POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY SECTION FOR GLASGOW GENERAL CONFERENCE 2014

THE EURO CRISIS: NEW SOCIO-POLITICAL DIVISIONS, MOBILITY AND MOBILIZATION    

The section chair and co-chair are Hans-Joerg Trenz, Director of the Centre for Modern European Studies, University of Copenhagen, and Goffredo Adinolfi, Center for Research and Studies in Sociology, Lisbon University Institute.  The Section convenors are Niilo Kauppi , Research Director – CNRS, University of Strasbourg, and David Swartz, Department of Sociology, Boston University.

The current Euro crisis is receiving considerable attention – as it should – among EU scholars.  Much of that attention, however, focuses on the origins and nature of this crisis, and its consequences for  reshaping financial and political institutions.  Yet the long term socio-political costs and consequences of crisis are becoming more apparent.  From a political sociology perspective it is now time to appraise these long term developments that affect the political constellation of Europe, its structured diversity of political cultures, political instability, social unrest and new inequalities. In the fifth year of crisis we therefore invite contributions that assess the social and political consequences for future European  integration or disintegration and outline the political and normative challenges ahead. Those consequences can be seen in cross-border migrations and mobilizations, diversity and multicultural considerations, social exclusion and stratification, loss of confidence (growing political skepticism) in mainstream institutions (parties, trade unions, parliaments) , and resurgent cultural and political localisms that challenge the principles underpinning representative democracy.

Crisis induced social constraints and conflicts test the capacity of the political system (both nation state and EU) to respond to the needs and demands of society.  Contemporary political sociology of Europe is concerned with the contestation of legitimacy across societies and political systems. From a political sociology perspective, the ‘European crisis’ has an extraordinarily high potential for generating deep and ongoing conflicts about European integration within and across national domestic politics. It has fueled debate over the authority of the state and of transnational regimes of governance.  It has pit northern countries against southern ones, citizens against elites.  It has also fundamentally put into question the efficiency and morality of the European free market and its capacity to guarantee welfare, sustainable growth, and equal distribution of goods and benefits. These contestations are carried by public intellectuals, political parties and a growing number of protest movements in different national arenas leading to various allegiances and frictions. Political conflicts are also channeled through different media outlets, amplifying and interconnecting perceptions of interests, identity and solidarity.

This section will organize 6-8 panels around these topics.  We invite  contributions that consider various kinds of social consequences and /or investigate the restructuring of political order and legitimacy in the relationship between  member states and the EU.

Panel 1: Governance beyond the nation-state: What are the prospects and limits for the allocation of authority and decision-making capacities beyond the nation-state?

Panel 2: Conflict and new cleavages: how are experiences of social deprivation translated into political conflict and cleavages? How does the (re)politicization of inequalities and the return of redistributive conflicts correlate with a ‘new politics of identity’, nationalism, regionalism and expressions of Euroscepticism?

Panel 3: Democracy, rights and legitimacy: What are the roots of the current lack of legitimacy of Europe? How can the requirements of democratic participation and rights in today’s situation of globalized politics be met? Can the idea of popular sovereignty be valid in a transnational context of governance? What type of democratic responses do we observe in reaction to the crisis of welfare and governance?

Panel 4: Intra EU-migration: a reappraisal of EU citizenship? How has the Euro crisis exposed the asymmetries of European citizenship and the differences that divide the peoples of Europe?  How can mobile citizens make use of EU citizenship rights as a strategy of resilience against crisis induced negative consequences?

Panel 5:  New media and new patterns of mobilization: how are new (digital) media used as a resource of support, resistance and/or civic engagement of particular groups? How can we account of the new discursive and mediating practices of political legitimation that interrelate political elites with the citizens?

Panel 6:  Political skepticism (loss of trust) in European institutions: How has crisis affected public attitudes and perceptions of legitimacy and identity in a transnational, comparative perspective?  How is Euroscepticism manifested in national and 2014 European Parliament elections?

http://ecpr.eu/events/eventdetails.aspx?EventID=14

 

Conference “Civic political engagement and public spheres in the new digital era”

CEVIPOF Sciences-Po Paris, SciencesCom – Audencia School of Management and Bournemouth University organize a conference:

“Civic political engagement and public spheres in the new digital era”

Paris, June 24-27, 2014

The conference will concentrate on the following themes :

Traditional and non-traditional forms of civic political engagement
Civic political engagement – still preaching to the converted
Cognition and behavior in online environment
Public spheres in the digital era

Deadlines:
Extended abstracts 15 January 2014 (please use the provided format)
Notification of acceptance 10 February 2014

All information and call for extended abstracts can be found at http://www.cpe2014.com/

 

 

New journal: European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology

This new journal is of great interest to our community. ‘New from the European Sociological Association, the EJCPS seeks to explore the relationship between culture and politics through a sound sociological lens. It welcomes both considerations of cultural phenomena in relation to political context, work that situates political phenomena within a cultural framework, and all points between these poles’.

