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Mute Vol 2 #7 - Show Invisibles? Migration / Data / Work Editorial content | Vol II
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 12 February, 2008 - 15:53

Mute_2_7_coverWe are living through an intensification of citizens’, and non-citizens’, visibility to capital. Database convergence, states of emergency and points-based immigration systems destroy the legal and informational grey zones in which the poor shelter and organise. As black economies and shadow sectors are exposed to the light of networked information in the interests of population management, border enforcement, welfare clamp-downs and, above all, profit, what are the risks and advantages of visibility? What do (political and artistic) representation and rights have to offer the illegal and ‘invisible’?

Undocumented Migrants Win Unpaid Wages in Sweden OpenPublishing | News & Analysis
Submitted by jaya on Wednesday, 9 April, 2008 - 16:33

The syndicalist SAC union in Sweden has over the last few months been campaigning for fair wages for undocumented immigrants , resulting in thousands of pounds in unpaid wages being paid to migrant workers.


Nuclear spring / Class struggle in a German town: temp workers on the construction site of the Philippsburg nuclear power plant OpenPublishing | News & Analysis
Submitted by unterschreber on Tuesday, 1 April, 2008 - 20:22
Wildcat (Germany)

On March 26 a Financial Times 'Lex' columnist wrote:
"Happily for nuclear power, there are new bogeymen in town.  Flatulent cows and coal fires are heating up the planet, while autocratic regimes seem to control most of the fossil fuel reserves.  As democratic Canada and Australia sit on plenty of uranium, and nuclear power generation is relatively clean once the plants are up and running, the industry seems set to make a comeback. [...] Russia announced this month that it expects to build as many as 42 new domestic reactors by 2030, compared with the 31 it is running now.  Its nuclear holding company, Rosatom, created in another fit of state-led industrial reorganisation, hopes to export another 60.  Some of these will go to China, which has 11 reactors in operation and five in construction.  The plan is to increase Chinese nuclear generation capacity fivefold by 2020, and then triple that by 2030.  In the US, plans for 30 new plants have been announced, and several developed countries are eyeing the replacement of similar reactors.
   So a burst of activity similar to the 1980s, when building work on half of the world's 438 nuclear power stations began, seems likely over the next two decades..."
    All of which makes now seem like a good moment to return to this 1986  article from German Wildcat (http://www.wildcat-www.de/), which argues that nuclear expansion was never just an 'energy' question: rather it has always played a key role in the restructuring (i.e. casualization, contracting-out, 'precarization', as it's now known) of labour on a  geographical and technological basis.  The article gives a concrete account of how this worked and how it was resisted last time round in Europe.  The analysis of work in a construction boom based on outsourced casual labour is obviously pertinent right now; as for state-initiated, privately implemented nuclear projects, it looks like the implications could be seen soon on a much bigger scale in Russia and China.   


Plague Politics Editorial content | Articles
Submitted by mute on Friday, 29 February, 2008 - 14:32
C. L-Stavrides

While bird flu panic made a return to the UK mainland last autumn, the promised pandemic failed to materialise. What does continue to evolve, however, are repressive forms of population management sustained by hypothetical threats of megadeath – writes C. L-Stavrides


Mute Vol 2 #7 - Show Invisibles? migration / data / work Mute Magazines

Mute_2_7_coverWe are living through an intensification of citizens’, and non-citizens’, visibility to capital. Database convergence, states of emergency and points-based immigration systems destroy the legal and informational grey zones in which the poor shelter and organise.

As black economies and shadow sectors are exposed to the light of networked information in the interests of population management, border enforcement, welfare clamp-downs and, above all, profit, what are the risks and advantages of visibility? What do (political and artistic) representation and rights have to offer the illegal and ‘invisible?’

RegionPrice
Europe7.00€
United Kingdom£5.00
USA10.00$
Rest of the World8.50€

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