* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download InterCultural Futures
Marx's theory of alienation wikipedia , lookup
Intercultural competence wikipedia , lookup
Foucault's lectures at the Collège de France wikipedia , lookup
Security, Territory, Population wikipedia , lookup
Ecogovernmentality wikipedia , lookup
Embedded liberalism wikipedia , lookup
Political economy in anthropology wikipedia , lookup
Contemporary history wikipedia , lookup
Anthropology of development wikipedia , lookup
Other (philosophy) wikipedia , lookup
InterCultural Futures Young People and the Coming of the 3rd Industrial Revolution: Challenges for Education, Training and Work in the Asian Century Peter Kelly Working Paper No. 1 InterCultural Futures 1 InterCultural Futures Centre for Education, Training and Work in the Asian Century Working Paper Series Series Editors Barbara Chancellor Michael Crowhurst Philip Doecke Annette Gough Richard Johnson Peter Kelly Jude Ocean Rachel Patrick Marg Sellers Geoff Shacklock The Centre for Education, Training and Work in the Asian Century aims to provide a sophisticated and critical engagement with debates about what the development of an Asian century means for key dimensions of education, training and work. Understandings of education, training and work, of childhood, youth and young adulthood, of transitions, relationships and family structures, of culture, politics and the economy, of development, migration and strategic relations, are being remade in the context of the Asian century. Not only in Asia, but globally. Research, scholarship and teaching in the Centre is vitally concerned with exploring and contributing to debates about how the experience of these developments by children and young people, by adults and communities in various parts of the globe, is marked by growth, development and opportunities, and by crisis, marginalisation, and exploitation. The Working Paper Series has a number of aims: o To provide opportunities for publishing the results and findings of research, commentary and critique on significant issues related to the work of the Centre, along with explorations of innovative and significant theoretical and methodological developments; o To provide a timely means to publish provocative and initial accounts of work that may be further developed and published elsewhere as it develops; o To provide opportunities for exceptional undergraduate and postgraduate work to be published and circulated to wider audiences; o To provide opportunities for a variety of work to published – experimental, innovative, imaginative, critical, progressive, more mainstream, but always scholarly. 2 InterCultural Futures Abstract Recent commentary has extolled the virtues of a so-called Third Industrial Revolution (TIR). The First Industrial Revolution emerged in England at the end of the 18th century and was powered by steam; the Second Industrial Revolution emerged in the US at the start of the 20th century and was powered by electricity (the First and Second revolutions are machined based and fueled by carbon); the Third Industrial Revolution emerges globally, will be digital, bio-genetic and post-carbon. The paper suggests that the digitisation of manufacturing processes (in ways that mimic the digitisation of other sectors of the economy); the emergence of large scale 3D printing/additive manufacturing technologies using new materials (carbonfibre composites) and bio-genetic and nano-technologies; and a profound upscaling of labour-replacing automation technologies in other sectors of the economy, will pose numerous challenges and opportunities for young people’s education, training and work in the coming decades. The paper argues that a concern with a ‘lost generation’ in the wake of the 2008-2009 GFC, while challenging and profound, should be ‘augmented’ with a longer-term view of the futures that we make and leave to young people. Futures, if made in the image of a rapacious capitalism, will be concerned mainly with costs/efficiencies/profits and the commodification of everything, fuelled by the Internet of Things, and digitally and bio-genetically energised. Keywords Young People; Third Industrial Revolution; Education and Training; Work; The Self as Enterprise InterCultural Futures 3 Young People and the Coming of the 3rd Industrial Revolution Utopian or Dystopian Futures? Utopia u·to·pi·a yo͞ oˈtōpēə/ noun: utopia; plural noun: utopias An imagined place or state of things in which everything is perfect. The word was first used in the book Utopia (1516) by Sir Thomas More. Dystopia dys·to·pi·a disˈtōpēə/ noun: dystopia; plural noun: dystopias An imagined place or state in which everything is unpleasant or bad, typically a totalitarian or environmentally degraded one.1 The Economist magazine ran a special feature in 2012 in which it extolled the virtues of a so-called Third Industrial