You can find a call for papers here

Here is the EJCPS’s aim and scope from the journal’s website:

The European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology is a peer-reviewed journal published under the auspices of the European Sociological Association.

The study of culture is the fastest growing area in both European and North American sociology. After years of mild neglect, political sociology is also re-establishing itself as a central plank of the discipline. The European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology aims to be a forum not so much for these fields of study considered separately, as for any work seeking to explore the relationship between culture and politics through a sound sociological lens. It welcomes, thus, both considerations of cultural phenomena in relation to political context, work that situates political phenomena within a cultural framework, and all points between these poles. In so doing it seeks both to address matters of immediate concern and to recover the broad sociological sensibility that was once a staple of the classical tradition.

CfP: Conference on Sexual Causes: Sexuality and Collective Mobilization

Sexual Causes. Sexuality and Collective Mobilization

From contraception to “gay marriage,” from abortion to prostitution or rape, there are many sexual issues which have mobilized people in recent decades. Indeed, since the “sexual liberation” phenomenon observed principally in the west in the 1970s, “sexual causes” have multiplied throughout the world, without, however, always attracting the scholarly attention they deserve. This symposium is thus devoted to mobilization related to sexuality, without any historical or geographical limitations.

International symposium organized by  CRAPUL/GT07
Lausanne, Switzerland, May 29-31 2014

Propositions (300 words) should be sent before 15 September 2013 to : causes.sexuelles.2014@aislf.net

More information on the symposium can be found here

Special Issue Partecipazione e conflitto: ‘Statactivsm: State Restructuring, Financial Capitalism and Statistical Mobilizations’,

The objective of this special issue is to collect papers investigating the use of statistics and quantification in contentious performances connected with state restructuring, main transformations in welfare capitalisms, and changes in work organization regimes.

The call for papers can be found here: CfP Statactivism

Candidate submissions must be addressed at partecipazioneeconflitto@gmail.com and to the three editors of the special issue. The call for papers will close on June 16, 2013: no papers received after that date will be considered for the special issue.
Authors whose papers are considered unsuited will be promptly notified of this fact. Our target publication date is May 2014 (vol. 7, no. 2). The extension limit is 8,000 words, including notes and references.

Editors:

Isabelle Bruno,CERAPS, Université de Lille 2,
isabelle.bruno@univ-lille2.fr

Emmanuel Didier, Centre Maurice Halbwachs (CMH/ETT),
CNRS/ENS, edidier@ehess.fr

Tommaso Vitale, Centre d’études européennes, Sciences
Po, tommaso.vitale@sciences-po.fr

UCSIA Summer School « Religion, Reform and the Challenge of plurality »

2013 UCSIA summer school on “Religion, Culture and Society”

Sunday 25 August – Sunday 1 September 2013

Antwerp, Belgium

In 2013 the UCSIA summer school focuses on the topic of Religion, Reform and the Challenge of Plurality.
We will research processes of change that arise in the interaction between religions and societies in contexts of plurality – especially and also in a global world. Where a diversity of religions and societal perspectives are present, identity-claims are problematised, and the understanding of citizenship is evolving. What role can religions play in shaping such societies? How do plural societies affect religions towards changing their own attitudes towards one another and revising their role in society? How do religious convictions and perspectives on citizenship relate to one another? Can one ‘belong’ to various cultures and religions? These challenges can be studied in various areas: changes in the perception and self-image of religions and faith-based organizations (so-called ‘identity-issues”), education, public health management, welfare programs, the relevance of voluntary work, attitudes towards (im)migration, gender and race issues, culture, politics, involvement in the public sphere, etc.

Participation and stay for young scholars and researchers are free of charge. Participants should pay for their own travel expenses to Antwerp.

You can submit your application via the electronic submission on the summer school website. The completed file as well as all other required application documents must be submitted to the UCSIA Selection Committee not later than Sunday 28 April 2013.

For further information regarding the programme and application procedure, please have a look at our website: http://www.ucsia.org/summerschool

Contact:

Sara Mels
Project coordinator

UCSIA
Prinsstraat 14
2000 Antwerp – Belgium Tel: +32/3/265.45.99 Fax: +32/3/707.09.31

RECODE PhD Summer School « The Challenge of Complex Diversity: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives from Europe and Canada »

The Challenge of Complex Diversity:
Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives from Europe and Canada

RECODE Summer School,
University College Dublin, 10th to 14thJune 2013

Applications are invited from doctoralresearch students to participate in a week-long summer school organized by the RECODE research networking programme, funded by the European Science Foundation, and hosted by the Humanities Institute, University College Dublin, from 10thto 14thJune 2013. Successful applicants will receive an award covering travel costs and accommodation.

