Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Conferance. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Conferance. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Ba, 8 tháng 11, 2011

2012 Annual SOYUZ Symposium: Affections/Afflictions/Afterlives, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 23-24 March 2012‏

SOYUZ, the Post-Communist Cultural Studies Interest group, invites
paper proposals for its 2012 meeting. The symposium has met annually
since 1991, and is an intimate forum where scholars (from graduate
students to senior faculty) from across the world can exchange ideas.

The 2012 symposium will ponder the sentiments, the failures, and the
successes around making do with those ongoing, productive connections
that are afforded by infrastructures and procedures conceived during
(or in response to) socialism.

How to speak about what lives "after" without abjecting the "remains"?
Topical foci might draw upon themes current in the humanities and
social sciences: biopolitics and biopowers (for instance, bricolage in
ways of dealing with affliction, means of training the body, etc.);
knowledge-making or sentiment-forming (e.g. recombination of
religious, ethnic-folk, scientific, poetic ideologies and resources);
material and narrative repurposing; modes of redistribution or
(re)portioning of entitlements.

The 2012 symposium will feature a keynote address by Judith Farquhar,
Max Palevsky Professor of Anthropology and of Social Sciences and
Chair, Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago.

SOYUZ began in 1991 as a regionally focused group responding to the
fall of the Soviet and socialist states. Since then, it has broadened
to include scholars working in any region touched by socialism, by the
oppositions of socialism to capitalism, or by those phenomena formerly
known as "post-socialist." The 2012 conference organizing committee
includes University of Michigan anthropologists working across regions
where socialism has figured in important ways: Kelly Askew (Tanzania),
Anya Bernstein (Buryatia), Krisztina Fehervary (Hungary), Alaina Lemon
(Russia, Romani diaspora), Erik Meuggler (China), Damani Partridge
(Germany).

Presentations may work in any discipline (anthropology, history,
sociology, literary criticism and film studies, etc.) and may focus on
any aspect of social life (religion, politics, kinship, sexuality,
exchange, performance, etc.). At the same time, papers must strive to
combine ethnographic evidence with theory.

We hope to make a limited number of travel subsidies available to
graduate students as well as to presenters from outside the United
States.

The deadline for abstracts is December 15, 2011

Please send abstracts of 250 words by email to: amlemon@umich.edu

Please include your full name, paper title, and academic affiliation,
and please write "SOYUZ 2012" in the subject line. Papers will be
selected and notifications made by January 15, 2012.

Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 9, 2011

Annual Conference on International Political Economy: Challenges to the Welfare State, Gediz University, Izmir, 23 May 2012‏

Gediz University (Izmir, Turkey), Florida International University (Miami,
USA) and Leeds Metropolitan University (Leeds, UK) cordially invite paper,
panel, and roundtable proposals for a joint annual multidisciplinary
conference on International Political Economy, entitled "Challenges to the
Welfare State". The conference seeks to provide an intellectual forum for
scholars of political economy, politics and international relations. We
welcome participation from faculty, graduate students, independent scholars,
and practitioners analyzing the issues confronting the welfare state (i.e.
unemployment, global economic governance, regional integration, comparative
country case studies, trade policy, environment, sustainable development,
multinational corporations and corporate responsibility) from a variety of
disciplines.
Submission Guidelines and Deadlines

Both individual paper proposals and pre-organized panel proposals are
considered. The submission deadline for paper, panel and roundtable
proposals is November 15, 2011. Proposals received after this date will not
be considered.

1. All abstracts should be submitted to: ipeconference@gediz.edu.tr
2. For paper proposals, abstracts of maximum 250 words should be sent
together with a current CV of the author(s).
3. For panel proposals, an abstract of maximum 250 words should be sent
together with a 250 word abstract for each paper (maximum of 4 papers per
panel). Please also include a chair and a discussant for the panel and a
current CV for each panelist.
4. All proposals will be peer reviewed. The Organization Committee's
decision regarding proposals will be communicated by January 25, 2012.

Conference Registration (via the conference website):

Registration fee: € 90.00 (by February 15, 2012)

Late registration fee: € 150.00 (after February 15, 2012)
Graduate Student registration fee: € 45.00 (by February 15, 2012)
Graduate Student Late registration fee: € 75.00 (after February 15, 2012)
On-site registration fee: € 200.00
Practical information

Participants are expected to cover their own travel and accommodation costs.
Practical information about hotels and travel indications will be found in
the conference website: http://ipeconference.gediz.edu.tr
Venue

Gediz University Seyrek Campus (23 May 2012) http://www.gediz.edu.tr
Crowne Plaza Hotel, Inciraltı, Izmir (24-25 May 2012)
http://www.ichotelsgroup.com/h/d/cp/1/en/hotel/izmtr
Travel Grants

A limited number of travel and accommodation grants are available,
especially for graduate students who cannot receive financial assistance
through their home institutions. If your participation depends on such
assistance please send an informed letter of request, including the amount,
to ipeconference@gediz.edu.tr (travel grants in the subject line) after the
abstract has been accepted and no later than February 15, 2012.
Contact

All inquiries should be addressed to:
Gaye Güngör, Assistant Professor, Department of International Relations,
Gediz University
gaye.gungor@gediz.edu.tr

Çiğdem Üstün, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science and
Public Administration, Gediz University
cigdem.ustun@gediz.edu.tr

Arzu Alvan, Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, Gediz University
arzu.alvan@gediz.edu.tr

Thứ Hai, 19 tháng 9, 2011

Second International Forum of Sociology, International Sociological Association (ISA), RC25 Language and Society, Buenos Aires, 1-4 August 2012‏

Call for Papers: Second International Forum of
Sociology, International Sociological Association (ISA), RC25 Language &
Society, Buenos Aires, Aug. 1-4, 2012

Dear colleagues,

As member
of the International Sociological Association (ISA), Research Committee (RC 25)
on Language and Society, and organizer of a panel session on “Nationalism and
Identity,” I would like to invite you to take part in the Second International
Forum of Sociology“Social
Justice and Democratization,” to be hosted in Buenos Aires,
Argentina, August 1-4, 2012.

Program
Coordinator is Prof. Celine-Marie Pascale from American University, USA,
President of RC 25 on Language and Society.

You can
find more information about the scheduled sessions at
 <http://www.isa-sociology.org/buenos-aires-2012/rc/rc.php?n=RC25>.

Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 8, 2011

2nd Global Conference Urban Popcultures, Prague, 9-11 March 2011‏



2nd Global Conference : Urban Popcultures
Prague, Czech Republic
9th March �" 11th March 2012

Deadline: 30th September 2011

This inter- and multi-disciplinary project aims to examine, explore and critically engage with issues related to urban life. The project will promote the ongoing analysis of the varied creative trends and alternative cultural movements that comprise urban popultures and subcultures. In particular the project will encourage equally theoretical and practical debates which surround the cultural and political contexts within which alternative urban subcultures are flourishing.

The project will explore and assess a number of core themes

1. Urban Space and the Landscape of the City
2. Urban Music Cultures
3. The City as Creative Subject/Object
4. Urban Codes
5. The City and Cyberculture
6. The Urban Underground
7. Urban Activities in Massmedia

Related themes will also be identified for development and exploration. Out of our deliberations it is anticipated that a series of related cross context research projects will develop.

