top of page

EASA 2026. Beyond informality: popular economies in a polarized world

  • alicastronovo
  • 21 dic 2025
  • 2 Min. de lectura

ree

Desde el GT CLACSO invitamos a presentar propuestas de ponencias al panel sobre Economías Populares en el Congreso EASA 2026, "Beyond informality: popular economies in a polarized world", co-organizado por Juliane Müller (Universidad de Barcelona) y Alioscia Castronovo (Universidad de Padua).


El panel busca proponer un espacio de debates antropológicos en torno a las economías populares, con el propósito de ir más allá de la categoría y lógicas de la informalidad y reflexionar, desde perspectivas etnográficas, en torno a los desafíos de las perspectivas y experiencias de las economías populares en un mundo polarizado y atravesado por múltiples crisis. Invitamos a enviar propuestas de presentaciones que combinen perspectivas etnográficas con reflexiones sobre las consecuencias epistemológicas y políticas de un marco de Economía Popular. ¿Nos ayudan las brechas económicas y los conflictos en las economías populares a comprender la polarización política o, por el contrario, puede la comprensión de la vida socioeconómica sobre el terreno contribuir a un mundo menos polarizado y desigual?


Se podrá participar presencialmente en Poznan, Polonia, o de forma virtual, todas las informaciones en la pagina web del EASA


La fecha límite para presentar propuestas es el 26 de Enero 2026.



ree

Short Abstract


This panel looks for ethnographic presentations that reflect a Popular Economy perspective. Do breaches and conflicts in popular economies help us understand political polarization or, to the contrary, can our findings on socioeconomic life be a contribution to a less polarized and unequal world?


Long Abstract


The research field of Popular Economies invites us to leave aside theoretical oppositions such as formal/informal economy, production/reproduction, community/market. Since its initial use in Latin American social sciences, the term has meant questioning the attributes of the ‘informal economy’ and the supposed single path to economic modernity. Popular economies are neither marginal nor ‘disordered’ economies, but constituted by practices, social networks, infrastructures and institutions that combine production, distribution and consumption of goods and services essential to “the social reproduction of large majorities” (Cielo, Gago and Tassi 2023: 17; Müller 2024).


The Marxist feminist tradition have emphasized the productive value of care and household work, everyday tasks that not only facilitate the reproduction of labor, but also the reproduction of life in a broader sense. In the daily lives of traders and vendors, for example, interpersonal care and work to earn a living intersect, coexisting in both domestic and public spaces. Moreover, social reproduction in popular economies is fully intertwined with productive labor, reconfiguring social struggles and processes of subjectivation (Castronovo 2019), enabling critical debates on contemporary capitalist transformations and racial, gender and class hierarchies.


This panel invites presentations combining ethnographic insights with reflections on the epistemological and political consequences of a Popular Economy framework. Do economic breaches and conflicts in popular economies help us understand political polarization or, to the contrary, can an understanding of socioeconomic life on the ground be a contribution to a less polarized and unequal world?


Comentarios


 

 

 

 

Esta pagina web ha sido realizada gracias al apoyo de CLACSO. Todos los materiales son publicados con licencia Creative Commons

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
logo clacso plataforma_edited_edited_edited.png
bottom of page