Archive: Giugno 18th, 2013

• PhD Summer School – Arab Spring

— CALL FOR APPLICATIONS —

 

DEADLINE: JUNE 28th 2013

 

GR:EEN – GEM PhD 2013 SUMMER SCHOOL

 

The Arab Spring, Domestic Democratic Transitions and the Evolving Euro-Mediterranean Framework

 

@ Manouba University, Tunisia

August 18-23 2013

 

The Summer school will see a succession of thematic days each focussing on the international implications and com­parative possibilities associated with societies in transition – i.e. (1) Specific Human Security Questions; (2) Human and Fundamental Rights Pro­tection; (3) Challenges associated with Democratic Transition; and (4) the Hopes and Risks moving forward. Each theme will be the object of a given doctoral workshop covering a series of 45min ses­sions, which will alternatively include either a lecture by a key academics from Europe and beyond; or a roundtable debate on one/two selected PhD paper(s). Interested parties are free to apply before the June 28th deadline.

 

All PhD students interested in and engaged with the summer school’s topic are welcome to apply by submitting a proposal. The Summer School’s international board will select the participatants among the submitted applications. Thanks to the support of the various partner programs, among which the European Commission’s FP7 research program and its Erasmus Mundus mobility program, about 25 students will be selected and provided with the opportunities and financial support necessary for them to attend and fully enjoy the event.

 

You can download the call for applications here

• Gender and Crises in Global Politics

The International Feminist Journal of Politics announces

 

the 3rd Annual IFjP Conference

May 9-11, 2014

University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California

 

 Gender and Crises in Global Politics

 
We invite submissions for individual papers or pre-constituted panels on any topic pertaining to the conference theme and sub-themes. We also welcome papers and panels that consider any other feminist IR-related questions.
 
Keynotes: Jack Halberstam (USC), others to be announced
 

Call for Papers

 
If one is to believe what newspapers, news media, and even IR’s journals suggest, the global political arena is (again) in a time of crisis. The Global Financial Crisis still reverberates and is producing the Debt Crisis. The continued violence in Syria, the tensions between Israel and Palestine, the aggression of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the risk of Iran’s proliferation and other militarily volatile situations have been characterized as crises. Environmentalists warn of ecological crisis, health scholars warn of a disease crisis, cyber-security specialists suggest a coming information crisis, and  migration experts warn of population crises. On the other hand, a range of issues are excluded from the categories of crisis.  Why, for example, is rape in the Democratic Republic of the Congo not a crisis?  Taken together, these present-day presumed crises and non-crises sit beside a history of global politics that is often told as a connection of crises – wars, depressions, diseases, and natural disasters.
 
Feminist work in International Relations has addressed many of these crises, both historical and contemporary, yet there is more to be done. The thematic focus of this year’s conference is on feminist theorizing of crisis, as well as of crises. We hope papers will address some of the following questions, both theoretically and empirically:
 

  • How does an event or social situation come to be constituted and represented as a crisis? What do gender and/or queer lenses tell us about what we recognize as crisis and how we read those crises?
  •  

  • Whose suffering constitutes a crisis, and what reactions are warranted? How does crisis policy behavior allow for the omission of concerns and needs of people at the margins of global politics? What do feminist and/or queer approaches to the politics of crisis representation look like?
  •  

  • Who/what is the subject of crisis politics? In crises, who is protected, saved, or forgotten? Whose crises demand attention? Whose are ignored?
  •  

  • What do gender and/or queer lenses tell us about analyzing crisis in global politics? What unique methods do feminisms bring to identifying and understanding what constitutes crises?
  • Are there feminist and/or queer approaches to crisis management? What challenges do crises present differently from ‘everyday politics’ as traditionally understood? What might a gendered/queer analysis of ‘means and ends’ tell us about crisis? Do gender and/or queer lenses tell us something about crisis strategy generally and/or disaggregate their analyses by types of crises?
  •  

  • How does feminist and/or queer theorizing deal with characterizations of  ’times of crisis’? Does feminist and queer work in history, sociology, geography, and politics provide contextualization of such characterizations?
  •  

  • What if anything does it do to look at theorizing crisis as in crisis? How do gender/queer lenses think about crises in theorizing – of crisis itself and of specific concepts in crisis located in political economy to security?

 
We invite submissions for individual papers or pre-constituted panels on any topic pertaining to the conference theme and sub-themes. We also welcome papers and panels that consider any other feminist IR-related questions.  Abstracts should be no more than 250 words.
 
Any inquiries should be addressed to the journal’s University of Florida gmail address, ifjpatuf@gmail.com.
 
Deadline for submissions: January 31, 2014.  We will, however, confirm acceptance of submissions before the deadline if we receive abstracts early. Early submission is therefore recommended.

 
Please submit your abstract on the conference website at: ifjpconference.net

Back to Top