Monday 25 July 2011

Music and Conflict Transformation Symposium Part 2

I have been busy lately actually writing my thesis (honest, Tia!) and have neglected to post part two of my review of this notable conference/symposium. I have, therefore, decided to do the next best thing which is to post someone else's summary of events. In this case it was from Arild Bergh's personal site, Musica Lista. Anyway, here it is:


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Post-session Q&AIt was my great pleasure to organise the 2011 SocArts symposium on the topic of Music – Conflict – Transformation. This year was the largest so far, with more than 40 attendants from a wide variety of backgrounds: musicians, practitioners from the peace building field, academics and researchers, lawyers, activists and educators. The geographical spread was also very broad with attendants arriving from Colombia, Japan, USA, Canada, Spain, Turkey, Norway, Germany, Austria and the UK. There was considerable breadth and quality in the papers presented, and I was very pleased to meet old and new contacts working in this field. Below is a brief summary of the different sessions throughout the two days.
There were seven sessions in all as well as a plenary discussion session at the end. The first session on Community, a key issue in conflict transformation work, was kicked off by Catherine Pestano(Community music and the promotion of social inclusion: An English-Vojvodinian (Serbia) partnership) who provided a summary of a project in Serbia that highlighted problems related to the "NGOisation" of the region as well as issues around working in languages other than your own. The value of improvising in the field and finding willing partners was also discussed. The Living Together Lounge for People Who are Both HIV-Positive and HIV-Negative was a presentation by Mia Nakamura who focused on the value of simply providing spaces for joint musicking between conflicting groups and again showing how the initial intent of music use may "transmogrify" in  the field. Finally Mindy Johnston (Music and Conflict Resolution: Exploring the Use of Music in Community Engagement) presented her research on the link between self and society in work by musicians and composers who worked in the conflict resolution field.

In the Identity session different perspectives on this topic was explored using different European case studies. Irene Gallego’s presentation Music as a social control mechanism highlighted the bureaucratic issues facing street musicians in Barcelona, where only those who play “traditional” music which is perceived to be representative of their ethnicity is given permits to play. From Austria Martin Winterdiscussed the fluidity of first generation immigrants’ musical identity, either to “fit in” or for nostalgic reason in his talk on Musical practice and the construction of cultural identity. Finally Pinar Güran presented the use of hybrid music styles in Berlin such as “RnBesk” (American R’n’B and Turkish arabesk) to work with youth who resorted to violence in conflict encounters.

The following session went straight to the centre of music and conflict transformation issues with a look at music in mediation and reconciliationBarbara Dunn discussed her Ph.D. Research on the potential for music use mediation with adults and highlighted how previous music experience affect the ability to use it to address conflict, that music transforms may potentially transform conflict by creating common ground and that musical exercises require careful consideration if used in conflict transformation contexts. In Musicking as a Means of Accessing Tacit Cultural Understanding in Conflict Transformation Settings” Craig Robertson discussed issues of “normality” in post conflict societies and how the same processes take place whether using music for negative or positive purposes, hence a understanding of the processes involved in musicking are important. María Elisa Pinto García finished the session with a presentation that discussed the use of music for reconciliation in Colombia where victims and ex-combatants in the long running civil war has participated in top down projects or tacitly used music locally to put across their views on violent events, and the limitations of such approaches for reconciliation.

Tuesday started with three future projects presentations. Linda Ippolito presented her Ph.D. research which will work with mediators and encourage them to use paradigms from music making to think about how conflicts between to two parties can be mediated rather than the common western way of seeing mediation as a zero sum game with a winner and a loser. Thomas Valenti briefly outlined some ideas he has developed with the owner of Hopeless Records to encourage behaviour changes in young adults in conflict areas, possibly involving recording music and teaching different music skills by professional musicians. Finally Charlie Irvine discussed the potential of iPods and playlists as a means of inducing a mood conducive to mediation work among younger people. Overall this session generated a lot of discussion and ideas.

The New Directions session examined the use of music (and art) to promote longer term societal changes. Gloria Patricia Zapata discussed whether playing music could help children from socio-culturally deprived backgrounds in Colombia. A project that took place in Lebanon, focusing on creating musical instruments and art among social workers from different groups in the conflict there was presented by Mercedes Pavlicevic in her talk on “Firemaking in the Lebanon: building social resilience through the arts in times of low-intensity conflict”.

