RC15 - Political and Cultural Geography

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15Jan 2015

CFP 28th Annual PGSG Pre-Conference — DePaul University, 20 April 2015

Sponsor: Department of Geography, DePaul University

Local coordinator: Kara Dempsey (kdempse5@depaul.edu)

Co-organizers: Reece Jones (reecej@hawaii.edu), Natalie Koch (nkoch@maxwell.syr.edu)

The PGSG and the Department of Geography at DePaul University are pleased to announce that the 28th Annual PGSG Pre-conference will be held at DePaul’s Lincoln Park campus on Monday, 20 April 2015. The paper sessions will take place during the day and the PGSG will host a group dinner for pre-conference participants during the evening.

More details will follow about the specific event location, but the meeting is scheduled to take place in Munroe Hall: http://www.depaul.edu/campus-maps/buildings/Pages/munroe-hall.aspx

Information about lodging near the Lincoln Park campus is available here: http://www.depaul.edu/about/campuses/Pages/lincoln-park.aspx#PlacestoStay6

Campus and parking maps can be found at: http://www.depaul.edu/campus-maps/Pages/default.aspx

Deadlines and registration

Please submit a paper title and a 200 word abstract, along with author contact details (name, institutional address, email address), to Reece Jones and Natalie Koch at aag.pgsg@gmail.com no later than 1 February 2015.

As with our past pre-conferences, there will be a nominal $20 registration fee for faculty only. Faculty, please bring cash on the day of the event.

15Jan 2015

CFA “Trajectories of Change”, Ph.D. Scholarships in Humanities and Social Sciences -- The State of the State: Organizing Power, Authority and Legitimacy

Programme

Both the on-going fragmentation in Syria and the progressing territorial disintegration of Ukraine demonstrate currently the radical character of changes in the European neighbourhood. Numerous states are dramatically challenged in their function as administrative, political and territorial entities. They are subject to violent transformations and their viability is being increasingly questioned. Which role do states play in transformation periods and in revolutionary situations? Are they still the key analytical category for analyzing the political change?

The scholarship programme “Trajectories of Change” addresses historical and current transformation processes in the European neighbourhood. It offers stipends and fieldwork grants for Ph.D. students in the humanities and social sciences, and supports both empirical research and projects centred on theoretical reflection. For 2015, applications dealing with the role of the state in transformation processes are especially welcome. Innovative research questions and comparative approaches are highly encouraged.


Scholarships
The programme offers flexible funding schemes for Ph.D. students at various stages of their dissertation research as well as for graduate students in the phase of Ph.D. project development:

  • Ph.D. Scholarships
  • Dissertation Completion Scholarships
  • Pre-Doctoral Research Grants
  • Fieldwork Grants


Requirements

  • Applicants must be Ph.D. students of social sciences or humanities. Prospective Ph.D. students can apply for Pre-Doctoral Research Grants.
  • Deadline 26 February 2015 for a stipend starting in September 2015
  • Please apply online at www.trajectories-of-change.de with Ph.D. proposal and two references.


Further information: www.trajectories-of-change.de

10Dec 2014

CFP: Museums, Discourse & Power -- MIDAS issue 6

MIDAS – Museum Interdisciplinary Studies is launching a call for papers for issue 6 for publication in Autumn 2015. This issue will include a thematic dossier under the theme “Museums, Discourse and Power” with Paulo Simões Rodrigues (University of Évora), and Laurajane Smith (Australian National University) as guest editors.

All accepted articles will undergo a double peer-review. Articles should not exceed 6 000 words (without bibliography) or ca. 40 000 characters (with spaces). It must follow the classical structure of an academic paper. Articles should include abstract, keywords and the biography of the author(s). More information at: http://midas.revues.org/390?lang=en

Deadline: March 31st, 2015.
Send your text to: revistamidas@gmail.com


Museums, Discourse and Power

Throughout their History, museums have established discourses about the cultural significance of their collections through the selection, reception, classification, cataloguing, and exhibition of objects. These discourses were - and still are - determinant for the creation of collective memories as well as for establishing the ways in which societies deal with the past in the present. They also contribute actively to shape social, moral, political and ideological values. By doing so, museums were and are not only institutions of power but also instruments of power. With the theme “Museums, Discourse and Power”, we intend to gather and publish a group of articles about the relation between Museums and Power, and about the relevance of that relation in the past as well as for contemporary societies.
Themes Priority will be given to articles, which approach the theme according to the following topics:

  • Museums and Globalization;
  • Museums and Post-Colonialism;
  • Museums and National Identities;
  • Museums and Immigrations, Emigrations and Migrations;
  • Museums and Cultural and Heritage Politics;
  • Museums and Propaganda;
  • Museums and Education;
  • Museums and their Communities;
  • Museums from the Point of View of their Users (includes visitor studies, community, critiques, etc.);
  • Museums, Art and Historiography;
  • Museums, Art and Gender;
  • Museums and Patronage;
  • Museums and Communication;
  • Museums and Technology.

