAL COORDINATION:
Isabel Piper Shafir

ACADEMIC COORDINATION:
Belén Rojas

ACADEMIC COMMITTEE:
Andrea Azevedo, Isabel Piper Shafir, Pilar Calveiro Garrido and Peter Winn

PEDAGOGICAL COORDINATION:
Belén Rojas and Andrea Azevedo


Concern for collective memory arises in societies attempting to overcome the violence of war, armed conflict, or dictatorship in order to build democratic forms of coexistence. Collective memory is presented as part of the transitional process, as a strategy for repairing the damage caused by violence, and as an element that would ensure such acts of violence never happen again. However, in the 21st century, the focus on this issue is shifting from reflections on violence and its traumatic effects to a quest to understand the present through its connection to the past. The central concern is no longer solely on recovering the memory of victims of human rights violations, but rather on the multiplicity of voices that construct narratives about the past, and on recovering not only experiences of pain but, above all, of struggles and resistance, and their connection to processes such as gender relations and migration.

We assume that collective memory constitutes a field of conflict where what is at stake is not only interpretations of the past, but also the meanings of who we are as a society and of our possible futures. The symbolic power of memory lies in its capacity to produce subjects, relationships, and social imaginaries—a power that makes it a potential source of resistance, instability, and transformation. But the mere act of remembering or forgetting certain events does not guarantee its transformative character; rather, this depends on the capacity of its practices to challenge the prevailing hegemonic versions within a given social order. Embracing this challenge, in this educational space we seek to jointly analyze the actions we undertake when remembering, problematizing the versions of the past they produce and, at the same time, promoting the construction of new interpretations and meanings that nourish different and dynamic ways of producing social subjects. The resurgence of authoritarian regimes in Latin America makes it urgent not only to remember the violence they have perpetrated in our recent history, but also to understand the elements that contributed to their reestablishment.

Always appealing to collective memory, Human Rights and resistance as keys to understanding, we will explore and critically reflect on the political struggles that are developing in the present; the dialogue between artistic manifestations and social movements to the construction and political uses of spaces of memory; the category of forced disappearance and its current uses; the phenomenon of contemporary migrations in articulation with processes and practices of elaborating the past; and the possible relationships between memory and gender, from a feminist perspective.

GENERAL OBJECTIVES

To know and understand contemporary debates on collective memory, the relationships between elaborations of the past and contemporary violence; and the place of these elaborations in the configuration of resistance. 

SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES

  • Describe and analyze experiences of development and implementation of memory policies, Human Rights and resistance practices in Latin America.

Reflect critically on:


1. The links between collective memory processes and political struggles in Latin America.
2. The potential of memory spaces to intervene in the debate on current dilemmas involving new forms of violence or violations of rights.
3. The articulation of the field of memory and gender and feminist perspectives, taking into consideration the theoretical, methodological and political consequences of this framework.
4. The transformation and analytical possibilities of the category of disappearance based on its transnationalization and current uses in various contexts.
5. The potential of the interwoven analysis between collective memories and migrations to challenge traditional understandings of both phenomena and open spaces for their reconsideration.
6. The connections between artistic expressions and social movements

The Specialization and International Course is aimed at undergraduate and postgraduate students; teachers at all levels; activists and members of organizations, movements and political parties; public officials; press workers; members and managers of non-governmental organizations and professionals interested in the fields of memory, Human Rights, feminism and migrant organizations and those linked to their defense.


Pilar Calveiro (Autonomous University of Mexico City)
Pilar Calveiro (Autonomous University of Mexico City)
Ana Cacopardo (University of Lanus, Argentina)
Ana Cacopardo (University of Lanus, Argentina)
Ricard Vinyes (University of Barcelona)
Ricard Vinyes (University of Barcelona)
Margarita Vannini (Central American University, Nicaragua)
Margarita Vannini (Central American University, Nicaragua)
Lupicinio Iñiguez (Autonomous University of Barcelona)
Lupicinio Iñiguez (Autonomous University of Barcelona)
Alejandro Castillejo (University of the Andes, Colombia)
Alejandro Castillejo (University of the Andes, Colombia)
Bruno Groppo (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, France)
Bruno Groppo (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, France)
Javier Trimboli (National Pedagogical University, Argentina)
Javier Trimboli (National Pedagogical University, Argentina)
Ana_Rüsche (FLACSO, Brazil)
Ana Rüsche (FLACSO, Brazil)
 
