Civil Disobedience in a Distorted Public Sphere
Biografie
Martin Blaakman is a PhD candidate at the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Amsterdam. In his thesis, supervised by Prof Dr (Veit) Bader, he analyses unjust social practices originating in non-discursive prejudices and explores whether, and how, ordinary citizens may have a responsi- bility for overcoming such social practices. Currently he is preparing an article on Robert Brandom’s notion of responsibility as a basis for trans- formative practices.
Introductie
Artikelen
Systeemtheoretische perspectieven op sociale versnelling (pdf)
Robin Vandevoordt
Laibach’s Politics without a Cause (pdf)
Atene Mendelyte
Militant Training Camp and the Aesthetics of Civil Disobedience (pdf)
Tom Grimwood & Martin Lang
Civil Disobedience in a Distorted Public Sphere (pdf)
Martin Blaakman
Awor Nan Ta Yama Noscriminal! (And Now They Can Call Us Criminals!): Civil Disobedience and the Dutch-Carribean Top 50 (pdf)
Jacquelien Rothfusz
Essays
Towards the Death of Neo-Liberalism (pdf)
Frank Ankersmit
Back to the Future of Communism: An Introduction to Gianni Vattimo (pdf)
René Gabriëls & Thijs Lijster
Het academisch manifest (pdf)
Hans Radder & Willem Halffman
Reviews
Beyond Liberalism?: A Marxian Account of Liberty (pdf)
Krisis
Uncertainty and Emancipation: A Metacritique of Domination (pdf)
Nathan Slangen
The ‘Right to Have Right’ as the Right to a Place of One’s Own. On refugees and ‘We, the People’
Marieke Borren