This was followed by a session on the transmission of conflict through music. Argun Cakir discussed how the the Kurdish dengbêj tradition was not only used to promote conflict, but also suffered from conflict within the tradition itself as new ways of working within this tradition has developed in recent years. The session was concluded by Cornelia Nuxoll who showed how the meaning of music is always locally determined and independent of the intent of the artists and/or composers. In her case she discussed how child soldiers in Sierra Leone had re-interpreted reggae music lyrics and used it to augment local discourses and in the fighting itself in the civil war there in the 1990s.

The symposium was concluded by an excellent session on the issues and ethics to consider when intervening in conflicts, this workshop was run by Joan McGregor from “Responding to Conflict” in Birmingham, and it was clearly a session that gave us all a lot to think about in terms of how to work in conflict areas with music.

Friday 22 July 2011

Process Arts

Interesting site collating approaches to facilitating group interactions through aesthetic thinking:

http://processarts.wagn.org/wagn/one_response

Thursday 21 July 2011

THE SOUNDTRACK OF CONFLICT: THE ROLE OF MUSIC IN RADIO BROADCASTING IN WARTIME AND IN CONFLICT SITUATIONS

An intriguing conference that I, unfortunately, cannot afford to attend:

THE SOUNDTRACK OF CONFLICT: THE ROLE OF MUSIC IN RADIO BROADCASTING IN WARTIME AND IN CONFLICT SITUATIONS



Three-Day International Conference

THE SOUNDTRACK OF CONFLICT: THE ROLE OF MUSIC IN RADIO BROADCASTING IN WARTIME AND IN CONFLICT SITUATIONS

University of Göttingen, Germany, 15-17 September 2011


Radio is a powerful medium in conflict situations. Major world powers have dedicated sometimes significant resources to funding radio broadcasts into different and "enemy" countries, in times of both "hot" and "cold" war.
And precisely because radio is relatively cheap, portable, and before or in the absence of the Internet the easiest and safest way to transmit information over international borders, radio has been and remains important in various conflicts in and between smaller countries as well.



The role of radio in wartime and in conflict situations has been addressed by scholars from various disciplines. However, a number of aspects remain under-researched, particulary what role music plays in this context.

This international, interdisciplinary conference aims to promote a broader and comparative approach to this topic. Researchers from several disciplines will come together to present and discuss papers on the role of music in radio broadcasting in a range of conflict situations from around the world.

In addition to the presentations, the conference will host a lecture-performance on the theatre project "Hate Radio" on the role of the radio in the Rwandan genocide in 1994. Additional information on the lecture performance is available here.

M.A. Expressive Arts in Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding

I have just come across this programme at the European Graduate School in Saas Fee, Switzerland. I don't really know anything about this school or any of its faculty, but they're busy people doing interesting things and worth contacting.

Looks amazing.

M.A. Expressive Arts in Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding

The Expressive Arts in Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding (EXA-CT) M.A. is a three year program concentrating on the use of creative methods through the arts to address conflicts within teams, communities, and across cultures. The EXA-CT program provides students with frameworks for merging the arts with conflict analysis interventions, restorative justice, trauma awareness and healing, mediation, humanitarian responses, and research. In short, EXA-CT students will learn ways to use the arts for peace and co-existence. Distinguished faculty in the fields of the expressive arts and conflict transformation will provide instruction during three summer school sessions along with support and supervision of an internship, thesis, and community of practice throughout the year.
Students will spend three summers in residence in Saas-Fee, Switzerland. During the first two summer residency periods, they will follow courses on the priniciples and practice of both expressive arts and conflict transformation and peacebuilding. They will be taught by faculty members who are active practitioners in the combined disciplines. Within each course, students will be challenged to experiment with the application of the arts in conflict transformation and peacebuilding paradigms, along with group discussions and reflective exercises.
In between the summer residencies, EXA-CT students will be expected to complete a prescribed self-study plan, an internship, and a Masters Thesis supervised by an EXA-CT faculty member. Students will also participate in the design and creation of the EXA-CT in ACTION group project and meet in a virtual classroom to discuss assigned readings and videos. During the third summer session, the student will complete oral and written exams and defend the Masters Thesis. Professional artists, peaceworkers, art therapists, mediators, educators, coaches, and humanitarian workers are encouraged to pursue the EXA-CT MA program.

A Night in Tahrir Square

I'm going to this tomorrow evening in London. It sounds very interesting and I have heard about a new research project linked to this. More TBA...


