Languages: English and German
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Welfare is characterized by conflicts and contradictions. It both enables and restricts: it protects individuals from the capitalist market economy while simultaneously supplying it with suitable workforces. It creates freedoms and constrains them, resolves conflicts, yet at the same time generates new problems (Lessenich 2019). It reacts to social protests and integrates them into its own logics of social cohesion. Moreover, its national framework exists in tension with municipal and transnational levels of negotiation.
These lines of conflict are particularly evident in the current political debates at the federal level in Germany. While the Bürgergeld (‘citizen’s money’) reform tended to strengthen the right to subsistence benefits and placed the focus on qualification (qualifare) and holistic approaches such as outreach counseling or coaching (carefare), neoliberal and nationalist forces have been advocating for cuts in social spending and restricting social rights for people who allegedly do not meet the norms of the national meritocracy (workfare & chauvifare), and not just since the 2025 election campaign. This is evident, for example, in the introduction of payment cards for refugees, the expansion of work obligations and sanctions or the invention of the figure of the “Totalverweigerer” (“total objector”). These conflicts are reflected in the everyday negotiations of (social) state benefits and rights.
In the research project Contestations of ‘the Social’ we examine socio-political conflicts within migration and labor societies, while also exploring processes beyond the national level. Based on the everyday disputes between multilingual grassroots groups of unemployed and precariously employed people and various authorities and actors, we ask: What conflicts and contradictions shape the current social (state) regime?
In our research, we have identified four central areas of conflict. Building on the interim results, we invite you to discuss the following questions:
1. Migrants’ struggles for social reproduction in necropolitical times
Presentations: Polina Manolova (Duisburg-Essen), Josie Hooker (Munich) and Valentina Moraru (Munich)
Commentary: Anda Nicolae-Vladu (Oldenburg/Bochum)
The social reproduction of migrant workers in low-wage sectors is embedded in power relations that are characterized by racializing and necropolitical dynamics. The workers seem to be trapped in a relentless struggle against instability and multiple precarity (Birke 2022). Imperatives of labor connected to social and residential rights, for example, force people into straining employment at the expense of their health. Their poor health, in turn, limits future employment. Combined with exclusionary infrastructures of the social (state) regime, it also significantly affects their (social) reproduction. Examples of this are plenty in regions which have been transformed by precariously employing industries. In the Oldenburg region, where our partner organization, the Arbeitslosenselbsthilfe Oldenburg (ALSO), is active, it is the meat and delivery industries that, directly and indirectly, shape the course of reproduction. In order to understand how the “geographical dynamics of accumulation have become increasingly racialized” (McIntyre/Nast 2011, 1466), we ask: What do the conflicts of migrantized workers around social reproduction in regions such as Oldenburg tell us about necropolitical social relations in the Global North?
2. Community as a tool for neoliberal crisis management and emancipatory alternatives
Presentations: Tine Haubner (Bielefeld), Ove Sutter (Bonn) and Tim Herbold (Munich)
Commentary: Mike Laufenberg (Fulda)
Social movements have, in recent decades, established infrastructures of solidarity and mutual support across many regions. This was particularly evident in the aftermath of the so-called “summer of migration” (Karakayali 2018; Maaroufi 2023). An example of these infrastructures is the self-organized social center of Project Shelter in Frankfurt, one of our research partners. At the same time, state institutions can be observed attempting to mobilize these emerging structures and communities for the management of social problems, effectively outsourcing responsibility to them (van Dyk/Haubner 2021). How can these contradictory processes be analytically grasped and interpreted?
3.B/ordering wage labour
Presentations: Michael Bättig (Oldenburg), Alex Rau (Munich), Veronika Schmid (Munich) and Paula Brücher (Munich)
Society today, and the lives lived within it, are primarily organized through wage labor. This also applies to those who do not work for wages, as essential systems of social integration and security ultimately rely on paid work. The need for wage labor is driven by economic coercion and an activating welfare state (Lessenich 2008). It is further reinforced by the norm of the wage-earning adult. This norm contrasts with the existence of groups that are structurally excluded from employment. Examples include refugees, who are subject to legal employment bans, as well as individuals engaged in care activities, such as elderly care. This panel asks: How and where do conflicts and social negotiations about the norm of wage labor take place? How can we understand the contradictions that arise from the coercion to work along with exclusion from work taking place simultaneously?
4. Dis-/orders of ‘the Social’– Social policy between criminalisation and protection
Presentations: Friederike Faust (Göttingen), Svenja Schurade (Göttingen) and Lisa Riedner (Munich)
Commentary: Insa Koch (St. Gallen, CH)
Social administration relies on bureaucratic and moral orders related to family, work, and the nation, which often do not align with lived realities (Cruikshank 1999). Our research demonstrates how attempts to circumvent such demarcations and exclusions were framed as fraud against the German and local welfare state. The policy field of combating welfare fraud has become a focal point of threat scenarios and authoritarian control projects. In resonance with research on criminalization, poverty, and welfare (Faust et al. 2024; Koch/James 2020; Korvensyrjä 2024), we observe that the logics of control and punishment are part of nearly all areas of the social (state) regime, while simultaneously creating their own infrastructures, networks, coalitions, laws, and practices. The Janus face of social policy has been noted many times. But what is the relationship between the caring and punitive elements of the welfare state in different fields? How does this relationship change? How are migration and social policy connected in this process? How can analyzing shifts in the relationship between protection and punishment contribute to understanding conflicts over current projects of authoritarian order?