Papers, reports, work-in-progress, workshops and pre-formed panels are invited on issues related to any of the following themes:

1. Popular, Alternative, and Underground Music Cultures
Alternative and Underground Dance, Electronica, Hip Hop, Gothic, Punk and Post-Rock Scenes. Local, Regional, and Global Scenes. The Mass-Appropriation of Underground Music. Independent Music Cultures. Popular Music Theory.

2. Subcultures, Communities, and Codes
Underground and Alternative Ideologies and Lifestyles. Issues of Gender, Sexuality, and Identity. The Avantgarde and Urban Codes. Urban Religion and Religious Expressions. D.I.Y.

3. Theories and Critical Studies of Popular Culture
Histories, Representations, and Discourses on Independent Scenes. The Frankfurt School. The Visual Turn. Urban Intertextualities and Intermedialities. Cultural Appropriations. Postmodernity and Beyond.

4. Popular and Subversive Expressions in Fashion, Art, Film, and Literature
Urban and Contemporary Life and Themes Considered in Music, Literature, Art and Film. Urban Fashion, Style, and Branding. Pop Art. Graffiti. Low vs. High Culture.

5. The City as Creative Subject/Object
Virtual Urbanity �" Online Communities and the Impact of Social Networking. Urban Identity and Membership. Globalization/Localization of Urban Experience. Recent trends in Copyright/Copyleft. The Role of Internet in the Transformation of Music Industry. The Impact of User-generated Content.

6. Conflict, Popular Revolt, and Politics
Music and Politics. Race and Music Styles. Music Revolutions. Generational Conflicts. Class Divisions. Ageing Music Fans and Cross-generational Cool. New Schools vs. Old Schools.

7. Popular Culture Online and in Massmedia
The Visual Aspects of Urban Entertainment. The Evolution of Music and Thematic Television. Media Structure of Music Video. Explicit TV and Censorship.

300 word abstracts should be submitted by Friday 30th September 2011. All submissions are minimally double blind peer reviewed where appropriate. If an abstract is accepted for the conference, a full draft paper should be submitted by Friday 27th January 2012. Abstracts should be submitted simultaneously to the Organising Chairs; abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, or RTF formats with the following information and in this order:

a) author(s), b) affiliation, c) email address, d) title of abstract, e) body of abstract

Please use plain text (Times Roman 12) and abstain from using footnotes and any special formatting, characters or emphasis (such as bold, italics or underline). We acknowledge receipt and answer to all paper proposals submitted. If you do not receive a reply from us in a week you should assume we did not receive your proposal; it might be lost in cyberspace! We suggest, then, to look for an alternative electronic route or resend.

Registration fee

The details of the registration fee are as follows; The cost for attending the conference is £275. This includes:

-conference registration fee
-a copy of the eBook
-discounted entitlement to an edition of hard copy themed volume(s) arising from the meeting
-access to the discussion group, blog and conference project initiative support materials
-Friday afternoon tea break
-Friday wine reception
-Saturday morning coffee break
-Saturday two course lunch
-Saturday afternoon tea break
-drinks in the conference room
-Sunday morning coffee break
-Sunday two course lunch
-Sunday afternoon tea break
-drinks in conference room

Website: http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/critical-issues/cyber/urban-popcultures/
Email: http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/about-us/contact-us/

Thứ Tư, 10 tháng 8, 2011

Great Exhibitions in the Margins, 1851-1938 University of Wolverhampton, 26-27 April 2011‏

Great Exhibitions in the Margins, 1851 - 1938 University of Wolverhampton, 26-27 April 2012

Research has for a long time focused on world fairs, great exhibitions or expositions universelles in the capitals of Europe and in the large cities of the USA. Their crucial role in communicating ideas about the identities of the exhibiting nations (and their relation to other cultures) and in showcasing contemporary art and design has been examined in detail. However, in the heyday of these spectacular events - in the second half of the nineteenth and the first half of the twentieth century - smaller cities and regional centres, such as Liege, Poznan, Edinburgh or Wolverhampton, staged their own 'great exhibitions' modelled on those held in the national (or imperial) centres. Their goals, although executed on a more modest scale, were often the same and involved the promotion and sale of goods but also communication of ideas, ideologies and identities. These smaller shows usually had large ambitions and tried to engage not only the local population but also national and international audiences and exhibitors.

This symposium turns attention to the exhibitions of arts and industries in the regions outside the capitals and to the assumptions that lay behind them. Its main focus will be placed on their ambitions, originality, relationship to the ��greater�� exhibitions and, in particular, their engagement with visual culture. The questions explored may include:

- what ambitions motivated the idea of staging an exhibition in the
particular location and what were its objectives

- what was the long-term impact of the show on the region, nationally
and internationally

- how were the arts displayed at the exhibition and what role they
played

- what specific influence did exhibitions like the Great Exhibition or
Expositions Universelles in Paris have on the exhibitions in the margins?

The symposium encourages an inter-disciplinary approach to the topic and papers are therefore welcome from scholars in a wide range of disciplines, including the history of art and design, history, politics, anthropology, ethnography, cultural studies etc. A network of researchers interested in the subject of exhibition cultures will be created through the symposium as further academic activities on the theme are planned (a publication and a research network). News about the symposium and the research network will be posted at http://greatexhibitions.blogspot.com.

Please send your paper proposals of up to 250 words to Dr. Marta Filipova at Marta.Filipova@wlv.ac.uk <mailto:Marta.Filipova@wlv.ac.uk> by 1 November 2011.

Chủ Nhật, 31 tháng 7, 2011

ISVS-6 Sixth International Seminar on Vernacular Settlements, Famagusta, North Cyprus, 19-21 April 2012

The International Seminar on Vernacular Settlements (ISVS) is pleased to announce the ISVS-6; the sixth ISVS Conference in Famagusta, hosted by the Eastern Mediterranean University, North Cyprus between the dates 19-21 April, 2012. 

ISVS aims to promote awareness and research on vernacular traditions by organizing seminars focused on important aspects of vernacular every two years in specifically chosen places across the globe. The last seminar, ISVS-5 held in Colombo, Sri Lanka focused on Vernacular Futures provided a great opportunity to explore the future of the vernacular traditions resulting in a suggestion that the survival and continuity of vernacular traditions may lie in ordinary informal buildings which are usually not regarded as vernacular. Building upon this insight, ISVS-6 in 2012 is delighted to lead the debate on vernacular traditions of contemporary societies and their building and settlement forms which display the same characteristics of the conventionally conceptualized 'vernacular'. This does not mean that the 'historical vernacular' is out of the conference scope. Instead juxtaposition of 'historical vernacular' and the 'contemporary vernacular' is expected to be explored in such a way that the nuances of their makings, and relevance in today's world could be understood thoroughly.

Under this scope, ISVS-6 is delightfully announced on the theme - 'Contemporary Vernaculars: Places, Processes and Manifestations' - to incite and welcome interdisciplinary scholars and practitioners from around the world working in the disciplines of architecture, art & architectural history, urban studies, city & regional planning, cultural studies, anthropology, sociology and environmental studies for proposing papers and meeting in North Cyprus in April 2012. ISVS-6 also expects to attract young researchers involved in postgraduate studies on contemporary vernaculars and offers a scientific platform to present and discuss their hypothesis and arguments, understandings and approaches, and methods and models with the scholars participating in the seminar. 