Revolution (TIR). For the want of more space the TIR can be made knowable along these lines: the First Industrial Revolution emerged in England at the end of the 18th century and was powered by steam; the Second Industrial Revolution emerged in the US at the start of the 20th century and was powered by electricity (the First and Second revolutions are machined based and fueled by carbon); the Third Industrial Revolution emerges globally, will be digital, bio-genetic and postcarbon (or so its prophets [profits] claim). Briefly, the various writers in The Economist imagine the TIR as being about the further digitisation of manufacturing processes (in ways that mimic the digitisation of other sectors of the economy); the emergence of large scale 3D printing/additive manufacturing technologies using new materials (carbon-fibre composites) and bio-genetic and nano-technologies; and a profound up-scaling of labourreplacing automation technologies in other sectors of the economy. In one of 1BothdefinitionsfromGoogle,whereagraphicalrepresentationindicatesamassive th expansionin‘mentions’/usageofbothtermsfromthelasthalfofthe20 century. 4 InterCultural Futures these articles Paul Markillie (2012) references the ‘productivity’ gains at Nissan’s UK factory without any sense of the human consequences of the labour redundancies embedded in these ‘efficiencies’: ‘Nissan’s British factory in Sunderland, opened in 1986, is now one of the most productive in Europe. In 1999 it built 271,157 cars with 4,594 people. Last year it made 480,485 vehicles—more than any other car factory in Britain, ever—with just 5,462 people’. Jeremy Rifkin, of The End of Work (1995) fame, has been very successful in positioning himself as a key advisor to the European Commission (EC), and to individual European leaders (he claims to have the ear of Germany’s Angela Merkel and François Hollande of France, among others) on ‘issues related to the economy, climate change, and energy security’ – all of which are framed by his working of the idea of the TIR, and its Five Pillars: (1) ‘shifting to renewable energy; (2) transforming the building stock of every continent into green micro–power plants to collect renewable energies on-site; (3) deploying hydrogen and other storage technologies in every building and throughout the infrastructure to store intermittent energies; (4) using Internet technology to transform the power grid of every continent into an energy internet that acts just like the Internet; (5) transitioning the transport fleet to electric plug-in and fuel cell vehicles that can buy and sell green electricity on a smart, continental, interactive power grid’ (Rifkin 2015). For Rifkin (2015) the five pillars of the TIR ‘will create thousands of businesses and millions of jobs, and usher in a fundamental reordering of human relationships, from hierarchical to lateral power, that will impact the way we conduct business, govern society, educate our children, and engage in civic life’. This digital re-ordering and re-engineering of the social, the cultural, the economic and the political and is imagined as being facilitated by the Internet of Things (IoT). The IoT ‘will connect everyone and everything in a seamless network. People, machines, natural resources, production lines, logistics networks, consumption habits, recycling flows, and virtually every other aspect of economic and social life will be connected via sensors and software to the TIR platform’ (Rifkin 2015). When the IoT meets Big Data, automated systems and advanced algorithmic analytics then the TIR will ‘dramatically increase productivity, and reduce the marginal cost of producing and delivering a full range of goods and services to near zero across the entire economy’. In early 2015 respected English novelist, essayist and commentator John Lanchester published a long review of The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant Technologies by Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee (2014), and Tyler Cowen’s (2014) Average Is Over: Powering America beyond the Age of the Great Stagnation, in the London Review of Books. In a wide-ranging essay Lanchester (2015) is much more skeptical and wary of some of the claims made for the TIR, or the Second Machine Age – particularly in terms of the future of work and the labour market possibilities of these emergent possibilities: ‘The kind of work done in most factories, and anywhere else that requires repetitive manual labour, is going, going, and about to be gone.’ Most starkly, Lanchester InterCultural Futures 5 (2015) references suggestions that the automation processes promised by robotics, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and bio-genetic and nano-technologies means that ‘the labour being done by these robots is work that will never again be done by people’. He cites Wassily Leontief, a Nobel laureate in economics, who 20 years ago claimed that ‘the role of humans as the most important factor of production is bound to diminish in the same way that the role of horses in agricultural production was first diminished and then eliminated by the introduction of tractors.’ Significantly, Lanchester (2015) indicates that it is not just manual labour that is at risk in these processes: he cites, for example, a press release from Associated Press (AP) about Apple’s multi-billion dollar quarterly results for the end of 2014 – that was not written by humans, but produced by software owned by a company called Automated Insights. For Lanchester (2015) the emergent possibilities of the TIR evoke ‘a longstanding vein of thinking concerning “technological unemployment”’, a concept first articulated by J M Keynes to describe the ‘means of economising the use of labour outrunning the pace at which we can find new uses for labour’. For Lanchester (2015) this is a form of progress that ‘makes jobs go away through the sheer speed of its impact’. Technology, its development, deployment and uses, is never neutral. Much of Lanchester’s essay points to the ways in which social, cultural, economic and political histories and trajectories shape and are shaped by these emergences: capitalism historically seeks to replace labour to drive efficiencies and reduce costs; low-skilled, low paid workers are always vulnerable; the working and middle classes of the First and Second Industrial revolution may indeed be ‘zombies’ (Beck 1992, 2000); and the future has to be made/colonised (but by whom, with what purposes, and what consequences?). There are significant challenges for youth studies in these emergent possibilities – related to the consequences for coming generations of young people of the family, education, training, work, and cultural dimensions of a so-called TIR. Challenges and opportunities for thinking that may not necessarily be productively engaged through the sort of political economy of the distribution and reproduction of youth disadvantage as outlined by James Côté (2014). In the Self as Enterprise (Kelly 2013), for example, I referenced Nigel Thrift’s (2005) Knowing Capitalism and his framing of a new political economy, a political economy that tries to come to grips with some of the transformations that have reshaped the character of capitalism in the last 30 years, and which may emerge in the TIR. We can identify three key elements of this political economy, including: (1) the discursive power of the cultural circuits of capitalism, in which capitalism endlessly commodifies the deconstruction and reassembling of capitalism’s own failings, successes and dysfunctions – and feeds it to itself; (2) the changing form of the commodity, a change possibly best exemplified by the monetisation of the electronic traces we leave as we ‘freely’ roam the web – in ways that make the Mark Zuckerbergs of the world multi-billionaires; (3) and the ways in which time and space are reconfigured as a productive grid of resources, so that, for example, we can work, shop and play 24/7 – in/from the office, our bedroom, the bus stop – and we and others (such as our managers) resent it when we don’t, or can’t. 6 InterCultural Futures So, what to make of these possible futures? Futures are always waiting to be colonised (Giddens 1990). From where we currently stand some possible futures are more probable than others. Given that youth studies takes young people as its object, their pasts and presents, but fundamentally their futures, then we should have at least a wary eye to what is being discussed, what is happening in what might be called future studies.2 Are these futures -possible and/or probable - Utopian? Dystopian? More importantly, for the discussion I want to develop here, are the ‘financial crisis’, the ‘crisis’ of sovereign debt, austerity and the great recession – the OECD/EU’s ‘lost decade’ - masking long run processes that are hinted at, made explicit by the idea of the TIR? Young People, the GFC and the Great Recession In this, the second decade of the 21st century, many young people in the OECD/EU economies appear to be carrying a particularly heavy burden for many of the downstream effects of the GFC. The unfolding/echoing effects of the Great Recession in Europe and the US, and the emergence of sovereign debt crises and significant austerity programs in many EU/OECD economies represents a largely successful framing of responses to the downstream effects of the GFC as being principally about State debt levels. In this discourse those that depend most on State provided services, payments and programs are the ones carrying the greatest burden of government austerity measures. It is in this sense that I have suggested that today’s young people and young adults, and the generations who will follow and grow up in the unfolding aftermath of the