Gabriel Gatti (University of the Basque Country, Spain)
Gabriel Gatti (University of the Basque Country, Spain)
Ana Barletta (National University of La Plata, Argentina)
Ana Barletta (National University of La Plata, Argentina)
Belen Rojas ((LCSP, University of Paris, France) )
Belen Rojas (LCSP, University of Paris, France)
Marisela Montenegro (Autonomous University of Barcelona)
Marisela Montenegro (Autonomous University of Barcelona)
Loreto Lopez (University of Chile)
Loreto Lopez (University of Chile)
Caterine Galaz (University of Chile)
Caterine Galaz (University of Chile)
Ana Gugliemucci (University of Buenos Aires, Argentina)
Ana Gugliemucci (University of Buenos Aires, Argentina)

 The Specialization in Collective Memories, Human Rights and Resistance will last 12 months and requires the following for accreditation: an international course and two optional virtual seminars from the curriculum; a writing support workshop; and the preparation of a final monograph.

The international course will last 12 months and requires, for its accreditation, the completion and approval of a final project, in addition to participation in at least 80% of the activities and tasks proposed by the teachers.

The specialization and international course will take place between September 2022 and August 2023

Students in the specialization and international course will have the support of academic tutors who will accompany them through the virtual seminars and guide them in completing their final projects.

Once the seminars have concluded, students will have four months to submit their final project. If they still need to complete a credit, they will also have four months to do so.

The specialization and international course are certified by CLACSO and FLACSO Brazil.

The specialization certifies 360 hours/chair of work; the international course 90 hours/chair.

CLARIFICATION: Those who enroll in the full specialization should not enroll in the International Course separately.

 

The online seminars will be offered in either Spanish or Portuguese. The course materials may be provided in both official languages, depending on availability. Student contributions to the discussion forums may also be in either language. The final research paper may be written in either Spanish or Portuguese.

“Current debates surrounding collective memories, gender and human rights”

Summary: 

Summary: This course aims to foster dialogue between the knowledge and experiences surrounding collective memory processes, resistance practices, and human rights. It will feature the participation of thinkers from diverse disciplines and contexts who will analyze collective memory processes in relation to: Human rights, political violence, transitional mechanisms, public policies on memory, resistance practices, gender, feminisms, among others.

Coordination: Isabel Piper Shafir (University of Chile)

Summary: In Latin America, the concept of collective memory has been linked to reflection on the political violence of the wars, armed conflicts, and military dictatorships of recent decades. Confronting these violent pasts has led to the development of memory policies, understood both as state policies and as political actions undertaken by social organizations or political groups involved in remembering the political conflicts experienced in their local contexts. We will examine some emblematic cases in our region, such as Nicaragua, Colombia, Argentina, and Chile.

We will examine how, in the current contexts of different regions and countries in Latin America, diverse resistance practices in the face of exploitation, dispossession, wealth concentration, and public and private violence draw upon a collective memory that recovers the various forms of knowledge from political struggle, transforming itself into an active memory. In the global context, resistance movements tend to be local. We will review and analyze resistance experiences in Mexico and in the Andean highlands of Peru, Argentina, and Chile.

The critical analysis of memory policies implemented in different Latin American countries leads us to argue that, despite significant contributions to understanding the authoritarian processes, dictatorships, and political transitions in the region, as well as confronting and elaborating on the consequences these have had on society and individuals, the challenge remains of understanding, decoding, or establishing links with the new socio-political realities developing in the region, in which new and old forms of political violence and resistance are articulated.

However, analyzing experiences of resistance in which memory is transformed into a political resource to act in the present will help us rethink memory as an agent that contributes to transformation.

