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Save-the-date: Public lecture at SLU with Prof. Tania Murray Li

March 12, 2025

Mark your calendar for a public lecture by Tania Murray Li, titled “Development-Imposed Harms, Differentiated Citizenship, and Access to Redress: Towards a Comparative Account,” at SLU on May 21, 2025.

Photo: Mikael Kristenson/Unsplash

On 21 May 2025 (16.00-17.30), the Division of Rural Development at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) will be hosting a public lecture by Prof. Tania Murray Li titled ‘’Development-imposed harms, differentiated citizenship, and access to redress: Towards a comparative account ’’.

About the lecture

In the Global South, development programs are usually presented as interventions that improve peoples’ lives, notably by providing infrastructure and generating jobs. Yet all too often such programs also cause harm to particular social groups who may be displaced from their land, robbed of water and other resources, or affected by pollution. While the harms are consistent, people in different corners of the Global South have different approaches to seeking redress, and radically different capacities to achieve any sort of justice. In many contexts, distinctions established in the colonial era continue to expose nominally-equal citizens to uncompensated harms. Drawing on collaborative research with colleagues at UMR-SENS, this talk sets out a framework for examining these differences. Why are recourse to law and the courts, or mass mobilizations, or media campaigns so prominent in some countries and virtually absent in others?

The lecture will be held at the assembly hall in the teaching building at campus Ultuna, Uppsala (SLU).

About Tania Murray Li

She is a Professor of Anthropology at the University of Toronto. Her publications include Land’s End: Capitalist Relations on an Indigenous Frontier (Duke University Press, 2014), Powers of Exclusion: Land Dilemmas in Southeast Asia (with Derek Hall and Philip Hirsch, NUS Press, 2011), The Will to Improve: Governmentality, Development, and the Practice of Politics (Duke University Press, 2007) and many articles on land, labour, class, capitalism, development, resources and indigeneity with a particular focus on Indonesia.

Her latest book Plantation Life: Corporate Occupation of Indonesia’s Oil Palm Zone (Duke University Press, 2021) is co-authored with Pujo Semedi (Universitas Gadjah Mada)

Note: The lecture will be followed by a mingle.