Imagining social justice with radical individuality with Prof Humeira Iqtidar
05 December 2024, 4:30 pm–6:00 pm
Join us for a Director's Seminar with Prof Humeira Iqtidar, Professor of Politics at King's College London.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Organiser
-
UCL Institute for Global Prosperity
Location
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B40 Darwin LTDarwin BuildingGower StreetLondonWC1E 6BTUnited Kingdom
Focusing on the ideas of two important political figures, Moshir Husain Kidwai (1877-1937) and Abdul Ghaffar Khan (1890-1988), I argue here that an important contribution of South Asian Islamic socialists was to carve a clear space for the individual in socialism, expanding and co-producing socialism in capacious ways. Softening the emphasis on the state and sharpening the focus on individual responsibility, influential Islamic socialists connected the individual to the community and expanded the ways in which spiritual equality translated into racial equity. Critically assessing other claims made by Islamic socialists regarding the egalitarian thrust of the Islamic tradition, I explore the ideational resources for political and social equality within South Asian Islamic political thought, and the ways in which equality might be imagined, facilitated and constrained by existing repertoires of normative values.
Accessibility
An access guide to Darwin Building, Lecture Theatre B40 can be found on AccessAble.
About the speaker
Inanna Hamati-Ataya is Professor of Global International Relations at the University of Groningen, Research Affiliate at the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH), University of Cambridge, Founding Director of the Centre for Global Knowledge Studies (gloknos), and co-Founder of the Cambridge Sustainability Initiative social enterprise.
Inanna's research lies at the intersections of deep history, global politics, and the anthropology of knowledge, science, and technology, with a special interest in how major transformations in knowledge-systems have shaped societal and natural orders throughout human history. Her IGP Soundbite talk draws on her recently completed ERC-funded research project The Global as Artefact (2017-2023), which examined the evolution and political impact of agricultural knowledge-systems in deep time, and her ERC/UKRI-funded proof-of-concept project A New Noah’s Ark (2022-2023), which developed an anthropological-legal framework to address the impact of climate change on traditional farming communities, through the preservation of ancestral agricultural knowledges between old and emerging Mediterranean regions of Europe.
About this event series
Dreams, Desires and Aspirations: Imaginative Landscapes of Prosperity
At UCL Institute for Global Prosperity we are working towards a new model of prosperity for the 21st century, reworking the way we conceive and run our economies, our societies, and our relationship with the planet. Our social and collective imaginaries, dreams, and aspirations are at the core of that mission, not only in understanding how people strive towards ideas of prosperity, but in unearthing how and why different ideas are constructed as they are. This term, we are inviting scholars, novelists, politicians, artists, and film-makers to help us excavate some of the imaginary forces that brought ‘prosperity’ to where it is today, and where it might be taken tomorrow.
Director's Seminars are an opportunity for audiences to get an in-depth theoretical perspective on sustainable and inclusive prosperity. These Seminars are given by academics who are pushing for new ways of thinking and new ways of researching society's grand challenges.