Please, note that submision of abstracts for all sessions is before 30th September, 2011. Once approved by the end October, final papers are due on 30th January 2012.

ISVS considers publication and expansion of knowledge and experiences on Vernacular traditions as one of its key objectives. With this purpose in mind, ISVS-6 has negotiated with the prestigious OPEN HOUSE INTERNATIONAL (Vol 37, No. 3 September Issue, 2012), journal to publish 3 selected papers which will meticulously deal with the themes of ISVS-6. Once chosen, the authors of the selected papers may have some revisions to be made upon the suggestions of journal's editorial board.

The venue of ISVS-6, Cyprus is the third largest island in the Mediterranean Sea and houses different building traditions; testimony to rich living patterns and complex interactions between different Mediterranean communities and cultures over successive generations from Asia Minor, the Middle East, Africa and Europe for three millennia. Evidently, natural and built environments strongly reflect this cultural complexity of the island. As the home of several civilizations and different geographic characteristics, the vernacular architecture of Cyprus undeniably exhibits a variety of building forms and traditions. However, they are now struggling to survive under the present day circumstances as in other parts of the world in different ways and modes on which this conference will focus. The conference participants will have a unique opportunity to visit and experience for themselves some of the unique vernacular traditions, and built forms of North Cyprus in the company of those who care and cherish those traditions.

We invite you to send your abstract for a paper presentation and join us in North Cyprus in April 2012 for an enjoyable and unique opportunity to explore the vernacular of the contemporary world.

For more details and abstract submissions please visit the seminar web-page:
http://isvs-6.emu.edu.tr,  isvs-6@emu.edu.tr

Thứ Hai, 11 tháng 7, 2011

Crossroads in Cultural Studies 2012, Sorbonne Nouvelle University, 2-6 July 2012

We are pleased to announce that the 9th International Conference Crossroads in Cultural Studies will be held in Paris, France, from July 2nd to 6th, 2012, hosted by Sorbonne Nouvelle University with the support of the French National Commission for UNESCO.

The city of Paris has a long and complex history as a crossroad between cultures and peoples. Paris has played an important role in the development and circulation of the works of authors and thinkers that have shaped the postcolonial imagination in a significant way. Drawing on their tradition of comprehensive and critical thought, the organizers seek contributions in the form of papers and panels that will continue to examine the intersection between culture, power and knowledge from within the framework of Cultural Studies.

The conference will also be hosted by UNESCO, the international organization that has always championed cultural diversity and difference. Given the long association between Cultural Studies research and UNESCO, this conference should be an occasion for Cultural Studies to look back on its own evolution as well as explore new scholarly insights. We believe UNESCO will also offer an exceptional platform to discuss important current issues and contribute to the visibility of Cultural Studies in France and Europe.

•12 WORLD-CLASS KEYNOTE SPEAKERS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD will address the conference at keynote and plenary sessions. Among them, Sarah Ahmed, Marie-Hélène Bourcier, Jeremy Gilbert, Achille Mbembe, Walter Mignolo, Bobby Noble, Phaedra Pezzullo, Françoise Vergès. With the participation of Stuart Hall and Jacques Rancière (to be confirmed).
•STATE OF THE ART CONFERENCE TOPICS. All topics relevant to Cultural Studies, especially new and innovative areas of research are welcome. See a list of possible topic areas.

•SUBMIT YOUR PROPOSAL NOW USING THE ONLINE FORMS! The call for papers and organized panel proposals is now open. Check the submission guidelines and submit a proposal using the online forms - session submission or paper submission - before September 30th, 2011.

•ACS ASSISTANCE SCHEME FOR CROSSROADS 2012.The Association for Cultural Studies will offer a small number of grants to assist participants from ACS under-represented regions with travel accommodation or registration expenses.

•ATTRACTIVE AND CONVENIENT ACCOMMODATION IN THE HEART OF THE CITY OF PARIS AND CLOSE TO THE CONFERENCE VENUES. Cheaper campus accommodation will also be available close at hand at the International Paris University Campus.

•SPREAD THE NEWS! Please forward this message to your colleagues and friends! We look forward to seeing you in Paris in 2012!
Since its inception in 1996 in Tampere, Finland, the Crossroads in Cultural Studies Conference has played an important role in the creation of a global discussion about Cultural Studies. It has become a major international conference where scholars from all five continents gather regularly to exchange research, views and insights. Organized by the Association for Cultural Studies (ACS), the Crossroads Conference is held every other year in different parts of the world. Previous conferences have taken place in Birmingham (United Kingdom), Urbana-Champaign (USA), Istanbul (Turkey), Kingston (Jamaica), and Hong Kong (China).
http://www.crossroads2012.org/?q=en/node/26

Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 7, 2011

Nation States between memories of World War II and contemporary European politics, Nottingham, June 2008‏

CfP: Nation States between memories of World War II and contemporary European politics

Nottingham, United Kingdom
Deadline: 2011-08-01

Papers are invited for an international and interdisciplinary symposium entitled `Nation States between memories of World War II and contemporary European politics', to be held in June 2012 in Nottingham.

At the most recent European elections the UK Independence Party's campaign centered on the iconic image of Winston Churchill, through whom UKIP – which eventually emerged as the second strongest British party contesting these elections – sought to articulate its staunch anti-EU politics. Not surprisingly, such discursive/ visual strategies were criticized – by, for example, a Conservative Party politician on the BBC's Question Time (21 May 2009) – for being inaccurate, thoroughly de-contextualized and historically distorting. In Georgia meanwhile, near what some consider the European continent's most easterly boundaries, a popular musician and leading figure in the opposition movement has drawn deeply disconcerting comparisons between his country's World War II history and its present state (Deutsche Welle TV, 4 June 2009). And in Belgium, at the heart of Europe, the chairman of the FDF, Olivier Maingain, compared the policies of the Flemish regional government to `practices worthy of the German occupation'
(La Libre Belgique, 31 March 2010), whereas Filip Dewinter of Vlaams Belang accused the francophone parties of seeking Lebensraum in Flanders (VRT TV, 3 June 2010).

These are but three of innumerable instances – some of them highly controversial and much-discussed, others part of mundane everyday discourse – of the past being invoked to make sense of current contexts and, crucially, to articulate a political position. More narrowly, it is particularly the history of World War II, and within it memories of invasion, occupation, oppression and genocide, that are commonly used – or misused – as points of alleged comparison with or analogy for present circumstances. Amongst the latter, questions of EU politics and European integration, the `fate' of nation states in times of economic globalization and the current financial crises, the much-debated European constitution and, more recently, the Lisbon reform treaty are objects of particularly widespread concern and debate across Europe.

We now invite abstracts for papers examining these issues in any European context, both within and beyond the EU's current borders. More precisely, we invite contributions that examine the contemporary instrumentalization of memories of World War II for rhetorical purposes of comparison in the context of national or transnational power struggles. Each paper is thus expected to contain three key components:
1. an empirical focus on a particular European context; 2. an analysis of publicly circulating and/ or contested interpretations of World War II history; 3. an examination of how such historical narratives are articulated and mobilized for particular ideological purposes in the context of contemporary national/ European politics.
We intend to build on Lebow et al.'s The Politics of Memory in Postwar Europe (2006, Duke University Press), Heer et al.'s The Discursive Construction of History (2008, Palgrave Macmillan), Jan-Werner Müller's seminal edited collection on Memory & Power in Post-War Europe (2002, Cambridge University Press), and on Pakier and Stråth's recent collection A European Memory? (2010, Berghahn): firstly, by extending the geographical reach of our analyses through a wider range of empirical case studies; and, secondly, through an analytical focus on the current salience of historical narratives commonly used to interpret, predict and respond to some of the social, political and economic challenges widely perceived to define the here and now.