A Night in Tahrir Square

Featuring El Tanbura, Azza Balba, Mustafa Said and Ramy Essam

22 July 2011 / 19:30
Barbican Hall

Tickets: £12.50 - £25
subject to availability


Description  /  Press  /  Bio  /  FreeStage  /  Amnesty UK campaigns


It was the biggest party in Egypt’s history. Between January 25th and February 11th, the people turned Cairo’s Tahrir Square into a cross between Woodstock and a giant soapbox. Music and poetry played a crucial role in breaking the ice and melting the fear of tyrannical decades.

The Barbican is proud to celebrate people power in the Arab world with an exceptional line-up of artists, all of whom helped to create the soundtrack to Egypt’s revolution.


Listen to Zakaria Ibrahim from El Tanbura in our Blaze podcast

El Tanbura - 25 Jan, Tahrir Square

Singer-songwriter Ramy Essam went to join the protestors with his guitar as soon as the uprising started. He became 'the Billy Bragg of Tahrir Square', performing countless times a day on makeshift stages and living down in the square for the entire revolution. His song 'Irhal' ('Leave') became the anthem of the revolt and a huge viral hit on the internet. Egypt’s most famous street music ensemble, El Tanbura, were also Tahrir regulars and their percussion and simsimiyya-driven sound from Suez found great favour with the protestors. 'You cannot imagine the feeling of solidarity between all the people there,' says founder Zakaria Ibrahim.

Ramy Essam - "Leave" live in Tahrir Square

Another fêted presence in the square was that of Egypt’s greatest living poet Ahmed Fouad Negm. Negm has spent 18 of his 82 years in Egyptian jails for his outspoken and often bitingly comical poems and lyrics. He is unable to travel, but his former wife Azza Balba – who has has also had a taste of Mubarak’s jails – will take part; a lifetime of protest lends a unique power to her performances of songs by Negm, Sheik Imam and others. Mustafa Said is an Egyptian singer, composer and virtuoso of the oud, or Arabic lute. His fiery performances during the revolution demonstrated his ability to combine refined instrumental skills and revolutionary passion to immense effect.

'An institution, both in their native Egypt and abroad.'Songlines 5* on El Tanbura's Friends of Bamboute

Freedom to Create Prize

I came across this and thought I should post it. It's essentially two huge prizes for for artists who use their art courageously for social justice, including one prize for an artist imprisoned because of it. Sounds amazing on one level yet I can't help but think that this prize money would be better spent helping with the social justice itself rather than rewarding an individual's efforts in this way. What do you think?


About the Freedom to Create Prize

Launched in 2007, the Freedom to Create Prize is a celebration of the courage and creativity of artists, and the positive influence of their work to promote social justice and inspire the human spirit. The Prize is open to all forms of art, in any creative field and any individual or group of any gender, religion or nationality.

In 2010, nearly 2,000 artists entered from more than 100 countries.

In 2011, a total prize fund of US$100,000 will be awarded to the winning artists and their nominated advocacy organisations to further the cause their artwork has highlighted.
Opportunities for Artists
The Freedom to Create Prize offers a range of opportunities and platforms for artists across the world. In addition to competing for the Freedom to Create Prize, all entrants are also considered for selection to:

Perform at the Freedom to Create award festival in November 2011. This year's celebrations in Cape Town, South Africa will reveal the 2011 Prize winners and celebrate the courage and creativity of this year's participating artists.

Showcase their work as part of the international Freedom to Create Exhibition - a touring exhibition of selected work entered for the Freedom to Create Prize. In addition to recent exhibitions in Mumbai and New York, Freedom to Create Exhibitions have also been held at the Cairo Opera House in Egypt, the National Gallery of Zimbabwe in Harare, the Queen’s Palace in Kabul, Afghanistan and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
Enter 2011
The Prize has two categories: the Main Prize, open to individuals or artistic groups in all creative fields over the age of 16 and the Imprisoned Artist Prize, focusing on artists who are currently imprisoned for their artwork.

The 2011 Freedom to Create Prize is now open for entries via our website until 30 July 2011 (deadline extended). Please seehere for further information on how to enter the prize.
Judging Panel
Read here about the Judging Panel for this year’s Freedom to Create Prize and read more about the members of the 2010,2009 and 2008 Judging Panel.
Award Ceremony
Winners of the 2011 Freedom to Create Prize will be unveiled in November 2011, at the Freedom to Create Award Ceremony in Cape Town, South Africa.