Coordination: Isabel Piper (University of Chile)

Summary: The course addresses the relationship between gender and memory, emphasizing two ways of understanding this connection: first, understanding collective memory as constructed by gendered subjects, and second, exploring different feminist approaches present in this field of study. From this perspective, we analyze the memories constructed by activists, guerrillas, victims, and other social actors in relation to their gendered positions in both the present and the past; as well as the continuities and discontinuities of gender roles and dynamics that occurred in significant events they recount.

Through these analyses, we aim to examine counter-memory exercises (Arfuch, 2013; Luongo, 2013) or subaltern memories that emphasize themes and perspectives little explored in hegemonic narratives: for example, visualizing how gender structures are destabilized or preserved in the construction of these memories, or how hybrid processes of affectivity, political action, and resistance are structured when remembering certain events and contexts. This is because we understand that the subjects of memories are multi-positional agents who are linked through events/spaces (Zalaquet, 2011).

Finally, the course will analyze various studies of collective memory from Ibero-American countries that precisely incorporate a gender perspective into the understanding of the processes of collective memory construction, either to make visible experiences -of victimization and/or political resistance- that have been silenced by a hegemonic, masculinized, and heterosexist memory, or to establish gendered understandings of the past through a critical reading of the ways in which different episodes are narrated from the present.

Coordination: Marisela Montenegro (Autonomous University of Barcelona) and Caterine Galaz (University of Chile)

Summary: The objective of this course is to bring into dialogue the processes of collective memory and migrations, with the aim of illuminating new facets that allow us to better understand the complexity of each, in a context of globalization and advanced capitalism.

In this sense, we will address the particular nuances of issues considered fundamental by memory studies, such as places and commemorations; the disputes between official and unofficial memories; and museification and heritage preservation. This will be done with the aim of examining dynamics such as memories without a place and the "non-place" of migrations; the challenge to imaginaries of exclusion and the limits of belonging; and cultural initiatives as alternatives for managing political tensions, their conflictive nature, and also their potential.

We will also examine issues that are gaining prominence in the study of contemporary migrations, such as diaspora and transnational spaces; migrant subjectivity and the impacts of mobility regimes on its development. This will allow us to analyze the tension surrounding national boundaries as contours of collective memory; and the potential of memories and counter-memories in shaping resistance to subordination and articulating relationships based on difference (Braidotti, 2006) during migrant trajectories.

Coordination: Belén Rojas - University of Utrecht, Netherlands)

Summary: The course reflects on the genealogy, transformation, and analytical possibilities of the category of disappearance. It has been used to describe cases in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay in the 70s, in Mexico and Colombia today, and, looking further back, in the Spanish Civil War, Nazi Germany in the 40s, Khmer Rouge Cambodia in the 70s, and Bosnia during the war in the 90s. There are hundreds, thousands, millions of cases that are referred to as disappearances and missing persons.

Coordination: Gabriel Gatti (University of the Basque Country, Spain)

 

Summary:  This seminar seeks to reflect on how Latin American societies have confronted their past experiences of political violence—whether dictatorships or internal armed conflicts—during the 20th and 21st centuries, through the memorialization processes undertaken by various social actors. Through this seminar, we will explore the public forms of memory constructed from these violent pasts, analyzing the critical capacity of the memorialization processes deployed in different countries of the region, such as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru, and Uruguay, to interrogate the present of these societies, particularly regarding new forms of violence and current conflicts.

Coordination: Ana Gugliemucci (University of Buenos Aires) and Loreto López (University of Chile)

Summary: This course aims to explore the public uses of the past and the political interpretations of collective memory in order to understand how meanings, practices, and politics of memory and forgetting are constructed in the public sphere by civil society organizations, intellectuals, and state agencies. In this sense, it will describe and analyze—through various empirical cases and at multiple scales—those public uses of the past through which actors have intervened in the past and continue to intervene in the present.

Coordination: Ana María Barletta and Emmanuel Kahan (National University of La Plata, Argentina)

Summary:This course aims to address the memory of history and popular struggles in Latin American aesthetic production in its various forms: in visual arts, popular music, poetry, literature, film and theater.