We anticipate that contributions will examine such contemporary `politics of memory' across a wide range of potentially relevant data: from political controversies to everyday language; from relevant media discourse to representations of World War II in art, film, novels, biographies etc; from school textbooks to readers' letters to newspaper editors; from party political manifestos to public rituals of commemoration; from life histories to current debates about the relative absence of – and need for – a pan-European public sphere.

Moreover, there is a host of potentially relevant conceptual issues and theoretical questions we invite contributors to relate their analyses to, including any of the following: How are memories of the Holocaust invoked in contemporary discussions surrounding European integration? More broadly, how, where, by whom and for what purposes are memories and narratives of World War II selected and articulated today? How and where are such narratives of the past contested? What is the relative relevance of national and European politics, of globalization and the current economic crisis to any such invocations of – and interpretative struggles over – the past? Can competing historical narratives be meaningfully described – in Gramscian terminology – as `hegemonic' and `counter-hegemonic' respectively, and, if so, in relation to which `scale'
of contemporary politics (i.e. local, regional, national, European, global)? Which wider theoretical debates (e.g. regarding `social memory'; theories of nationalism; discourse analytical approaches to studying language in social context; conceptualizations of civil society etc.) advance our understanding of such contemporary interpretative contests over World War II history? How do such ideological struggles over memory connect with contemporary debates about migration, multiculturalism, integration and identity politics? As academics, what are our intellectual and ethical responsibilities in responding to historical inaccuracies, distortions, omissions or mis-uses?

The conference will take place at the University of Nottingham from 27-29 June 2012. A key note address will be given by Dr Henning Grunwald (Vanderbilt University).

The deadline for abstracts of original, previously unpublished work to be sent to Bram.Mertens@nottingham.ac.uk and Christian.Karner@nottingham.ac.uk is 1 August 2011. Abstracts should be between 500 and 600 words in length and provide an outline of the context the discussion will examine, of the kinds of materials the paper sets out to analyze, and of the conceptual questions to be addressed. We hope to publish an edited collection of select conference contributions with Transaction Publishers. The time frame for this edited collection will be extremely tight, so potential contributors will need near-finished papers by the time of the conference and will have to submit final drafts for consideration by the editors within two weeks of the conference.
Submissions will also need to be formatted fully in line with Transaction guidelines, which will be circulated after the deadline for abstracts.

Bram Mertens
Department of German Studies
School of Modern Languages and Cultures
University of Nottingham
University Park
Nottingham NG7 2RD
Email: bram.mertens@nottingham.ac.uk

Thứ Tư, 29 tháng 6, 2011

Twenty Years of Macedonian Independence, Skopje, 8-10 September 2011‏

The Center for Research and Policy Making (CRPM) from Skopje, and the School of Public Policy "Mother Theresa" are organizing an international and interdisciplinary academic conference dedicated to the 20th anniversary of the independence of the Republic of Macedonia titled 'Twenty Years of Macedonian Independence: mirroring economic, political and policy developments'. The conference will be held from 8 to 10th September 2011 and will bring together renowned international speakers.

The conference will include five panels covering various aspects of the political and social developments in Macedonia in the last twenty years. The panels will focus around the following themes:

1) Twenty years of democratic development in Macedonia: politics and policies of democratization and consolidation
2) Nation-building / nation branding in Macedonia
3) Lessons from multicultural policies in Macedonia for the region and beyond
4) Macedonia and the EU: love at second sight
5) Twenty years of economic development in Macedonia: issues and challenges

We welcome paper proposals by academics, researchers, practitioners and doctoral students in the social and economic sciences and humanities. Applicants should submit a completed application package consisting of the following items:

a) 250-300 word abstract

b) short narrative biography [max 300 words] - please do not send long CVs

The abstract and the short narrative CV should be sent via email to crpm@crpm.org.mk by 1 August 2011. The successful applicants will be notified by mid August. The organizers will try to secure travel and accommodation grants under special conditions for the international participants.

Thứ Bảy, 25 tháng 6, 2011

Conference: Fleeing Homophobia, Free University, Amsterdam, 5-6 September 2011‏

About the Fleeing Homophobia project
Each year, thousands of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) asylum seekers apply for asylum in EU Member States. During the Fleeing Homophobia project, Sabine Jansen (COC Netherlands) and Thomas Spijkerboer (VU University Amsterdam) have undertaken a comparative research about how these applications have been dealt with. Further to their findings, they have formulated policy recommendations.

About the Fleeing Homophobia Conference
The conference intends to share the research findings with a wider audience; to discuss the consequences for policy makers, decision makers, the judiciary, lawyers, NGO's and activists; and to see how academic research can be made fruitful for asylum practice, and how practice can inform further research.

�Submit an abstract!

During the conference, two sessions have been reserved for researchers who want to present papers. Papers are invited on any topic that is directly relevant for LGBTI asylum cases, including (but not restricted to):
- Credibility assessment
- Coming out late
- Persecution by third parties
- Country of Origin Information
- Preventing persecution by being
`discreet'
- Increasing LGBTI awareness
- Sexual orientation: act or identity?
Papers do not necessarily have to be finished products. Work in progress is more than welcome.

If you want to submit a paper, send an abstract of no more than 250 words to Louis Middelkoop at l.p.middelkoop@vu.nl before 15 June 2011 (n.b. deadline now extended). Papers should be submitted at the latest on 15 August 2011, and will be posted on the conference website.

More information (programme, registration)
The conference website www.rechten.vu.nl/fleeinghomophobia is regularly updated.

Organization Fleeing Homophobia is a project of COC Netherlands and VU University Amsterdam, in cooperation with the Hungarian Helsinki Committee, Avvocatura per i diritti LGBT/ Rete Lenford, and the European Council on Refugees and Exiles. Fleeing Homophobia is funded by the European Refugee Fund, the Dutch Ministry of Justice, and the participating organisations.

Thứ Tư, 22 tháng 6, 2011

Conference: Cultures, Communities and Conflicts in the Medieval Mediterranean, Southampton University, 4-6 July 2011‏

I would like to draw your attention to the up-coming conference of the Society for the Medieval Mediterranean entitled "Cultures, Communities and Conflicts in the Medieval Mediterranean" will take place at Avenue Campus, Southampton University (UK) from 4th to 6th July 2011. This event is organised by Dr François Soyer (University of Southampton) and Dr Rebecca Bridgman (University of Cambridge).

The aim of this international conference is to encourage cross-disciplinary discussion and open new perspectives on the medieval Mediterranean World through contributions from a wide variety of disciplines: not only from history but also from other disciplines such as archaeology, theology, architecture and material culture studies. Speakers include Dr Anna Contadini and Prof. Jonathan Bloom. For full program please see below.