GFC, will carry a particularly heavy burden in terms of changed education and employment circumstances and opportunities; consequences for physical and mental health and well-being; consumption, housing, relationship and parenting aspirations; and a sense of self in relation to the possibilities for participation in the liberal democracies (Kelly, 2016). In the European Union, for example, over 5 million young people (under 25) were unemployed in the EU-28 area in the second quarter of 2014 (an unemployment rate of 21.7% [23.2% in the euro area] – a rate twice as high as the adult unemployment rate of 9.0%). In addition, 7.5 million young Europeans between 15 and 24 are classified, problematically, as neither in employment, nor in education or training (NEETs). Variations in these rates across the EU are extreme. There is a gap of nearly 50 percentage points between the EU country with the lowest rate of youth unemployment (Germany at 7.8% in July 2014) and the EU country with the highest rate, Spain (53.8% in July 2014) (European Commission 2015). As many have suggested these sorts of aggregate figures don’t reveal the ways in which different groups and communities and different localities are differently impacted, how different labour markets offer more or less opportunities for particular populations of young people, or what combinations of social class, gender, ethnicity and geography shape the exclusion and marginalisation of young people from education, from work, from housing, from consumption, from the possibilities of family relationships. For example, a recent Australian study by the Brotherhood of St Laurence (a faith based non-government agency) suggested that data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics indicated that in early 2014 the youth unemployment rate (for 15 to 24 year 2SeethislinktoanumberofJournalsinthefieldoffutures: http://www.wfsf.org/resources/futures-publications-journals InterCultural Futures 7 olds) was 12.2%. Importantly, this rate was much higher in certain towns/cities/regions: 21% in West and North West Tasmania, including Burnie and Devonport; 20.5% in Cairns (Queensland); 19.7% in northern Adelaide, including Elizabeth and Gawler (SA); 17.5% in Hume (Victoria), including Goulburn Valley, Wodonga and Wangaratta; 17.3% in Mandurah (WA); and 16.8% in Parramatta (NSW) (Brotherhood of St Laurence 2014). These gross and regionally segmented unemployment figures also don’t tell us much about the types of work, the sorts of jobs that are available to many people, young and old. As I wrote in the Self as Enterprise (Kelly 2013) work can be ‘better than sex’, or ‘toil and drudgery’, and can say much about the sorts of choices that the self as enterprise can or cannot make, and how these choices echo through much of a life. In addition, in many OECD and EU economies governments have, for the last few decades, been shifting the burden for the cost of higher education to students. In this context high levels of youth unemployment and precarious employment, student debt accompanying increased costs for higher education, housing costs that lock many out of home ownership, and the challenges for young people’s physical and mental health and well-being are re-shaping young people’s sense of self and of their chances for meaningful participation in relationships and settings that traditionally identified someone as an adult, as a citizen. The Self as Enterprise: Neo-Liberalism’s Ideal Subject? In this section I want to situate this discussion in a brief account of why it is productive to think about the self as an enterprise, and the ways in which neo-Liberalism, as an art of government (Foucault 1991), seeks to make the individual responsible for the choices, outcomes and consequences of managing this enterprise. In The Protestant Ethic and the “Spirit” of Capitalism Max Weber (2002) explored the particular virtues that should be seen as attaching to work, and the particular influence that certain Protestant sects had on articulating these virtues. Weber’s (2002, pp.9-11) concern was with investigating the relationship between a Puritan/Calvinist view that hard work, done well, was its own reward, and a so-called spirit of capitalism – the essence of which was seen, by Weber, to be captured in the home-spun philosophy of Benjamin Franklin. Weber makes no claims for the representativeness, even truthfulness of Franklin’s incitements and advice. Yet, for Weber (2002, p.11) there is little doubt that what is found in Franklin’s advice, a ‘philosophy of avarice’, is the idea of ‘the duty of the individual to work toward the increase of his wealth, which is assumed to be an end in itself’. This spirit has, for Franklin, ‘the character of an ethically slanted maxim for the conduct of life [Lebensführung]. This is the specific sense in which we propose to use the concept of the “spirit of