Coordination:Ana Rüsche (Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences, Brazil)

Summary: The workshop is a training space designed to guide the development of the final monograph for the specialization. It will support students in defining their object of analysis, translating it into a viable research problem, constructing a work plan, developing argumentative frameworks, and establishing analytical conclusions. These tasks will be carried out individually and collectively through peer exchange and with the workshop instructor, following a discussion forum format. The workshop's objective is to produce a draft of the final specialization paper. The final monograph may be written in Spanish, Portuguese, or English.

CM PlenosIf you belong to a Full Member Center of CLACSO.
CM Associates: Yes You belong to a CLACSO Associated Centre.
No linkIf you DO NOT has any of these links with CLACSO.

 

  Discount for payments made by 27/09 A payment after 20/09 Payment in 3 installments
CM Plenos $460 $570 USD 750 (3 x 250 USD)
CM Associates $590 $700 USD 1020 (3 x 340 USD)
No link $660 $960 USD 1290 (3 x 430 USD)

In all cases, payment can be made by credit card, deposit or bank transfer.

CM PlenosIf you belong to a CLACSO Full Member Center
CM Associates: Yes You belong to a CLACSO Associated Centre
No linkIf you DO NOT has any of these links with CLACSO

 

  Discount for payments made by 27/09 A payment after 20/09 Payment in 3 installments
CM Plenos $175 $230 USD 315 (3 x 105 USD)
CM Associates $235 $290 USD 420 (3 x 140 USD)
No link $300 $360 USD 540 (3 x 180 USD)

In all cases, payment can be made by credit card, deposit or bank transfer.

The Specialization and the International Course are aimed at undergraduate and postgraduate students; teachers at all levels; activists and members of trade union organizations, social movements and political parties; public officials; press workers; members and managers of non-governmental organizations and professionals interested in the subject.

To participate, you need to register through the website.

Registration will be open between July 26 and October 3.

Upon completion of the registration process, you will receive a confirmation email. On the first day of the course, you will receive your login credentials for the online platform.

If any of the mandatory training sessions are owed, in all cases, an additional amount must be paid in order to retake said credit.

Exceptional criteria: In exceptional cases (health, family, or humanitarian reasons) and within the first two months of the start of any course, students may request to withdraw from the cohort and resume it the following year. In all cases, the reasons justifying the request must be submitted in writing. After two months from the start of the course, no requests will be accepted.

Money paid will only be refunded in cases where the organizing institutions decide to cancel the activity. 

The classes will take place from October 2022 to August 2023.

All students will receive the necessary instructions to access classes, bibliography and discussion forums through the CLACSO virtual platform.

Accessing and navigating the Virtual Learning Environment is very simple and user-friendly. In any case, a technical and academic support team will always be available to you.

You must pass the International Course, two (2) elective Virtual Seminars, the methodological workshop and complete the final integrative work.

All training courses must be completed and passed - without exception - in order to receive the specialist title.

To obtain the Specialization degree, you must complete a final monograph. The methodological workshop is mandatory and aims to support you in completing this final project.

You must participate in the classes and activities proposed by the teachers and complete the final monograph.

Yes, the Specialization and the International Course are certified by FLACSO Brazil and CLACSO. The specialization has a total workload of 360 hours, and the international course 90 hours. The certificate of completion will be sent digitally and is completely free of charge. The International Specialist diploma is issued by the General Secretariat of FLACSO, located in Costa Rica. The fees and procedures for issuing and sending the international diploma can be found on the FLACSO Brazil website. https://flacso.org.br/tramitacion-de-titulos-y-certificados-2/

The Specialization and the International Course are accredited by FLACSO Brazil and CLACSO. The International Specialist diploma is issued by the FLACSO General Secretariat, located in Costa Rica. Fees and procedures for issuing and shipping the international diploma can be found on the FLACSO Brazil website. https://flacso.org.br/tramitacion-de-titulos-y-certificados-2/

 See the table of prices and options above.

If you wish to obtain certification from FLACSO, you will need to pay an additional fee.*

 

* The issuance of the printed diploma, along with the academic transcript, costs USD 222,00 (two hundred twenty-two dollars). This fee includes shipping the printed and signed documents to the student's address. The procedures for issuing and shipping the international diploma can be found on the Flacso Brazil website. https://flacso.org.br/tramitacion-de-titulos-y-certificados-2/



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