Friday 13 May 2011

Music - Conflict - Transformation Conference, Exeter (May 9-11)

Day 1

Sometimes a negative event can have long-lasting residual effects beyond the temporal parameters of the event itself as any memory studies researcher will tell you as will anyone on the planet with pretty much any memory at all. Happily, the opposite is also true. I have had the misfortune/fortune to have experienced both of these phenomena recently. First, my house was burgled in February and my car and my laptop (with all of my PhD work on it) were taken without consent. This rather alarming setback not only threw my schedule out of the window, I have found it very difficult to get back into the swing of things ever since. That is, until the SocArts Music-Conflict-Transformation Symposium earlier this week at my spiritual home, the University of Exeter. This was to prove to be the most exciting, rewarding, stimulating and, for me, cathartic gathering of minds that I have yet to experience. More importantly, again, for me at least, I am renewed and filled with motivation; a positive memory has finally superseded a negative one.

The symposium was organised by my fellow music and conflict transformation colleague, Arild Bergh, and it turned out to be one of the first, probably the largest and definitely the best sharing of ideas on the topic ever held. Every single presentation was relevant to my own work and I believe this marked the beginning of some as yet undefined grouping of like-minded researchers, practitioners and other interested parties.
I shall go through each presentation one by one and give an overview followed by a brief comment:

First up was Catherine Pestano, a Croydon (London, UK) community music practitioner who was reporting on a social inclusion project using music in Vojvodina in what is now part of Serbia. Pestano had been invited to develop and deliver a social inclusion music project in the Vojvodina village of Tarak, whose population was actually mostly of Romanian ethnicity despite being within the political borders of Serbia. This had been an autonomous Yugoslav province before Milosović set out on his expansionist agenda. The idea was to train local musicians to facilitate creative and expressive musicking. She encountered, however, what I have elsewhere described as ‘foreigner fatigue’; the locals were ambivalent about foreigners and had become hardened to the perceived broken promises they bring. They were not interested in the playful tricks of the trade found in western community music ice breakers and games. They, like many Bosnians I have met, were very proud of their classical music traditions, especially orchestral, and viewed fun musical activities as juvenile. It is a shame I had not encountered Pestano prior to her trip as I could have forewarned her about this kind of attitude in the Balkan region. She was, however, able to find some success in a neighbouring village of Uzdin, where the locals were all too happy to engage with her practices. I think the issues she encountered all come down to a problem recognising and accessing contextual tacit knowledge.

Next up was Mia Nakamura from Tokyo University of the Arts who talked about the Living Together Lounge for people who are both HIV-positive and HIV-negative. The Living Together Lounge is a monthly live music and poetry event in Tokyo that had been set up with the intention of preventing the further spread of HIV. She reported that the project had not been successful in this aim, but it had provided a positive social environment where both groups of people could be both open and comfortable with each other and even enjoy themselves together. The layout of the club starts with fairly light “DJ music” as people arrive but the music is turned off completely during introductions. A quiet “dry drum pattern” at a “heart-rate tempo” is introduced while personal poetry about HIV experiences are read. The idea is to keep the readers, who often have no public speaking experience, focused and moving along; a form of musical-physical entrainment in other words. After the readings, a live musical group performs a set which includes at least one song based on one of the readings. According to Nakamura, music in this context reframes the narrative content originally found within the readings. How I interpreted this was the DJ music first relaxes people, the beats keep the pace of the readings from dragging, the content of the poems sets the scene in terms of emotional content, intention and making emotional and memory connections between the two art forms. Over time this is experienced by repeat attendees as ritualistic since they have expectations of layout and schedule and generally have these expectations fulfilled and experienced. Very interesting stuff and she even quotes me on my work with Pontanima and the concepts of temporary identity building and normality. I wonder what my Bosnian informants would make of this project.

Mindy Johnston is a gamelan musician and recent graduate in conflict transformation and alternative dispute resolution in Portland Oregon. She had studied many musicians involved with social activism in the northwest coastal USA. She discovered that many musicians did not like to be referred to as activists and preferred to hold on to their musician identity even if their music or musical activities were involved with social activism to some degree. Her findings echoed with some of my own in music and conflict transformation: music can provide a common goal which in turn can act as a pre-condition for conflict transformation and that any social change through musical intervention needs to be long term.

The three above presentations combined echo some of my theories about how a successful music conflict transformation project might unfold. Such a project would need to be long term, led by trusted local people, repeated and engage with memory work. Another emergent theme here is the difficulty in accessing tacit knowledge of a social group in conflict which is necessary in order to understand their contextual relationships to music and musicking.

