
Lara Monticelli
I hold a master’s degree in Economics and Social Sciences (Bocconi University, Milan) and a Ph.D. in Economic Sociology (University of Brescia). Before joining Copenhagen Business School as an Assistant Professor and Marie Skłodowska-Curie fellow in September 2018, I have been awarded an individual grant by the Italian Fondazione Banca del Monte di Lombardia to conduct an explorative project on ecological and utopian communities in collaboration with the Dutch Research Institute for Transitions (DRIFT), Erasmus University (Rotterdam).
Prior to this, I worked as a post-doctoral research fellow at the Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences at Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa (Italy). The research I conducted during my post-doc was focusing on the study of political engagement among young precarious workers, combining perspectives from the sociology of work, social movement, and political participation studies.
My current EU funded Marie Skłodowska-Curie fellowship (2018-2021), titled ‘EcoLabSS – Ecovillages as Laboratories of Sustainability and Social Change’, focuses on the (re)emergence of community-based, prefigurative social movements (e.g. sustainable communities, eco-villages, transition towns, solidarity networks) as living laboratories experimenting with practices of resilience and resistance to environmental, economic and societal challenges. I am especially interested in how these movements re-politicize and re-configure everyday life, thus representing radical attempts to embody the critique to contemporary capitalism and prefigure alternative, sustainable futures.
I am also involved in a number of parallel research and editorial projects in collaboration with non-governmental organizations like the Global Ecovillage Network and ECOLISE – the European Network for Community-Led Initiatives on Climate Change and Sustainability.
In the past years, I have co-chaired two mini-conferences within the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (Berkeley 2016, Lyon 2017), creating a vibrant and international forum for the discussion of the emerging, interdisciplinary research field focusing on prefigurative politics, alternative futures and radical imagination in grassroots, community-based social movements. Since 2017, I am the co-founder and co-chair of the new research network 'Alternatives to Capitalism' within the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE).
I am affiliated researcher at the CoresNet research network for the study of consumption networks and practices of sustainable economies and a member of the collective “Women on the Verge” that gathers female scholar-activists from Australia, Italy, Mexico, Netherlands, the UK and the USA.
Prior to this, I worked as a post-doctoral research fellow at the Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences at Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa (Italy). The research I conducted during my post-doc was focusing on the study of political engagement among young precarious workers, combining perspectives from the sociology of work, social movement, and political participation studies.
My current EU funded Marie Skłodowska-Curie fellowship (2018-2021), titled ‘EcoLabSS – Ecovillages as Laboratories of Sustainability and Social Change’, focuses on the (re)emergence of community-based, prefigurative social movements (e.g. sustainable communities, eco-villages, transition towns, solidarity networks) as living laboratories experimenting with practices of resilience and resistance to environmental, economic and societal challenges. I am especially interested in how these movements re-politicize and re-configure everyday life, thus representing radical attempts to embody the critique to contemporary capitalism and prefigure alternative, sustainable futures.
I am also involved in a number of parallel research and editorial projects in collaboration with non-governmental organizations like the Global Ecovillage Network and ECOLISE – the European Network for Community-Led Initiatives on Climate Change and Sustainability.
In the past years, I have co-chaired two mini-conferences within the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (Berkeley 2016, Lyon 2017), creating a vibrant and international forum for the discussion of the emerging, interdisciplinary research field focusing on prefigurative politics, alternative futures and radical imagination in grassroots, community-based social movements. Since 2017, I am the co-founder and co-chair of the new research network 'Alternatives to Capitalism' within the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics (SASE).
I am affiliated researcher at the CoresNet research network for the study of consumption networks and practices of sustainable economies and a member of the collective “Women on the Verge” that gathers female scholar-activists from Australia, Italy, Mexico, Netherlands, the UK and the USA.
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Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles by Lara Monticelli
Dinerstein, A.C. (2015) The politics of autonomy in Latin America. The art of
organizing hope. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. (PB, pp. 282, £ 34.99,
ISBN 978-1-349-32298-5).
Books, Edited Volumes and Special Issues by Lara Monticelli
All articles are freely downloadable, and you can also download a single PDF file containing all the contributions from the link above.
With contributions by : David Harvey, Michael Hardt/Toni Negri, Christian Fuchs, Silvia Federici, Slavoj Žižek, Erik Olin Wright, Lara Monticelli, Friederike Beier, Wayne Hope, Todd Wolfson & Peter Funke, Joss Hands, Peter McLaren & Petar Jandrić, Ingo Schmidt, Bahar Kayıhan, Joff P.N. Bradley & Alex Taek-Gwang Lee, Paul O'Connell, Chihab El Khachab, Franklin Dmitryev & Eugene Gogol, Bryant William Sculos, Leila Salim Leal, Paul Reynolds, Ben Whitham, Rosa Luxemburg.
Il libro studia i mutamenti dell'associazionismo assumendo come punto di osservazione i circoli giovanili dell'universo ARCI nella provincia di Mantova. La prospettiva considerata risulta particolarmente interessante: ARCI ha mantenuto livelli di adesione costanti, arrivando in talune aree a duplicare gli iscritti proprio grazie ai nuovi circoli giovanili.
Anche in un periodo di generale contrazione della partecipazione associativa questa realtà ideologicamente caratterizzata ha confermato o esteso la sua presenza. Comprendere quindi i circoli giovanili, la loro composizione e il loro sentire, significa gettare una luce importante sulle tendenze con le quali ARCI - ma più in generale tutto il mondo dell'associazionismo - dovrà confrontarsi nel prossimo futuro.
Una corretta decodifica di quello che i giovani dicono ed esprimono può dunque mettere a disposizione di tutti coloro che lavorano con e nell'associazionismo italiano strumenti utili per sviluppare politiche di member-raising significative ed efficaci.