10Dec 2014

CFP: International Conference

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE


Local Government and Urban Governance: Citizen Responsive Innovations in Europe and in Africa


IGU Commission on Geography of Governance (IGU-GoG) & Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning - University of Lisbon


Lisbon, 9-10 April 2015


Call for Papers


The 2015 Annual Conference of the IGU Commission on ‘Geography of Governance’ (IGU-GoG), to be held in Lisbon, Portugal, 9 - 10 April 2015, at the Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning – University of Lisbon, aims to explore recent developments in local government and urban governance in Europe and in Africa, challenges and opportunities confronting local government, and the recent reforms and institutional experiments on both continents.


We welcome proposals for papers on any aspect of the broad area of local /urban governance, but would particularly encourage papers on three main themes:

  • Theme 1 - Local Government and Urban Governance in Europe: the impact of austerity, recent reforms and the role of local government in an 'EU Urban Agenda'
  • Theme 2 - Local Government and Urban Governance in Africa: democratic decentralization, good governance and the role of local government in the ‘Post-2015 Agenda’
  • Theme 3 – The use of ICT to expand the role of citizens in Urban Governance: national cases and international comparisons


Participation in the Conference & Selection criteria

  • Participation in the conference requires the presentation of a paper
  • The working language of the conference will be English
  • All submissions will be peer-reviewed for content and appropriateness to this conference
  • Information on registration will be available soon in the conference website
  • If necessary, contact us to discuss any ideas that you might have for a paper on these or on other related issues, even if with a focus outside Europe or Africa


Conference Convenor & Organization

Carlos Nunes Silva

Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning

University of Lisbon

Lisbon, Portugal

E-mail: locgovgeo@gmail.com


Conference venue

Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning

University of Lisbon

Lisbon, Portugal


Further information available in the Conference website


All inquiries, expressions of interests, and abstracts should be sent, by e-mail, to:

Carlos Nunes Silva E-mail: locgovgeo@gmail.com

09Dec 2014

CFP: EUGEO 2015 - Convergences and divergences of Geography in Europe

CFP for the Panel New and emerging electoral geographies: methods, patterns, movements
In EUROREG 2015

Proposed by: Martin Šimon (martin.simon@soc.cas.cz) and Balázs Szabó.

The party-structure of European countries has changed significantly for the last decades. New cleavages have emerged both in the Western democracies and post-socialist countries. The processes of globalisation, the new waves of immigration, and the economic crisis have had strong effects on the election results in the western part of Europe. The Eastern European party-structure, which originally developed in the early 1990s after the change of regime, has been modified since then due to the new cleavages caused by the EU enlargement and the economic reforms. These changes created a flux of changes in electoral landscape in Europe and thus provides a rich material to be analysed.

For the session of electoral geography we kindly invite researchers dealing with:
A) analyses of spatial differences in election results in different countries, regions or cities, and participants of comparative studies of different territorial levels;
B) analysis of the impact that the new social movements and the rapid development of communication technologies (the new media) make on the election results;
C) spatial features of electoral base of new political parties like populist, pirate, Eurosceptic, anti-globalist parties. The aim of the session is to provide a state-of-art report of a new and emerging research in electoral geography and related fields in Europe, therefore papers dealing with multi-country perspective are encouraged to participate.

Other sessions are listed in this page. Note that the deadline to submit abstracts is Jan 31, 2015.

05Dec 2014

CFP: Geopolitics in Europe - 9th Pan-European Conference on International Relations

Geopolitics in Europe: power, crisis and the return of territory -- European International Studies Association’s 9th Pan-European Conference on International Relations, 23-26 September 2015, Sicily, Italy

Organized by: Gonzalo Pozo (KCL) and Ian Klinke (Oxford)

European geopolitics has long enjoyed an intimate relationship with forms of political violence, from 19th century imperialism to 20th century territorial revanchism. Yet, post-Cold War Europe is often cast as a curiously post-geopolitical continent, a place where geopolitics no longer matters. Struggles over territorial space seem to happen elsewhere.

The Russian annexation of Crimea is only the most recent reminder that the politics of territory has not been banned from Europe. This comes as no surprise to those who have noted that whilst the European Union may have dissolved borders throughout the Schengen era, it has long hardened and militarised its outer border in attempt at keeping the global poor outside its fortress of wealth. Classical geopolitics may remain a taboo in the corridors of Brussels power, but it has made a revival in national capitals throughout the EU. Moreover, the Eurozone crisis has installed a new hierarchical geography of core and periphery in which the economies of the North limit the sovereignty of the South. As territorial conflict returns to haunt the continent, territorial borders are also being questioned by peaceful nationalisms, from Glasgow to Barcelona. In short, political power in Europe continues to be exercised over and resisted through territorial space. Perhaps more surprisingly, the recent uprising in Ukraine has also shown that street level violence can still be sparked in the name of ‘Europe’.