Irene Gallego from the Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona gave a very interesting talk about a study of how Barcelona policy makers have embarked on a social control programme through regulating public music throughout the city. Since Barcelona hosted the Olympics in 1992, city officials wished to present a cohesive cosmopolitan front and one part of how they accomplished this was through the promotion of and appropriation of certain forms of musical busking. This was formalised into a system whereby certain buskers qualified through an accreditation programme to busk in certain pre-defined spots throughout the city. Spontaneous public musiciking was banned. This has had the effect of preserving ethnic minority stereotypes as this culture is no longer visible publicly as they wish to present themselves. Only the groups that adhere to the city’s idea of that culture became accredited. Furthermore, this encouraged individual competition within the minority communities instead of working together to improve their collective visibility. In the end this has resulted in the standardisation, simplification and domestication of the immigrant musician in Barcelona. It was very good to see some empirical data on this subject and it illustrates how musical social policies directly affect large social groups and why it is so important to not only to understand this process, but to educate and advise policy makers.

Martin Winter presented the results of a study he had conducted with Richard Parncutt at the Centre for Systematic Musicology at the University of Graz in Austria that examined how music was used by migrants in Graz for identity work. The frame for the study was a local population that viewed migrant integration as the goal for conflict resolution in communities and cultural differences were seen as somehow threatening. This attitude in turn threatened the very cultural identity of the migrants. The findings showed that migrants used music to help them through initial culture shock upon arrival in Graz but it also strengthened in-out group boundaries and therefore strengthened stereotypes. Authentic music from the migrants’ place of origin was deemed important in the early stages of their arrival but this same authentic music also locked them into stereotypes later on which hindered their integration into wider society. This was a nice presentation with lots of solid data but I had to worry about a society that could only feel integrated if it had a homogenous culture. I think it would be interesting and useful to study any joint musicking that might occur in Graz between the indigenous population and the migrant one.

My friend and colleague Pinar Gϋran, from the University of Exeter, was up next with her latest research on the Turkish migrant communities in Berlin and their relationships to Turkish music. In particular she examined conflicting identities in what she coined RnBesk, a hybrid of the arabesque music of Turkey in the 1960s and 1970s with modern western hip hop and RnB. Gϋran’s study has shown that Turkish youth in Berlin connect to hip hop and RnB as a protest against racism they experience and to a sense of global disenchantment while the use of arabesque music connects them to a sense of belonging to Turkey. In addition, it has been observed that those youth who become involved with active musicking in this fashion are less likely to be involved with crime and other destructive behaviour. This work has illustrated again how social groups can engage with memory work through music, even if it a memory mediated through their parents and other older community members. It also shows how tacit knowledge of a culture can be learned via music at great distances through the use of hip hop and RnB.

Barbara Dunn is a busy multi-disciplinarian based in Seattle who is a qualified psychotherapist, music therapist, clinical social worker, mediator and musician. The core of her presentation was firstly an observation that music therapy practices, at least where she works, tends to be ethnocentric and she sensibly makes a call to learn from the communities in which such people work. Secondly, she explained some of her work that attempted to engage community mediators with music therapy practice. While I agree with and applaud her attempts to share approaches between different disciplines that address the same types of conflicts, I was less convinced by the particularity of her style, which was demonstrated by a sing-song both at the start and end of her presentation. I also agree that it is odd and quite simply wrong that at conferences about music very little music is engaged with, but I did not think that the gospel-inflected sing-song that we did on this occasion was wisely chosen. If anything, it very much highlighted the need to understand a social group’s musical relationships prior to any musical intervention. There were a few participants who happily engaged with this experiment but it seemed that most did so begrudgingly and there was a prevailing sense of unease in the room. It was another case of good intentions combined without tacit knowledge resulting in more harm than help, albeit in a relatively safe environment. Finally, it has highlighted a conflict within the growing music and conflict transformation community between some practical approaches and some research-based approaches. It is important to continue dialogue, discussion and debate between all areas of this field, however, no matter divergent our philosophies might be.

The last presentation of the first day was by Maria Elisa Pinto Garcia from the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies which reported on her study of reconciliation attempts using song-writing by victims and ex-combatants in the Columbian civil war. This was an excellent and fascinating study that ultimately showed how music can seem to help a situation when in fact it has not done what it has been reported to do. Pinto Garcia’s study showed that music in this case reinforced latent conflict and continued mistrust and stereotypes. Victims generally did not feel reconciliation was possible without a perceived sense of justice of some sort; musicking together was simply not enough. The Columbian government set up a Sing With Me initiative which claimed to put these two groups together in song-writing projects and that reconciliation had occurred between them, yet an investigation revealed that there had actually been no encounters between victims and ex-combatants and the songs used as examples of collaboration had in fact pre-existed prior to the project. In the end, Pinto Garcia concluded that there was evidence that song-writing provided both groups with a common ground and a sense of catharsis which are both pre-conditions for future conflict transformation, but this had not been followed through as such and instead had been manipulated for governmental propaganda. Furthermore, it is important to understand the particular context of any encounter.