The cost of registration is £60, or £40 for students (includes teas and coffees only). Please register in advance via our conference management system:https://www.conftool.net/medieval_mediterranean_2011/ For any enquiries please contact:
smm2011@soton.ac.uk

Thứ Ba, 21 tháng 6, 2011

Postcommunist Corruption: Causes, Manifestations, Consequences, Miami University, Oxford, OH, March 29 – April 1, 2012‏

Havighurst Center for Russian & Post-Soviet Studies 11th Annual International Young Researchers Conference

POSTCOMMUNIST CORRUPTION: CAUSES, MANIFESTATIONS, CONSEQUENCES

Organizers: Gulnaz Sharafutdinova and Venelin Ganev

Miami University
Oxford, OH

March 29 – April 1, 2012

After more than two decades of research on post-communist transformations, a consensus has emerged that corruption is a major phenomenon associated with the evolution of the former "second world."
The purpose of this conference is to explore the analytical, conceptual and comparative dimensions of this phenomenon and to examine recent empirical findings and field work on corruption in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. We are particularly interested in questions such as: What is the heuristic potential, as well as the possible shortcomings, of currently available typologies of post-communist corruption? Is there anything historically distinct about post-communist corruption – or is it a manifestation of broader patterns observable across regions and types of political regimes? What are the most promising strategies for studying the interplay of local factors (such as the multifaceted legacies of socialism) and international developments (such as the emergence of globalized political, economic and institutional contexts) that shape corrupt practices in post-communism? How have such practices evolved over the last twenty years, and how do they vary across time and space? What important aspects of post-communist socio-political orders can be explained as a consequence of enduring and institutionally embedded forms of corrupt behavior?

We invite submissions that demonstrate both analytical rigor and sensitivity to cultural and historical differences. We are particularly interested in stimulating cross-disciplinary conversations about the nature and significance of corruption and the ways in which empirically grounded studies of this phenomenon may be amalgamated into broader analytical accounts of political, social, economic and cultural change after the fall of communism.

We encourage proposals from young researchers who have already completed their dissertation research (ABD) or have defended their dissertation within the last three years. This will be an intensive 2-1/2 day working conference (March 29-April 1, 2012) during which each of the selected papers will be critiqued by the other participants, including all invited presenters, keynote speakers, and a team of discussants made up of Miami University faculty.

The Havighurst Center will provide accommodation in Oxford, ground transportation to and from the airport, and partial travel funding ($300 for domestic travel and $800 for international travel).

To be considered for the conference, submit an abstract of approximately 250 words and a short CV to havighurstcenter@muohio.edu <mailto:havighurstcenter@muohio.edu> by November 1, 2011.

Please type "*2012 Young Researchers Conference*" as the subject of the email. Selected papers will be announced by January 1, 2012.

Questions can be directed to:

The Havighurst Center for Russian & Post-Soviet Studies Miami University Harrison Hall, Room 116 Oxford, OH 45056
(513) 529-3303
havighurstcenter@muohio.edu

Chủ Nhật, 19 tháng 6, 2011

Of Cosmopolitanism and Cosmologies, 2nd Joint Biennial CASA - SASA Conference, Telc, Czech Republic, 2-3 September 2011‏

The subject of cosmopolitanism has lately received particular attention in the social sciences. A moral
and political need to theorize the complex ways in which it is possible to tackle local and supra-local
loyalties has inspired much of this scholarly debate. While we should not overlook the underlying
political urgency �" captured by Ulrich Beck’s question, “how ought societies to handle ‘otherness’
and ‘boundaries’ during the present crisis of global interdependency?” �" the interest in the basic
assumption of the possibility of “openness to the world and to the other” as an ethical stance or a
way of life has a special anthropological bearing.
There are two grounds on which anthropology engages with the subject of cosmopolitanism. The
first relates to anthropology per se, to its outlook and positioning as a way of knowing. It is believed
that ethnographic practice presumes cosmopolitan perceptual abilities. However in the special issue
of SA (2010/4) on “cosmopolitan anthropology” the editor points out that whereas anthropologists
have traditionally valued their methods for receptiveness to various experiences and cultural
pluralism, they have usually been less prepared to construe these qualities in their research subjects.
It follows that to accomplish anthropology as a cosmopolitan practice, it is necessary to reconsider
our methods of inquiry in a way that grants our research partners equal capacity of relating to
differences not as definite but strategic, of being ethnographers in their way. The second ground
concerns more directly social theory as it emerges from within anthropology. After substantial
criticism was levelled against various analytic categories of commonality, which undermined their
universal aspirations, the question of how to theorize ontologies of sociality as they materialize in
various cosmologies still lingers. On the one hand we are proposed a plurality of cosmopolitanisms
(rooted cosmopolitanism, vernacular cosmopolitanism, Asian and African cosmopolitanism), while on
the other there are discussions of cosmopolitanism that reach beyond the normative definition and
mark new directions of exploration. They range from questioning the adequacy of the cosmopolitan
approach as an alternative to other ontologies of the social (Bruno Latour) to detecting a latent and
implicit controversy over the meaning of subjectivity in the humanities (Huon Wardle).
For this conference we propose to start from the basic assumption that cosmopolitanism could be
approached as an existing mode of existence shifting in nature and effect with the complex social,
political and cultural relations in which it is embedded. As such it can be investigated independently
though not necessarily regardless of reference to philosophical conceptions. If cosmopolitanism is
born of a negotiation with otherness, what are the templates around which ontologies of sociality
arise? The question seems to us even more pertinent in view of the development of our discipline in
Central and Eastern Europe. The anthropological production that issues from the region is marked by
an attention to social cleavages and boundaries and theorization thereof. We believe it is time to
start looking beyond this paradigm.
The organizers of the 2nd biennial conference of the Czech Association for Social Anthropology (CASA)
and the Slovak Association of Social Anthropologists (SASA) invite scholars and students of social
anthropology and related disciplines to address the following questions and to develop their own
themes for panels focusing directly or indirectly on the anthropological investigation of
cosmopolitanism, understood most broadly as an historically, socially or culturally situated
phenomenon:
- The narrative of internationalism during socialism operated sometimes explicitly in
opposition to cosmopolitanism. What is the plight of this narrative after 1990?
- Conceptions of self and “other” are often revealed in relation to cosmological settings. What
are the current ontologies of self and other in post-socialist Europe?
- The ´culturalization of poverty´ could be seen as a new millennial narrative. How can we read
this global escape to culture against existing social inequalities?
- Kant linked cosmopolitanism to the principle of universal hospitality. What could be made of
that link if we take into account the renewed interest of anthropology in hospitality?
- Do new religious movements influencing various marginal groups in CEE reveal any
cosmopolitan ethos?
- In the increasingly interconnected and complex world new cosmo-political alliances and
identities have been forming across social and environmental movements (around issues
such as global poverty, climate justice, agriculture etc.). How are the local and trans-local
loyalties and stakes played out in these movements?
Organisation:
This two-day conference will consist of one plenary session focused on the central theme
followed by parallel panels on various themes. The keynote speakers will be: Huon Wardle
(University of St. Andrews) and Jonathan Friedman (EHESS and University of California in San
Diego). The language of the plenary session is English. The languages of the panel sessions are
English, Slovak, and Czech. However, we will adopt the rule that if one paper accepted to a given
panel is in English, all panel papers will have to be in English.
Important deadlines:
Paper proposals should be sent via email by July 8, 2011.
If you are interested in organizing panel sessions dedicated to a particular topic, you should
send panel proposals, names of proposed participants and abstracts by July 8, 2011.
Abstracts should not exceed 300 words.
Individual applicants will be informed about the outcome of their paper proposal by July 22,
2011. All proposals as well as organizational inquiries shall be sent to SASA.CASA.11@gmail.com
The final conference program with titles and abstracts of panel sessions will be announced via
email during August 2011.
Venue:
The conference will take place in the south Bohemian town of Telè at the Masaryk University learning
centre situated in the former Jesuit’s college (http://www.muni.cz/uct/general/about). The premises
offer conference rooms (a lecture hall for the plenary session and graduate student conference and
seminar rooms for panel sessions, all equipped with conference technology and access to internet) as
well as reasonably priced accommodation for participants (300CZK/person/night) in 3-5 bed rooms.
Please visit http://www.muni.cz/uct/services/accomm for more details. We have booked enough
rooms (70 places) for all participants.
The conference fee of 600 CZK (25 Euros) covers the costs of the two-day conference and a dinner
on the second day of conference for each participant. It is payable upon registration at the
conference venue.