This is the interim workshop of the DFG Emmy Noether Junior Research Group Contestation of ‘the Social’ – Towards a Movement-Based Ethnographic Social (State) Regime Analysis, which is based at the Institute for European Ethnology and Cultural Analysis at LMU Munich. We are planning both academic panels as well as formats for exchange with experts from practice. We welcome interested participants and particularly our partner groups: the community organizations of unemployed people BASTA! (Berlin) and ALSO (Oldenburg), and Project Shelter from Frankfurt/Main.
Bibliography
Birke, Peter (2022): Grenzen aus Glas: Arbeit, Rassismus und Kämpfe der Migration in Deutschland, Mandelbaum Verlag, Wien.
Cruikshank, Barbara (1999): The Will to Empower: Democratic Citizens and Other Subjects, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York.
Faust, Friederike et al. (2024): Crimscapes: Kulturanthropologische Perspektiven auf Politiken der Kriminalisierung, in: Zeitschrift für Empirische Kulturwissenschaft, Bd. 120 Nr. 2 (2024), 217–241.
Karakayali, Serhat (2018): Volunteers: From Solidarity to Integration, in: South Atlantic Quarterly, 117 (2), 313–331.
Koch, Insa & James, Deborah (2020): The State of the Welfare State: Advice, Governance and Care in Settings of Austerity, in: Ethnos, 87(1), 1–21.
Korvensyrjä, Aino (2024): Die „Gesellschaft schützen“? Strafgerichte diskriminieren nicht nur bestimmte Gruppen, sondern tragen auch aktiv zu rassifizierter und migrantisierter Armut bei, in: Analyse & Kritik, ak708, 15.10.2024.
Lessenich, Stephan (2008): Die Neuerfindung des Sozialen: Der Sozialstaat im flexiblen Kapitalismus, transcript Verlag, Bielefeld.
Lessenich, Stephan (2019): Sozialpolitik als Problemlöser und Problemverursacher, in: Obinger, Herbert & Schmidt, Manfred G. (eds.): Handbuch Sozialpolitik, Springer VS, Wiesbaden.
Maaroufi, Mouna (2023): Kämpfe um Autonomie und Commons des Ankommens: Urbane Infrastrukturen und Infrapolitiken der Arbeitsvermittlung, in: sub\urban, Bd. 11 (1/2), 97–126.
Nast, Heidi J. & McIntyre, Michael (2011): Bio(necro)polis: Marx, Surplus Populations, and the Spatial Dialectics of Reproduction and “Race”, in: Antipode, 43 (5), 1465–1488.
Van Dyk, Silke & Haubner, Tine (2021): Community-Kapitalismus, Hamburger Edition, Hamburg.
Program
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025 | |
8pm | Opening Event (tba) |
Friday, Nov. 14, 2025 | |
11:00 a.m. | Registration, getting to know each other, coffee & snacks |
12:00 p.m. | Welcome & short inputs from the CoS team |
1:30–3:00 p.m. | Panel I Migrants’ struggles for social reproduction in necropolitical times with Polina Manolova (Duisburg-Essen), Josie Hooker (Bath, UK) and Valentina Moraru (Munich), commenatry: Anda Nicolae-Vladu (Oldenburg/Bochum), facilitation: Lisa Riedner, CoS-Team |
3:00–3:30 pm | Coffee Break & Snacks |
3:30–5:00 p.m. | Panel II Community as a tool for neoliberal crisis management and emancipatory alternatives with Tine Haubner (Bielefeld), Ove Sutter (Bonn) and Tim Herbold (Munich), commentary: Mike Laufenberg (Fulda), facilitation: Valentina Moraru, CoS-Team |
5:15–6:30 p.m. | Interactive discussion |
8:00 p.m. | Evening event, dinner, vernissage & music (venue tba) |
Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025 | |
9:00 a.m. | Coffee |
9:30–11:00 a.m. | Panel III B/ordering wage labour with Michael Bättig (Oldenburg), Alex Rau (Munich), Veronika Schmid (Munich) and Paula Brücher (Munich), facilitation: Tim Herbold, CoS-Team |
11:15 a.m.-12:15 p.m. | Panel IV Dis-/Orders of ‘the Social’ – Conflicts over fraud with Friederike Faust (Göttingen), Svenja Schurade (Göttingen) and Lisa Riedner (Munich), commentary: Insa Koch (St. Gallen, CH), facilitation: Paula Brücher, CoS-team |
12:35 p.m. | Lunch |
2 p.m. | Final discussion |
Contributors
More information coming soon!