capitalism”’. Weber saw in the Protestant Ethic only one of the motive forces for the emergence of rationalised capitalism. A Protestant ethic promised heavenly salvation, and an earth bound redemption as the outcome of the pursuit of the individual’s calling. I have suggested that 21st century, flexible capitalism is energised by a spirit that sees in the cultivation of the self - as an ongoing, never ending enterprise - an ethically slanted maxim for the conduct of a life. This spirit is identifiable as an institutionally structured, individualised 8 InterCultural Futures entrepreneurialism: a structured series of incitements, suggestions, imperatives to manage the lifecourse, the biography as an entrepreneurial DIY project (Kelly 2013). Michel Foucault’s (1985, 1986, 1991) later work on the care of the self; the central part played by an analysis of the relationships between knowledge/power/subjects in this work; the focus on the ways in which forms of management and regulation, and practices of the self interact to shape the ways in which we practise our freedom in neo-Liberal spaces; and a refusal to ground this analytic in a theory of the Subject provides a powerful framework for thinking about the self as enterprise and the processes of individualisation and responsibilisation at play in the conduct of this enterprise. Foucault’s work throws into relief questions about the ways in which we practise our freedom, and are managed and regulated as Subjects who are free to choose, and who must carry the consequences of the choices we make (Rose 1999a). An extensive literature that draws on Foucault’s work argues that neo-Liberal governmentalities produce understandings of the self as an autonomous, self governing enterprise that should, ideally, be capable of identifying, navigating and managing the opportunities and risks of 21st century capitalism. The idea of the self as enterprise opens up for analysis our willing participation in globalised, precarious labour markets (Bunting 2004). To practise one’s freedom is to develop certain dispositions, behaviours, capacities and commitments – in settings and systems of interaction in which others seek to manage or encourage particular behaviours and dispositions. It is in the compulsion to choose, to make appropriate choices from a range of culturally and historically specific options that we, not only, practise our freedom, but also carry the responsibilities and obligations, or reap the rewards that flow from practising our freedom in these ways (Kelly 2013). This form of personhood has to be produced in a variety of settings, relationships and practices at different times during a life. In an Introduction to Foucault’s work on governmentality Colin Gordon (1991, pp. 43-44) argues that homo economicus, as the subject of neo-Liberalism, is both a ‘reactivation and a radical inversion’ of the subject of Scottish Enlightenment Liberalism. This reactivation centres on imagining human behaviours and dispositions in terms of rational, choice making man. For early Liberalism this male pronoun was an entirely appropriate way of constructing the subject as a ‘rational, interest-motivated economic ego’, engaged in private, individual, ‘atomistic, egoistic’ exchange relations that emerge from a particular ‘natural and historical milieu’ (Burchell 1996, p. 24). In this sense, argues Burchell (1996, p. 23), Liberal rationalities of government must take as their object, ‘the natural private-interest-motivated conduct of free, market exchanging individuals’, in so far as the behaviours and dispositions of such individuals are the foundation which enables various markets to operate ‘optimally’ in relation to their very essence. The radical inversion of this principle of Liberal rationalities of government takes a number of forms. Gordon (1991, pp. 4344) argues that the subject of Liberalism originally signified a subject whose motivations and desires must ‘remain forever untouchable by government’. For neo-Liberalism however, ‘homo economicus is manipulable man’, a subject who is ‘perpetually responsive’ to environmental cues, opportunities, incitements and risks. Within this way of thinking about the self, ‘economic InterCultural Futures 9 government joins hands with behaviourism’. This articulation works to construct a view of the subject as an ‘individual producer-consumer’ who, in certain quite fundamentally new ways is ‘not just an enterprise, but the entrepreneur of himself or herself’. Where the meanings of life are transformed into meanings that are structured by the market form, then the subjects of neo-Liberal rationalities of government emerge, argues Burchell (1996, pp. 22-23), as ‘free’, ‘entrepreneurial’, competitive and economically rational individuals. However, within these governmentalities this form of selfhood is not so much a ‘given of human nature as a consciously