RECODE, an interdisciplinary, comparative research programme, aims to explore to what extent the processes of transnationalisation, migration, religious mobilisation and cultural differentiation entail a new configuration of social conflict in post-industrial societies (see http://www.recode.fi/).The summer schoolwill examine the challenge of complex diversity, through theoretical and empirical perspectives from Europe and Canada.The week longprogramme will consist of lectures and seminars on the following four thematic areas covered by the RECODE network: (1) Linguistic diversity; (2) De-territorialized diversity; (3) Religious diversity; (4) Solidarity beyond the nation-state.

CfP: Grounding cosmopolitanism: Theory and practice through the prism of women’s rights

Grounding cosmopolitanism: Theory and practice through the prism of women’s rights 

Conference to be held in Istanbul.

This event follows and expands on the framework and research we have recently published in Theory & Society and the discussion we had organized in May 2012 with the participation of Seyla Benhabib, Ayse Kadioglu, Fuat Keyman, and Meyda Yegenoglu. The conference aims to bring together and facilitate dialogue between leading theorists, scholars conducting fieldwork, and activists to analyze the modalities of mutual recognition in practice in relation to cross-cutting cleavages and aspirations that mark women’s movements. Women’s rights represent a promising foil for exploring the tensions involved in the cosmopolitan framework, at once presenting a universal challenge and conjuring up thick significations. We wish to explore these questions particularly in relation to the women’s movements in the Middle East and the Balkans.
Deadline: January 4

CfP: Fields, Networks and Social Change in a Neoliberal Age

ECPR General Conference, Bordeaux, September 4-7 2013

Political sociology section

Panel 6: Fields, Networks and Social Change in a Neoliberal Age

Chaired by Mathieu Hilgers, Université Libre de Bruxelles, and Eric Mangez, Université Catholique de Louvain

An impressive number of recent publications show an international dynamic of interest in field theory. However, with some rare exceptions, many researches fail to develop the seminal potential of field theory to interpret and to explain the dynamics of social change (see Fligstein and McAdam 2012; Mangez and Hilgers 2012). Given the constant refinements of the concept and theory of field and their growing use in international sociology, anthropology and political sciences in recent years, it seems useful to bring to light the elements that make this theory useful for the analysis of social change. More precisely, this panel aims to contribute to the development of field theory by considering its potential to grasp the impact of the process of neoliberalization which affects many societies in the world. How can we interpret the impact of the process of neoliberalization on the functioning of relatively autonomous domain of activity (art, literature, education, research,…)? How does it affect their autonomy and their structure? How does the rise of various ‘transfield’ networks affect these domains? The panel will address the question of the relation between fields and networks in a neoliberal era. This panel is open to theoretical or empirical contributions but it will give the priority to contributions which provide a theoretical impulse to field theory by mobilizing empirical analysis. A comparative perspective will be privileged for the discussion, contributions which concern the reality beyond Europe are of course more than welcome.

Fligstein Neil and McAdam Doug (2012). A Theory of Fields. New York: Oxford University Press.

Mangez, Eric; Hilgers, Mathieu (2012). The Field of Knowledge and the Policy Field in Education: PISA and the production of knowledge for policy, European Educational Research Journal , p. 189-205

Submit proposals here

Deadline February 1st

CfP: Coordination of Policy Sectors

ECPR General Conference, Bordeaux, September 4-7 2013

Political sociology section

Panel 5: Coordination of Policy Sectors

Chaired by Philipp Trein, Université de Lausanne

Policy analysts have used the concept of policy sectors to distinguish actor constellations and functional logics of certain policy problems. Most of the policy analyses focus on the functional logics, structures, ideas, actors and conflicts inside a policy sector, whereas the relations in between such fields remain poorly analyzed. However, the vertical relations of policy sectors are very important, because many political problems require the coordination of actors from different fields, such as in cases of imminent catastrophes, or, for the solution of complex societal problems. This panel wants to understand how policy sectors or sub-sectors relate to each other. Possible examples are the relation of fiscal and monetary policy, foreign and defense policy or preventive health and health care policies. Certainly, other examples are possible.

Therefore, this panel invites papers that focus on the coordination of policy sectors and policy sub-sectors. Theoretical contributions are welcome, but also empirical analyses. Successful papers address, for instance, questions as the following: Where do policy sectors touch and when do conflicts among sectors emerge? Which forms of coordination between policy sectors are possible and which factors have a positive or negative impact on coordination? In which country, or group of countries, is a coordination of policy fields or sectors more likely?

This panel contributes to the debate on field concepts in political analysis, by sharpening our understanding of sectoral and sub-sectoral relations in politics and to a better understanding of the coordination patterns in public policy.

Submit proposals here

Deadline February 1st