Bringing the fields of International Relations and Political Geography into dialogue, this section seeks to attract critically minded work from a whole range of theoretical backgrounds to reflect on the geopolitics of contemporary Europe.

Submissions will address issues such as:
- Territorial conflict, separatism and centrifugal nationalism
- The return of great power rivalry and the spectre of a new Cold War
- The status of classical geopolitical thought in Europe
- The political economy of crisis Europe
- Geopolitical fantasies of the European Union as a global actor
- The European border regime, economic migration and the current refugee crisis
- The role of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation in Europe

Submissions will be made through the conference website, but in the meanwhile please get in touch with a title and short (200w) abstract. Ian Klinke (ian.klinke@ouce.ox.ac.uk) and Gonzalo Pozo (gonzalo.pozo-martin@kcl.ac.uk).

05Dec 2014

CFP : “Geographies of Violence” - 9th Pan-European Conference on International Relations

“Geographies of Violence” - The Worlds of Violence - 9th Pan-European Conference on International Relations, 23-26 September 2015, Sicily, Italy

Panels organized by:

Simon Springer University of Victoria, BC, Canada springer@uvic.ca

Philippe Le Billon University of British Columbia, BC, Canada philippe.lebillon@ubc.ca

In carrying forward the ‘Violence and Space’ sessions that we organized for the AAG in Los Angeles in 2013, we wanted to bring more attention to geographical scholarship on violence by reaching out beyond the confines of human geography and encouraging a more interdisciplinary conversation. With this in mind we are assembling a 10 panel Section on the theme of‘Geographies of Violence’ for the upcoming ‘The Worlds of Violence - 9th Pan-European Conference on International Relations’, which will be held 23-26 September 2015 in Giardini Naxos, Sicily, Italy.

Studies on the geographies of violence have rapidly increased in number over the past decade, both within and outside the discipline of geography. Reflecting greater sensitivity to multiple forms of violence and their spatial dimensions, this growing interest has responded to renewed violent forms of imperialism, debates about the trends of violence, and renewed methodological interest in spatial analysis. Engaging this broad literature, this Section will consider the theoretical implications and empirical groundings of violence with the aim of more rigorously demonstrating the ways in which violence is woven through everyday lives, institutions, and structures. As such, the included themes range from a discussion of racism and genocide, sovereignty, neo-colonialism and development, gender inequalities, terror and territory, political ecology, war and militarism, displacement, geopolitics and subaltern resistance. Conceptually the Section will raise issues ranging from routinized performances and banal geographies of violence that serve conventional social, economic, and political norms that go largely unnoticed, through to the spectacular eruptions of ‘exceptional’ violence that capture public attention. By forwarding an agenda for the study of violence from a geographical perspective, we hope to demonstrate the myriad ways in which violence is relationally embedded within the human experience, a process that we envision will support greater understanding of pathways towards nonviolence and peace.

The 10 included Panels are as follows, each of which will include 5 speakers/papers:
1. Development, Neo-colonialism, and Violence
2. Race, Hate, and Genocidal Geographies
3. Geopolitical Violence and Subaltern Resistance
4. The Political Ecology of Violence
5. Sovereign Violence and Spaces of Exception
6. Geographies of Gender(ed) Violence
7. The Violence of Displacement
8. Geographies of Militarism and War
9. Terror, Terrorism and Geography
10. Peace and Nonviolent Geographies

We encourage submissions from scholars writing on any of the above named themes. In your submission, please identify which one of the identified 10 Panels you would like your paper to be considered for. Abstracts of approximately 200-250 words should be sent to both of the organizers at springer@uvic.ca and philippe.lebillon@ubc.ca

Please note that at the same time you email your abstracts to the organizers you will also need to register and submit your abstract through the conference’s online system found here: https://www.conftool.pro/paneuropean2015/

More details about the conference, including travel, accommodation, venue, and location details can be found on the conference website here: http://www.paneuropeanconference.org/2015/

The deadline for receiving abstracts is January 15th, 2015.

03Nov 2014

New Board elected at the IPSA Conference in Montreal

A new Board of Officers was elected during the most recent IPSA conference, held in the city of Montreal in July, 2014.

RC15_Business_Meeting_participants_-_Montreal_July_2014.JPG Members of the RC 15. From left to right: Johanna Pettersson, Cristina Sarmento, Patricia Oliviera, Przemyslaw Osiewicz, Gabriela de la Paz, Heriberto Cairo Carou, Luna Vives, Alan Henrikson, María Lois, Marina Sanz, Carlos González Villa.