Picturing Moral Courage: Stories of Survival, Sarajevo, 15-16 July 2011‏

The Post-Conflict Research Center, the Center for Justice and
Reconciliation, PROOF Media for Social Justice and the Embassy of the United
States in Bosnia and Herzegovina invite interested students from the Western
Balkans to apply for participation in the �Picturing Moral Courage: Stories
of Survival� conference. The conference will be held on July 15th and 16th at
Hotel Europe in Sarajevo and funding has been secured for regional student
participants.
*About the conference: *
�Picturing Moral Courage: Stories of Survival� aims to educate participants
about the topic of moral courage using several creative approaches: a photo
exhibition depicting rescuers from all over the world and their personal
narratives; workshops that teach students how to use photography, media, and
other forms of artistic expression as a tool for peacebuilding and social
action; and a dramatic reenactment of rescuer narratives performed by
professional actors. Additionally, conference panelists and speakers will
present a wide variety of perspectives and topics from the fields of
genocide, education, art, media and peacebuilding. This conference will
give students from all over Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the greater Balkans
region, the chance to interact with each other and can play a role in
creating a network of informed citizens and youth members who can promote
peace and reconciliation in their respective communities. Bosnia and
Herzegovina is a country deeply affected by consequences of the recent war,
therefore, this conference aims to educate members of Bosnian youth and
civil society about topics related to moral courage and rescuer behavior and
their importance to sustainable peace in the country. One of the most
detrimental impediments to reconciliation and peacebuilding efforts is the
educational division within Bosnian schools throughout the country. This
divided system administers separate curricula to students of different
ethnicities, resulting in three independent understandings of conflict and
history.
*Application requirements:*
Students, including undergraduates, graduates and post-graduates, from
Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, the F.Y.R. Macedonia,
Montenegro, Serbia and Slovenia are encouraged to apply. A proven interest
in the issues the conference will address is crucial, as well as
demonstrated social and/or political engagement in your country of
origin. Round-trip
transportation, accommodation and some meals will be covered for all
selected participants.
For more information, or to request an application, please send an email to prccontact@gmail.com.

Thứ Sáu, 17 tháng 6, 2011

Victims of crime and victims of war- international and national contexts, Annual conference of the Victimology Society of Serbia, Belgrade, 24-25 November 2011

It is our pleasure to invite you to the Second Annual Conference of the
Victimology Society of Serbia Victims of crime and victims of war:
international and national contexts, which will be held in the Palace Hotel in
Belgradeon 24th and 25th November 2011.

The Conference aims to bring together experts and researchers who are dealing
with problems of crime and war victims, both theoretically and practically,
from the perspective of different disciplines, and to enable constructive
discussion, comprehensive exchange and connection of various experiences and
knowledge. Experiences and problems of crime and war victims as well as social
responses to them will be considered both separately and in their mutual
coherence and similarities. Particular attention will be put on considering
problems of victims in the context of the latest EU and the Council of Europe
packages of measures, UN Resolution 1325 as well as in connection to the
obligations of Serbia in regard to determining the facts about war crimes and
facing the past.

This years’ Conference will also have a preparatory character for the 14th
Symposium of the World Society of Victimology titled Justice for Victims, which
will be held in The Netherlands in 2012.

The conference work will be organized through:
• Plenary sessions
• Thematic sessions
• Workshops.

The key speakers at the plenary sessions will be:

* Prof. dr Marc Groenhuijsen, president of the World Society of
Victimology and director of the International Victimology Institute
INTERVICT, University of Tilburg (The Netherlands): Victims of crime and
war in the context of the newly EU and UN laws on victims

* Prof. dr Natasa Mrvic-Petrovic,professor of the Law faculty, Union
University in Belgrade ( Serbia ): Compensation of crime and war victims

* Prof. dr Liz Kelly,director of The Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit
(CWASU), London Metropolitan University (UK): Violence against women and
children in the national legislations of the EU member states: an overview of
the research results

* Prof. dr Geoffroy de la Grandmaison, professor at the Faculte des
Sciences de la Sante, Paris Ile de France Ouest (France): International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the forensic pathologist:
ethical considerations

* Snezana Savic,judge of the Belgrade Appellate Court: Protection of
victims of crime and war in the legal practice in Serbia

* Jasna Lazarevic,associated researcher at the Small Arms Survey, The
Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva (
Switzerland ): Armed violence: the burden for the society and the state


If you wish to participate at the conference, please complete the registration
form and send it with a proof of payment of the registration fee to the E-mail:
infovds@eunet.rs, the address of the Victimology Society of Serbia, Dositejeva
1a, Belgrade 11000, Serbia, or fax number: +381 11-3034 232.

If you want to present your paper at the conference, we invite you to submit an
abstract of the paper.

Please find attached the registration form, the call for submission of
abstracts and information regarding the registration fee and other charges.

For any additional information about the Conference, please contact Tamara
Kljajicon the telephone +381 11 3034 232 or via E-mail infovds@eunet.rs

Thứ Năm, 16 tháng 6, 2011

8th European Feminist Research Conference-Strand 6, Revisiting 'Equality vs. Difference': Feminism in the 21st Century, Budapest, May 17-20 2012‏

The 8th European Feminist Research Conference will take place in Budpest,
Hungary, May 17-20 2012. The conference is organized by the Department of
Gender Studies, at the Central European University and ATGENDER, the
European Association for Gender Research, Education and Documentation. The
over-all theme for the conference is “The Politics of Location Revisited:
Gender@2012”. One strand for presenting papers is “Revisiting 'Equality vs.
Difference': Feminism in the 21st Century".

For this strand, we seek papers that address feminist struggles for justice
at the crossroads of multiple locations within and across axes of
signification and relations of power, and/or against the background of the
inter-disciplinary debates around equality and difference in feminist
scholarship and activism.

How have these debates transformed feminist thinking and what challenges and
promises do they raise for feminism’s potential to bring about emancipation
and social change? How do feminist scholars and activists engage with the
complexities that arise in the field in-between struggles for equality and
politics of difference? What does equality mean at the beginning of the 21st
century?