"
Book chapters by Lara Monticelli
Reserch Reports by Lara Monticelli
This report principal aim consists in shedding some light on the potential contradictions arising from the tension between “standardization”, coming from NPM organizational approaches, and the growing attempts to offer tailor-made, individualized employment and training services . In order to focus on this theme, a relevant part of this report is focused on one side on the variety of instruments, formats and modules used by street-level bureaucrats to process and categorize users in their every-day routine activities and on the other, on the various programs aimed at providing individual-specific services. A second relevant research theme regards dualization of labor policies. In several countries, public employment services are divided into those targeting “normal” job seekers and “disadvantaged” categories. But what are the definitions used to define a “normal” and a “disadvantaged” job seeker? And in which way does the mechanism “enforcement-reward” function at the local level in the case study of Italy?
Call For Papers by Lara Monticelli
The goal of this new research network is to advance the international, comparative and interdisciplinary study of theories, practices, social movements, communities and other organizations that are advocating, experimenting with and constructing alternatives to contemporary capitalism.
More specifically, the research network has three goals: 1) To bridge the disparate interpretative frameworks that exist by engaging in a theoretical systematization of the literature; 2) To map existing alternatives embedded within various socioeconomic , political and geographic contexts; 3) To encourage the use of innovative research methods that can provide new insights and reach broader audiences.
(https://sase.org/2016---berkeley/mini-conferences_fr_232.html)
Location: Berkeley, University of California
Date: June 24-26, 2016
Mini-conference organisers: Francesca Forno, Paolo R. Graziano, Lara Monticelli, and Torsten Geelan
Extended abstract: approx. 1000 words to be submitted through the SASE website, clearly stating that you wish to be considered for this mini-conference (https://sase.org)
Expected output: edited collection or special issue
Extra-conference activity: visiting/dining at a local co-operative/eco-village (tbc)
Any questions: email ([email protected])
Dinerstein, A.C. (2015) The politics of autonomy in Latin America. The art of
organizing hope. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. (PB, pp. 282, £ 34.99,
ISBN 978-1-349-32298-5).
All articles are freely downloadable, and you can also download a single PDF file containing all the contributions from the link above.
With contributions by : David Harvey, Michael Hardt/Toni Negri, Christian Fuchs, Silvia Federici, Slavoj Žižek, Erik Olin Wright, Lara Monticelli, Friederike Beier, Wayne Hope, Todd Wolfson & Peter Funke, Joss Hands, Peter McLaren & Petar Jandrić, Ingo Schmidt, Bahar Kayıhan, Joff P.N. Bradley & Alex Taek-Gwang Lee, Paul O'Connell, Chihab El Khachab, Franklin Dmitryev & Eugene Gogol, Bryant William Sculos, Leila Salim Leal, Paul Reynolds, Ben Whitham, Rosa Luxemburg.
Il libro studia i mutamenti dell'associazionismo assumendo come punto di osservazione i circoli giovanili dell'universo ARCI nella provincia di Mantova. La prospettiva considerata risulta particolarmente interessante: ARCI ha mantenuto livelli di adesione costanti, arrivando in talune aree a duplicare gli iscritti proprio grazie ai nuovi circoli giovanili.
Anche in un periodo di generale contrazione della partecipazione associativa questa realtà ideologicamente caratterizzata ha confermato o esteso la sua presenza. Comprendere quindi i circoli giovanili, la loro composizione e il loro sentire, significa gettare una luce importante sulle tendenze con le quali ARCI - ma più in generale tutto il mondo dell'associazionismo - dovrà confrontarsi nel prossimo futuro.
Una corretta decodifica di quello che i giovani dicono ed esprimono può dunque mettere a disposizione di tutti coloro che lavorano con e nell'associazionismo italiano strumenti utili per sviluppare politiche di member-raising significative ed efficaci.
"
This report principal aim consists in shedding some light on the potential contradictions arising from the tension between “standardization”, coming from NPM organizational approaches, and the growing attempts to offer tailor-made, individualized employment and training services . In order to focus on this theme, a relevant part of this report is focused on one side on the variety of instruments, formats and modules used by street-level bureaucrats to process and categorize users in their every-day routine activities and on the other, on the various programs aimed at providing individual-specific services. A second relevant research theme regards dualization of labor policies. In several countries, public employment services are divided into those targeting “normal” job seekers and “disadvantaged” categories. But what are the definitions used to define a “normal” and a “disadvantaged” job seeker? And in which way does the mechanism “enforcement-reward” function at the local level in the case study of Italy?
The goal of this new research network is to advance the international, comparative and interdisciplinary study of theories, practices, social movements, communities and other organizations that are advocating, experimenting with and constructing alternatives to contemporary capitalism.
More specifically, the research network has three goals: 1) To bridge the disparate interpretative frameworks that exist by engaging in a theoretical systematization of the literature; 2) To map existing alternatives embedded within various socioeconomic , political and geographic contexts; 3) To encourage the use of innovative research methods that can provide new insights and reach broader audiences.
(https://sase.org/2016---berkeley/mini-conferences_fr_232.html)
Location: Berkeley, University of California
Date: June 24-26, 2016
Mini-conference organisers: Francesca Forno, Paolo R. Graziano, Lara Monticelli, and Torsten Geelan
Extended abstract: approx. 1000 words to be submitted through the SASE website, clearly stating that you wish to be considered for this mini-conference (https://sase.org)
Expected output: edited collection or special issue
Extra-conference activity: visiting/dining at a local co-operative/eco-village (tbc)
Any questions: email ([email protected])