Trespass Journal

Book Review – The Autonomous Life? Paradoxes of hierarchy and authority in the squatters movement in Amsterdam

Book Review – The Autonomous Life? Paradoxes of  hierarchy and authority in the squatters movement in Amsterdam

NN

ISBN: 978-1-7849-9411-2; https://www.oapen.org/view?docId=608061.xhtml

Chapter 2: The habitus of emotional sovereignty

The following conversation occurred among a small group sitting in a private bedroom at approximately 3 a.m. at a squatters’ party.

I’ve been squatting in Amsterdam for the past decade and I want to comment on this book, which I think is trash.

1 I read the book when it came and I am amazed at David Graeber’s glowing review because it’s not much more than gossip and finishing scores, with some clunky academic analysis of late night conversations. It is difficult to judge a book that is full of ad hominem attacks without responding in kind; This made me wonder if it was really worth assessing the book. On reflection, I feel that someone has to answer because otherwise written lies become accepted truths.

2 It is terrible that Kadir criticizes a female friend in the book for being fat (despite the pseudonyms it is easy to find out who the people were): “To be clear, there is a difference between being considered
overweight, for which there is more acceptance in the subculture, and being obese.” Perhaps Kadir did not like this person? I can not understand this kind of thing in an academic work.

3 Another male activist is criticized that he is old, pittiful, unmarried and still in the movement, as if people use squatting to sort out their living needs as they go on young adventures and then they go
further to standardized middle class behaviors such as education at a university or a family. If it is still possible people would actually have coherent revolutionary politics, then this argument is nonsense.
This person is controversial, sure, but he is part of the scene and I respect him for still doing things [actually he just died – RiP].

A number of movement researchers feel their academic production serves as an extension of their activism. I do not share this approach.

4 Kadir is an American, Yale-trained anthropologist who judges European squatters because they do not comply with their rhetoric of nonhierarchy. That does not look good, it seems colonial. Of course, the movement is not perfect, no one would argue … but what about her own positions? She criticizes hierarchical behavior in others, but tells how she moved into a house and forced the inhabitants to clean it up. She criticizes kraakbonzen (male squat boss figures) but is/was dating a “charismatic leader” – sorry to become personal, but how else to challenge the hypocrisy?

And if you look for it, you’ll see the hypocrisy everywhere. Another example: Kadir criticizes the hegemonic history of squatting in Amsterdam (1980s glory days), but just repeats it herself. She scorns the nostalgic views of the movement, but then says “squatting was widespread in the 1980s when it was idealistic. Now its done mainly by foreigners who do it for free housing rather than out of ideals.” And another example : She talks about how history is told by those who have the privilege of writing it without examining her own privilege. Another: Kadir writes that people should study the history of Surinaamers squatting in Amsterdam in the 1970s and 1980s, but acknowledges that she did not do it herself. Another: she emphasizes the importance of interviewing women (of course valid to say), but at one point uses the opinions of three men “as a result of methodological coincidence / convenience.” I really would recommend to anyone who reads the book to see if she is really passing the criticisms she rolls out.

5 Here are some comments of Amsterdam squatters when the book has been published so that you can judge how people in the scene have found the book: https://www.indymedia.nl/node/34262. A comrade of Joe’s Garage (a social center in Amsterdam) was angry that she was cooking with them, and so on, without informing that they were research subjects and that she would repeat midnight conversations in a PhD. Very unethical.

I realized after a few months that the cost of squatting had outweighed the benefits and moved to rental accommodation to finish my dissertation.

In memory of Ouwesiem

It is with sadness that we pass on the news that Ouwesiem has died yesterday. He was active for decades in the Dutch squatters movement and known to many. We will commemorate our loss by continuing the fight!

More updates in Dutch at https://www.indymedia.nl/node/42086

RiP

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Utrecht: Watertower squatted to protest squatban, later evicted

Yesterday (October 1) a water tower in Utrecht (in the Netherlands) was squatted to mark seven years since the criminalisation of squatting. The long empty building (which was already squatted in the past) is a perfect example of the necessity to occupy empty buildings. A big banner was put on the building saying ‘Fuck the squatban.’ Unfortunately the state responded with overwhelming force and evicted the building the same day. According to reports, seven people were arrested, six squatters and one person outside for “insulting the police”. Solidarity with the arrestees!

Here follows a (quickly translated) statement from the squatters:
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Proposal to create an International Anarchist Defence Fund

In summer of 2017 a few activists discussed the idea of creating an International Anarchist Defense Fund.

Why is it needed?
Basically, it is a Fund that is supposed to financially help anarchist who got in trouble for their activism (either repression or medical problems). It’s true, there are a bunch of ABC chapters or other support groups all over the world, but in many places there are still not enough money or activists to maintain a solidarity campaign on their own. Thus, this fund is seen as a way to complement the work existing solidarity groups and to provide support to individuals with no or little support.
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Prague – Summary of the current situation for Klinika social centre

On Tuesday 5th September 2017 the Prague municipal court by its decision opened the way for the eviction of Klinika. Our appeal was rejected as the court upheld the view of the state (owner of the house) that they were within their rights not to extend the contract with us. The collective is convinced that the autonomous social centre can remain functioning regardless of the decision. It is senseless to destroy a functional social centre visited by thousands of people for an uncertain and highly uneconomical reconstruction of the building into offices, whose approval alone will take a few years due to the need to change the zoning regulations which do not allow offices at the site.
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Book Review: Squatting in Britain 1945-1955

Squatting in Britain 1945-1955 by Don Watson
ISBN: 978-1-60486-810-4
PP: 264
Publisher: The Merlin Press
£16.99

After World War II, many people squatted empty properties, often government-owned ex-Army camps, since a housing crisis had been created as a result of the hugely damaged housing stock, slow state action to build new homes and a huge influx of returning servicemen as well as displaced peoples from other countries.
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DSEI London: Conference at the Gates

Call for paper/activities/participants

Hopefully, you like what you have read about Conference at the Gates 2015, and you are excited to join us for our event on the 8th of September 2017

This year we want to do something similar, but bigger, and with a bit more emphasis on collaboration. Last time we ran it as a fairly standard academic conference, with themed panels and talks, interspersed with workshops by activists from for example Bahrain Watch and ForcesWatch.
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Conflict and Autonomy in Bologna (2016)

“We made Làbas to create a rupture in the linearity of our history and identity.”

Transcript from the seminar ”Conflict and Autonomy in Bologna – Building the Common” held in Lymy, Helsinki 13.4.2016 with guests from the collective Làbas based in Bologna, Italy.

Mixcloud:

Transcript below:
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Evictions in Bologna

Police injured more than a dozen people, two seriously, on a day where two social centres were violently evicted in Bologna.

Activists in Bologna were awoken at dawn on Tuesday (8th Aug) to news of evictions at two of the city’s social centres, Làbas and Laboratorio Crash. At Làbas, where the violence took place, this has resulted in over 30 people, including 14 migrants, being made homeless.
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Undocumented – a letter to de groene amsterdammer

Thanks for the extended article about the parallel world of undocumented fellow towns-men. Chris Keulemans sketches in the article a pretty complete image of the world in which people without documents try to live, both the daily reality as well as the paper reality of policy documents, juridical rulings and political discussions concerning respecting the most banal human rights: food, clothes and shelter.
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