How can feminists think and use solidarity and new strategic alliances with
other progressive movements, when locations are shifting, complex and
paradoxical? And what is the role of identity politics and representation?
We are also interested in careful and contextualized reflections on the
implications of power and privilege within feminist scholarship.

The theme of this strand raises questions of immediate importance for
feminist scholarship, especially in relation to the current European
political, social and cultural climate, where structures of inequality and
forms of discrimination are persisting, if not increasing.

The strand is co-ordinated by Jelisaveta Blagojević, Mia Liinason and Eike
Marten. You are welcome to contact us with questions or ideas on e-mail *
strand6efrc2012@gmail.com*. The deadline for submissions is July 31. Please
visit the conference webpage for more information: *
http://www.8thfeministconference.org*

Thứ Tư, 15 tháng 6, 2011

(Re)imagining the Balkans - Paris, Ceri Sciences Po, 27 June 2011‏

 (Ré)imaginer les Balkans : des sociétés européennes en mouvement
 Amphithéâtre Chapsal, Sciences Po, 27, rue Saint Guillaume, 75337 Paris
Avec le soutien de la Direction de la prospective du Ministère des Affaires étrangères et européennes
27 juin 2011

9H15 - Ouverture – Christian Lequesne, directeur du CERI-Sciences Po

Session 1 - 9H30-11H15 - Fabriques culturelles et connexions transnationales : les horizons de l’appartenance
Présidente de séance et discutante: Emmanuelle Olivier, CRAL-EHESS-CNRS

Popular Music in the "Yugosphere" and "Ethnosphere": Layers of Musical Belonging since the Break-up of Yugoslavia
Catherine Baker, University of Southampton

Bubbles and Powder Kegs: A Cinematic Bus Ride through Serbian Imagination
Marko Žiković, Alberta University

Bridging Social Capital on the Web: Migrants from Former Yugoslavia and the Importance of Invisible Layers
Jasmina Marić, Internet Interdisciplinary Institute (IN3), UOC Barcelona

11H15-11H30 – Pause café

Session 2 - 11H30-13H00 - Des passés mobiles : les identités dans les pliures du temps
Président de séance et discutant : Xavier Bougarel, CNRS, CETOBAC

Victims' "memory wars"? A Bosnian Association of War Victims under Ethnographic Scrutiny
Cécile Jouhanneau, ISP-Nanterre et CERI-Sciences Po

Sculpting the Nation in Skopje. The Multiple Temporalities of the Present
Nadège Ragaru, CERI-Sciences Po

Voices of the Nation. Being Kosovar Today
Anna di Lellio, The Graduate Program in International Affairs, The New School (New York)

Reshaping Identities: History Teaching in Contemporary Serbia
Dubravka Stojanović, Université de Belgrade

13H00-14H30 – Repas

14H30-15H00 – Key note speaker: (Ré)imaginer les Balkans
Maria Todorova, University of Illinois

Session 3 - 15H15-17H15 – Table ronde : Les présences et présents de l’Union européenne dans les Balkans occidentaux
Président de séance et discutant : Jacques Rupnik, CERI Sciences Po

Gerald Knaus, European Stability Initiative
Daniel Korski, European Council on Foreign Relations
Stefano Bianchini, Università degli studi di Bologna

Conclusion - Joseph Maïla, directeur de la Prospective, Ministère des Affaires étrangères et européennes.

Responsable scientifique : Nadège Ragaru - ragaru@ceri-sciences-po.org
Contact à la Direction de la prospective : Luc Lévy – luc.levy@diplomatie.gouv.fr

Educating for peace in Israel: Obstacles and possibilities, Faculty of Media and Communications, Belgrade, Monday, 20 June 2011, 18:30-20:00‏

The Center for Comparative Conflict Studies (CFCCS) at the Faculty of Media and Communications (FMK)

Invites you for a presentation

Educating for peace in Israel: Obstacles and possibilities

The presenters: our guests from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem

Dr. Daphna Golan-Agnon, Dr. Nadera Shalhoub-Kervorkian & Dr. Rachel Busbridge

The Faculty of Law

(Campus-Community Partnership Program)

http://law.huji.ac.il/eng/merkazim.asp?cat=531&in=0

When? Monday, June 20, 2011 18:30-20:00

Where? The Faculty of Media and Communications, Karadjordjeva 65, Beograd (room #227)

About the presentation:

In this presentation, we explore what it means to educate for peace in Israel in the context of ongoing conflict. Drawing on our experiences of the “Partnership”, a community-engaged set of courses that focus on activism and Jewish-Palestinian interaction, we share our insights and encountered challenges in promoting peace education in Israel.

Educating for peace is, to say the very least, a challenge in Israel: the enduring and deeply-seated Israeli-Palestinian conflict permeates all aspects of life including the academia, and the segregated nature of primary and secondary education means that the first encounter between Jews and Palestinians typically takes place on campus.

The history of mutual mistrust, the pervasiveness of unequal power relations and the construction of Palestinian and Jewish identities as diametrically opposed to each other means that the possibilities for genuine peace education are constrained.

Thứ Ba, 14 tháng 6, 2011

Making Sense of Catastrophe: Postcolonial Approaches to Postsocialist Experiences, Cambridge, 23-26 February 2012‏

Moving from adolescence to adulthood, the postsocialist world is
undergoing multi-directional transformations that would have seemed
unbelievable twenty years ago. Bustling economic development combines
with corruption, violence, and cynicism, which reign over the
postsocialist space. Three causal schemes compete to explain this
large-scale process. One derives the postsocialist present from the
legacies of the Soviet past. Another ascribes responsibility to the
global crisis of the traditional West. A third episteme draws on
analogies and contrasts between postsocialist and postcolonial
transformations, both of which have shaped the 21st century as we
experience it.

Writing in 2001 from different hemispheres, David Chioni Moore called
upon a "Global Postcolonial Critique" of the postsocialist world, while
Alexander Etkind speculated about "internal colonization" in Russia's
past and present. Independently, the last decade has seen a booming
development of Memory Studies, which has transferred its focus from its
original subject of the aftermath of the Holocaust to broad conceptions
of "cosmopolitan" (Daniel Levy, Nathan Snyder) and "multi-directional"
memory and "post-memory" (Marianne Hirsch), concepts that have been
applied globally from Latin America to the Pacific.

With this workshop, we intend to consolidate a new research agenda that
combines three independently developed fields, Postcolonial Studies,
Postsocialist Studies, and Memory Studies, in their application to
Eastern Europe and Northern Eurasia. Is the terror in places like Katyn
or Kolyma, as in Auschwitz, unrepresentable, or have art and history
learned how to represent these events? How do we need to revise
postcolonial categories such as orientalism, hegemony, or the subaltern
when referring to places such as Belarus or Kazakhstan? How are people
across the postsocialist world making sense of its serial catastrophes?
What does the memory of the past teach us about power and culture in the
present and in the future?

We invite both theoretical and empirical contributions to these and
related questions. We wish to establish a dialogue between experts who
specialize in different parts of the planet. Interested scholars from
the postcolonial and postsocialist worlds are equally welcome.