Chair

Heriberto Cairo Carou, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain.

Co-chair

Luna Vives, Dawson College, Canada.

Secretary

Przemyslaw Osiewicz, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland.

Board Members

Sanjay Chaturvedi, Panjab University, India.

Gabriela De la Paz, Tecnológico de Monterrey, Mexico.

Alan Henrikson, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, USA.

María Lois, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain.

Johanna Pettersson, Uppsala University, Sweden.

Jaime Preciado, Universidad de Guadalajara, México.

Cristina Sarmento, New University of Lisbon, Portugal.

Takashi Yamazaki, Osaka City University, Japan.

We thank the members of previous Boards for their hard work!!

21Sep 2010

Report: RC-15 Sessions at IPSA World Congress, Santiago, Chile

IPSA WORLD CONGRESS, Santiago, Chile, July 12-16, 2009

A total of 2389 people participated in the 2009 IPSA World Congress of Political Science in Santiago, Chile. The Research Committee on Political and Cultural Geography (RC 15) of  the International Political Science Association (IPSA) organized the  following four panels at the Congress:

  • Panel 1: Geopolitics of Climate Change > Co-organizers: Sanjay Chaturvedi (Punjab University) and Timothy Doyle (Keele University);
  • Panel 2: Global Energy Resources: Where Geography & Politics Converge> Co-conveners: Aharon Klieman (Tel Aviv University, RC 41 on Geopolitics) and Takashi Yamazaki (Osaka City University, RC 15);
  • Panel 3: Urban Politics, Global Discontent and Resistance > Co-organizers: Joe Painter (Durham University) and Jeronimo Montero (Durham University);
  • Panel 4: Latin American Geopolitics > Co-organizers: Heriberto Cairo (Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain) and Jaime Preciado (Universidad de Guadalajara, Mexico).

Twelve excellent papers altogether were presented from all around the world. All the panels were well-attended. Upon approval by the committee members for our second term, the other co-chair Prof. Sanjay Chaturvedi and I will initiate new projects for the next IPSA World Congress in Madrid 2012. For more information about activities of the IPSA, please look at: http://www.ipsa.org/site/. Information provided by: yamataka@lit.osaka-cu.ac.jp.

15Jan 2007

L’orbite de la géographie de Jean Gottmann / The Orbit of Jean Gottmann’s Geography

Le numéro spécial de La Géographie avec les Actes du Colloque International « L’orbite de la géographie de Jean Gottmann », qui a eu lieu à Paris, le 29-30 mars 2005, organisé par l’Université de Paris Sorbonne, la Bibliothèque nationale de France et la Société de Géographie, a été publié. L’ouvrage contient 27 contributions originels (http://www.socgeo.org/05.htm), chacune avec un sommaire en français, anglais et italien, 27 illustrations. Elle contient aussi un exposé inédit avec lequel Jean Gottmann défendait l’unité de son travail devant la Commission pour la soutenance de Doctorat d’Etat, à l’Université de Paris X en 1970. L’ouvrage, qui développe 312 pages, est en vente au prix de 15 euros plus frais de port (France : 5 €, Europe : 6.80 €, Monde : 10.40 €) Pour recevoir l’ouvrage, commandez-le par lettre ou par e-mail à la Société de Géographie <socgeo@socgeo.org>. 

The special issue of La Géographie dedicated the proceedings of the International Conference « The Orbit of Jean Gottmann’s Geography », which took place in Paris, on March 29-30, 2005, organized by the University of Paris-Sorbonne, the Bibliothèque nationale de France and the Société de Géographie is now available. The volume includes 27 original contributions (http://www.socgeo.org/05.htm), each with an English, French and Italian abstract, 27 illustrations. It contains also the unpublished text prepared by Jean Gottmann to defend the unity of his work in front of the Doctorat d’ Etat Commission at the University of Paris X, in 1970. The volume, which develops 312 pages, is available at a cost of 15 euros, plus postage. (France : 5 €, Europe : 6.80 €, Monde : 10.40 €) To order this book please reply to Societe de Geographie <socgeo@socgeo.org>.

01Sep 2006

Report: RC-15 Sessions at IPSA World Congress, Fukuoka, Japan (2006)

PANELS PRESENTED AT THE 20th IPSA WORLD CONGRESS (2006), FUKUOKA, JAPAN:

Panel 1: Reconstructing Territory: Nations, Borders, and Networks

Business Meeting Fukuoka 2006

Seated, from left to right, are: Takashi Yamazaki, John O'Loughlin, Alan Henrikson, Yasuo Miyakawa Standing, from left to right are: Ladis Kristof, Sanjay Chaturvedi, Gerard Toal, Arnon Soffer, Dennis Rumley

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