contrived style of conduct’. That is, this subject has to be made up – encouraged, incited, directed, educated, trained - via the mobilisation of diverse techniques, as the active, autonomous, responsible entrepreneur of her or his own DIY project of the self. Rose (1996, p. 57) argues that the self, in this sense, is conceived as an active, self-creating individual seeking to enterprise themselves. Individual biographical projects are the result, within this rationality, of the maximisation of the chances for a good life through acts of choice – through the practise of freedom. Life is accorded ‘meaning and value to the extent that it can be rationalized as the outcome of choices made or choices to be made’. In this sense an ethic of enterprise is a fluid, shifting, generalised, and at the same time contingent and contextual body of thoughts, ideas, recipes, forms of advice, injunctions and suggestions for how it is that we should know ourselves and act on ourselves. This ethic emerges from and gives shape to an array of always limited fields of possibility in which we are encouraged to imagine ourselves, our options, our choices, our aspirations in particular ways if we want to participate, on an on-going basis, in precarious labour markets. Participation that will provide, it is hoped, the forms of salvation even purpose and meaning - that paid work promises (Kelly 2013). Despite the ambitions of neo-Liberal governmentalities the self as enterprise cannot be ‘willed’ into existence. The regulation of the conduct of oneself and others is, in many respects, a failing exercise, an incomplete project, a more or less successful enterprise. The costs and benefits associated with this enterprise, the responsibilities for managing the consequences, the outcomes of this enterprise (intended or otherwise), and the capacities to identify and manage the risks and opportunities that confront this enterprise are, within neo-Liberal mentalities of rule, imagined as residing in and with the individual. As individuals we are imagined as being responsible for the choices we make, for the outcomes of choices made (and not), for managing the material ambiguities (Bauman 2001) and emotional costs of globalised, precarious labour markets (Elliott and Lemert 2006). Young People’s Futures: Supernumerary, Unneeded, of No Use? And, so, has the ‘crisis’ diverted our focus from longer run processes that are now being popularised through the language of the Third Industrial Revolution, the Second Machine Age? Zygmunt Bauman (2004), the influential sociologist of liquid modernity, would likely say yes. In Wasted Lives: Modernity and its Outcasts, he argues that at the start of the 21st century large numbers of people around the globe – hundreds of millions, in 10 InterCultural Futures fact – are surplus to requirements, are, indeed, redundant. Bauman (2004, pp.5-6) argues that this redundancy is a consequence of the global spread and triumph of modernisation processes. These modernisation processes can, largely, be understood in terms of the colonisation of all aspects of life, of all spaces and places by market forces, practices and processes under regimes of capital accumulation. As processes of modernisation have become truly globalised, as the ‘totality of human production and consumption has become money and market mediated, and the processes of the commodification, commercialization and monetarization of human livelihoods have penetrated every nook and cranny of the globe’, then the ‘crisis of the human waste disposal industry’ has become more acute. Being surplus to requirements, being redundant means that individuals are confronted with a life that does not provide the means to secure a livelihood. The idea of redundancy, the reality that you, or I, or we might be in-excess, is a powerful and disturbing concept and reality. In the first instance the concept of redundancy says something, means something, different to the concept of unemployment. Importantly, for Bauman (2004, pp.11-12), redundancy ‘whispers permanence and hints at the ordinariness of the condition.’ Redundancy, the sense that you, or I, or we are of limited or no use particularly in social, cultural and commercial environments in which usefulness not only brings material rewards, but also gives purpose and meaning to a life - can have profound consequences for a sense of self. As Bauman (2004, p.12) suggests: ‘To be ‘redundant’ means to be supernumerary, unneeded, of no use – whatever the needs and uses are that set the standard of usefulness and indispensability. The others do not need you; they can do as well, and better, without you’. What is more, to be redundant suggests that there is no ‘self evident reason for your being around and no obvious justification for your claim to have the right to stay around. To be declared redundant means to have been disposed of because of being disposable – just like the empty and non-refundable plastic bottle or once-used syringe, an unattractive commodity with no buyers...’ For Bauman (2004, p.12) redundancy, as a concept (but also, significantly, as a state of being) shares its ‘semantic space with ‘rejects’, ‘wastrels’, ‘garbage’, ‘refuse’ – with waste’. To be redundant or surplus to requirements holds out different possibilities or prospects to being unemployed: ‘The destination of the unemployed, of the ‘reserve army of labour’, was to be called back into active service. The destination of waste is the waste yard, the rubbish heap’. The arguments and provocations that I have sketched here suggest that the immediacy of a concern with a ‘lost generation’ in the wake of the GFC, while challenging and profound, should be ‘augmented’ with a longer-term view of the futures that we make and leave to young people. Futures, if made in the image of a rapacious capitalism, will be concerned mainly with costs/efficiencies/profits and the commodification of everything, fuelled by the Internet of Things, and digitally and bio-genetically energised. In such times, under such circumstances, to imagine the self as enterprise will offer little by way of comfort to large populations of young people confronted with the possibility that they are supernumerary, unneeded, of no use. InterCultural Futures 11 References BAUMAN, Z. 2001. The Individualized Society. Cambridge. Polity. BAUMAN, Z. 2004. Wasted Lives: Modernity and its Outcasts. Cambridge. Polity. BECK, U. 1992. The Risk Society. Cambridge. Polity. BECK, U. 2000. The Brave New World of Work. Cambridge, Polity. BROTHERHOOD OF ST LAURENCE (BSL 2014) Youth employment – My chance, our future. (Accessed 23 March, 2014). Available from http://www.bsl.org.au/Advocacy/Youth-employment.aspx BRYNJOLFSSON, E. AND A. MCAFEE. 2014. The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant Technologies. New York NY. Norton. BUNTING, M. 2004. Willing Slaves: How the Overwork Culture is Ruling our Lives. London. Harper Collins. BURCHELL, G. 1996. Liberal Government and Techniques of the Self. In A. BARRY, T. OSBORNE AND N. ROSE (eds). Foucault and Political Reason: Liberalism, Neo-Liberalism and Rationalities of Government. London. UCL Press, pp.19–36. CÔTÉ, J. 2014. Towards a new political economy of youth, Journal of Youth Studies. 17(4), pp. 527-543. COWEN, T. 2014. Average Is Over: Powering America beyond the Age of the Great Stagnation. New York NY. Plume/Penguin. ELLIOTT, A. and C. LEMERT. 2006. The New Individualism: The Emotional Costs of Globalization. Abingdon. Routledge. European Commission (EC 2015) Youth Employment, [Accessed 5 April, 2015]. Available from http://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?catId=1036. FOUCAULT, M. 1985. The Use of Pleasure. New York NY. Pantheon. FOUCAULT, M. 1986. The Care of the Self. New York NY. Pantheon. FOUCAULT, M. 1991. Governmentality. In G. Burchell, C. Gordon & P. Miller (eds). The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmental Rationality. Hemel Hempstead. Harvester Wheatsheaf, pp.87–104. GIDDENS, A. 1990. The Consequences of Modernity. Stanford CA. Stanford University Press. GORDON, C. 1991. Governmental Rationality: An Introduction. In G. Burchell, C. Gordon & P. Miller (eds). The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmental Rationality. Hemel Hempstead. Harvester Wheatsheaf, pp. 152. KELLY, P. 2013. The Self as Enterprise: Foucault and the “Spirit” of 21st Century Capitalism. Aldershot. Ashgate/Gower. KELLY, P. 2016. Growing up After the GFC: Responsibilisation and Mortgaged Futures, Discourse. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01596306.2015.1104852 LANCHESTER, J. 2015. The Robots are Coming, London Review of Books, 37(5), 5 March 2015, [Accessed 29 March, 2015]. Available from http://www.lrb.co.uk/v37/n05/john-lanchester/the-robots-are-coming. MARKILLIE, P. 2012. A third industrial revolution, The Economist, April 21, [Accessed 15 March, 2015]. Available from http://www.economist.com/node/21552901. RIFKIN, J. 1995. The End of Work: The Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-Market Era. New York NY. Putnam. 12 InterCultural Futures RIFKIN, J. 2015. The Third Industrial Revolution: How lateral power is transforming energy, the economy, and the world, [Accessed 29 March, 2015]. Available from http://thethirdindustrialrevolution.com/. ROSE, N. 1996. Governing ‘Advanced’ Liberal Democracies. In A. BARRY, T. OSBORNE and N. ROSE (eds). Foucault and Political Reason: Liberalism, Neo-Liberalism and Rationalities of Government. London. UCL Press, pp.37– 64. THRIFT, N. 2005. Knowing Capitalism. London. Sage. WEBER, M. 2002. The Protestant Ethic and the ‘Spirit’ of Capitalism: and Other Writings. London. Penguin. InterCultural Futures 13 RMIT University CRICOS Provider Code: 00122A. 14 InterCultural Futures