Proposals shall consist of an abstract of 300-500 words and a short CV.
Please send your applications to Jill Gather by 1
October 2011. Please also inform us if you wish help with financing your
travel to Cambridge. We will provide participants with accommodation
from 23 to 26 February 2012. The reimbursement for travel expenses will
be negotiated on an individual basis.
Keynote Speaker: Michael Rothberg (University of Illinois)
http://www.memoryatwar.org

Thứ Năm, 9 tháng 6, 2011

Conference: One Decade after the Ohrid Framework Agreement. Lessons (to be) learned, Skopje, 24-26 June 2011‏

One Decade after the Ohrid Framework Agreement.Lessons (to be) learned from the Macedonian Experience

Hotel Continental, Skopje, 24-26 June 2011

The conference is organized by CRPM, KAS, FES, OSI Think Tank Fund

Friday 24th June 2011
12:00 - 13:30
*Working language of the conference is English. Consecutive translation will be provided only for non-English speakers at the opening of the conference. Opening of the conference
Marija Risteska, CRPM Executive Director
Abdulaqim Ademi, Vice-Prime Minister of the Government of Republic of Macedonia, responsible for the implementation of the Ohrid Framework Agreement
Heinz Bongartz, representative of the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung
Anja Czymmeck, resident representative of the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung
Goran Buldioski, director of the Open Society Institute Think Tank Fund
Keynote speaker: Florian Bieber, Centre for Southeast European Studies, University of Graz, Austria
13:30 -14:30 Lunch
14:30 – 16:00 Panel 1: The conflict, the agreement and the reconciliation: 2001 then and now
Panel Chair: Ljubomir Frchkoski, University Ss Cyril and Methodius, Skopje, Macedonia
Papers:
Dane Taleski, Central European University. Post-conflict legacies and the Ohrid Framework Agreement: Discursive legitimation of the political competition between Albanian parties in Macedonia.
Papakostas Nikolaos, Institute of International and Economic Relations, Athens. The role of organized crime groups on the eruption of 2001 conflict and on the reconciliation process.
Oliver Stanoeski, University Ss Cyril and Methodius. One decade living in the margins: the unfinished task of the peace-building process in Macedonia.
Cvete Koneska, University of Oxford. Power-sharing and power-dividing: Education and Decentralization policies in post 2001 Macedonia.
16:00 -16:30 Coffee break
16:30 – 18:00 Panel 2: Political belonging in post-2001 Macedonia: the authority of "ethnic identities"
Chair: Vasiliki Neofotistos, Assistant Professor, University of Buffalo, New York, USA
Papers:
Franziska Blomberg, Europa-Universität Viadrina, Frankfurt am Oder. Democratic Spill-Over of Civil Society in Ethno-Nationally Divided Societies? - External Democracy Promotion in Macedonia and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Ljubica Spaskovska, University of Exeter. In Search of a Demos: 'ethnizenship' and belonging.
Anastas Vangeli, Center for Research and Policy Making. Heritage, Loyalty, Membership: Semantics of Belonging in Contemporary Macedonia.
Martin Pechijareski, Central European University. The role of inter-ethnic conflicts on the integration of the Macedonian Society.

>> Saturday 25th June 2011
9:30 – 11:00 Panel 3: The Ohrid Framework Agreement in the Southeast European context
Chair: Dimitar Bechev, European Council on Foreign Relations, Sofia office.
Papers:
Jan Mus, Warsaw School of Social Science and Humanities. How much politics in ethnicity and ethnicity in politics?
Ivan Toromanoski, Independent researcher. Changes in Construction of Macedonian Nationalism and the Nationalism of the Macedonian Albanians: From Peoples' Republic of Macedonia to "North-Atlantic" Republic of Macedonia.
Plamen Dimitrov, Bulgarian Geopolitical Society, Sofia. Ohrid Framework Agreement and its implications for the Balkan geopolitical status quo.
11:00 – 11:30 Coffee break
11:30 – 13:00 Panel 4: Decentralization reform after OFA: towards greater power sharing or effective and efficient service delivery?
Chair: Gordana Siljanovska, University Ss Cyril and Methodius, Skopje.
Papers:
Elena Davitkovska, University Ss Cyril and Methodius and Ivan Stefanovski, Civic Association MOST, Skopje. The Future of Good Governence in Ethnically Mixed Municipalities in Macedonia.
Biljana Kotevska and Aleksandar Cekov, Centre for Regional Policy Research and Cooperation "Studiorum," Skopje. Towards effective political participation of "small ethnic communities " in local self&#8208;&#8208;government in Macedonia (impact of the Ohrid Framework Agreement)
Aisling Lyon, University of Bradford. Municipal Decentralisation: Between the Integration and Accommodation of Ethnic Difference in the Republic of Macedonia.
Bojana Jovanovska, University Ss Cyril and Methodius. Decentralization Reforms in Social Services Delivery in Macedonia.
13:30 -14:30 Lunch
14:30 - 16:00 Panel 5: Equitable representation for "non-majority communities" in Macedonia - Until when?
Chair: Zhidas Daskalovski, University St Clement of Ohrid, Bitola, Macedonia
Papers:
Simonida Kacarska, University of Leeds. Equitable representation in the EU conditionality.
Marija Risteska, Center for Research and Policy Making. Insiders and Outsiders: Revisiting the Principle of Just and Equal Representation of Minority Groups in Macedonian Public Administration.
Jana Lozanoska, EuroBalkan, Skopje. Principle of non-discrimination and equitable representation in Ohrid Framework Agreement ten years after - Formal or substantive equality?!
16:00 -16:30 Coffee break
16:30 – 18:00 Panel 6: The future of Macedonia and the region
Chair: Neophytos Loizides, Queen's University Belfast / University of Kent.
Papers:
Benjamin Mols, Global Governance Institute, Brussels. The OSCE in the Western Balkans: Offering the Nescesary Future Perspectives for a Neglected Organisation.
Boyka Boneva, Institute for International Economic Relations, Athens. The Role of Bulgaria and Greece as catalytic factors for the European Future of the Western Balkans.
Georgios Kokkalis and Elina Makri, Cafe Babel, Athens. The `'New'' Macedonian Question : FYROM and Greece.
Olsi Baze. Kristal University, Tirana. The role of the Albanian factor on the EU integration perspective of the region.

>> Sunday 26th June, 2011

9:30 – 11:00 Panel 7: Lessons learned
Chair: Biljana Vankovska, University Ss Cyril and Methodius, Skopje.
Papers:
Nenad Markovic, University Ss Cyril and Methodius, Skopje. Fears and lessons learned from the implementation of the Ohrid Framework Agreement (2001-2011).
Premysl Rosulek, University of West Bohemia, Pilsen. Macedonia in 2011: stabilization or before the Framework Agreement II.
Marko Savkovic, Centre for Security Policy, Belgrade. Reaching OFA: What valuable lessons are there for mediators of the future?
Dusan Janjic, Institute for Social Sciences, Belgrade. Macedonia: A no noticed crisis?
11:00 – 11:30 Coffee break
11:30 – 13:00 Special panel on The Initiative for RECOM
Speakers: Representatives of the Network promoting the Initiative for RECOM towards the establishment of a Regional Commission Tasked with Establishing the Facts about All Victims of War Crimes and Other Serious Human Rights Violations Committed on the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia in the period from 1991-2001
13.30 – 14.30 Lunch
14.30 – 16.00 Closing of the conference
Moderator: Marija Risteska, Center for Research and Policy Making, Skopje