Oh, I seem to have forgotten my own presentation! I presented before Maria and my topic was Musicking as a Means of Accessing Tacit Cultural Understanding in Conflict Transformation Settings. Rather than go on about it much here, I will post it up separately along with the other presentations that followed on subsequent days.

Friday 21 January 2011

More conferences...

The SocArts group had another one of their famous gatherings in November in Exeter, this time hosting Paul Atkinson of all things ethnographic fame. It was all very informal and lovely and all members in attendance shared with the big man our work and ideas. He was very cordial and helpful and then proceeded to impress us with polemics about his early career and ideas about the benefits and limits of ethnographic research. It is always fantastic to be in the presence of important figures who have influence your own work, but also important to realise that this next generation of researchers is just that, the next generation, with that entails.

I have recently been accepted to present at two conferences. First up is the rather wordy The Language of Art and Music: "An International Symposium on the Potential for Artistic Expression to Cross Cultural Barriers and the Relationship between Art, Culture and International Relations" in Berlin which takes place February 17-20. I will hopefully be attending with my colleague Arild Bergh and presenting the basics of my research to such illustrious guests as Dr. Alfredo Palacio (former president of Ecuador), Danny Trejo (of From Dusk till Dawn fame), Helena Bonham Carter, Jytte Hilden (former Minister of Culture in Denmark), Marcia Barrett (of Boney M fame) and Paco de Lucia (renowned flamenco guitarist). I'm not convinced that this audience is going to enjoy what I have  to say about this subject, but it should be fun. Berlin is great, anyway.

Finally, I will be presenting at BSA Annual Conference in London, April 6-8. The title of my presentation this time is Trying to be Normal: An Analysis of Musical Practices in Post-War Sarajevo. I best start writing this, I suppose. 

Music - Conflict - Transformation Symposium

I will be co-hosting a symposium on music and conflict transformation with my colleague Arild Bergh at the University of Exeter in May. Below is the call for contributions. If you are interested, please contact me on cr264@exeter.ac.uk. Feel free to share and re-post far and wide.


9th and 10th May 2011, University of Exeter, SocArts UK

Call for contributions

In the past decade there has been a growing interest in music and social conflict both inside and outside academia. Interdisciplinary research from music sociologists, ethnomusicologists, music psychologists and musicologists has focused on music’s dual use, both as a resource for conflict transformation and as a medium that can be used to incite conflict and channel violence. This research has also dovetailed with practical initiatives by non-governmental organisations (NGOs), local communities, academics and individuals attempting to utilise music to avoid or transform conflicts. Together these activities are slowly improving our understanding of the interesting, and at times pivotal, functions of music related activities in conflict and post-conflict scenarios. However, it is clear that there is still a great deal of conceptual work to be done in this field if we are to understand the processes (negative as well as positive) that take place in and around music and conflict/conflict transformation. Similarly, there is as yet little empirical research available to elaborate this conceptual base. The time is ripe for increasing the dialogue between researchers, practitioners/musicians and participants with regards to work in this field.
This symposium will explore these and related issues by providing a place for practitioners, researchers, musicians and other interested parties to present and discuss work concerned with music, conflict and conflict transformation. We especially encourage contributions from those working with music in connection with conflict or conflict transformation, whether in the context of NGOs, academia, (local) politics, mediation, music therapy, community or popular music around national, regional, urban or ethnic groups. Contributions may take the form of informal presentations, in-depth research papers or videos showcasing projects in this area but in all cases they should emphasise real life data to provide a rich context for further discussion.
The annual SocArts symposia are deliberately kept smallinformal and free to attend to ensure a positive and creative atmosphere, with time for informal discussions and food throughout the day. SocArts central position in international research on music in everyday life and our connections with researchers and research institutions worldwide means that these symposia provide ample benefits for the participants. Over the past seven years our symposia have brought together a broad spectrum of researchers, practitioners and musicians with many practical outcomes and networks emerging after the event.
Attendants will also be able to spend time in the historic Cathedral city of Exeter which has grown from Roman origins and has a wonderful quayside. Accommodation details will be available.