Call for panel discussants: ECPR General Conference 2016

We are looking for two or three additional discussants for the following panel for Prague.  If you would be interested in discussing one or both these books, please contact David Swartz at dswartz@bu.edu.

Panel title:  Rethinking Recent Conceptualizations of Power in Political Sociology

Chair: David Swartz

Co-Chair: Claudia Wiesner

Presenters: David Swartz & Claudia Wiesner

Discussants: Anja Thomas, Hans-Joerg Trenz, Niilo Kauppi

Conceptualizing power is a central theme and core concern of political sociology.  How one approaches the social basis of political life is shaped by guiding conceptions of power.  Two recent books, one in German and the other in English, assess and critically evaluate recent conceptualizations of power that are of interest to political research, particularly in the European context. Demokratisierung der EU durch nationale Europadiskurse by Claudia Wiesner and Symbolic Power, Politics, and Intellectuals: The Political Sociology of Pierre Bourdieu by David Swartz offer different perspectives on these recent trends.  This panel will draw inspiration from these two books by having the authors present their works followed by responses by discussants.

 

David L. Swartz

Boston University – Sociology

 

Panel Proposal. Migration and mobility in contemporary Europe: the users and uses of power

Panel Proposal: ECPR General Conference 2016, Prague 7-10 September 2016

The prevalence, scope and dimensions of migration have intensified in contemporary Europe. The panel will discuss how this has created multiple and complex mobility statuses, rights, actions, regimes and structures, amounting to a gradual continuum between full exclusion and full inclusion of migrants, instead of a simple dichotomy between the two.

Contemporary migration is elaborately researched in different disciplines, such as political science, sociology, economics, anthropology, law, history, etc. They study the European or national mobility regimes and structures and the linkage with migration patterns, (supra)national law and the effects on the characteristics, experiences and trajectories of migrant individuals/groups. However, there is also increasing interest in how these individuals and groups act within and/or surpass their different mobility categories. Some of this research rightfully shows that there is not just a simple dichotomy between inclusion and exclusion of migrants, but that more complex and continuous processes are taking place creating a gradation between full exclusion and full inclusion.

This panel wants to engage with research from every discipline, focusing on these complex processes, while asking the critical question of where and how power operates within them. The explicit identification of power is a crucial but difficult exercise, as power can be hidden, complex, perverse, or fragmented, both in terms of the uses of power and their effects as in terms of the users of power and their contexts. Different uses of power can be identified in resistance by individuals or groups, mass mobilization, governmentality practices, governance, structural (economic, political, natural) forces, media discourses, etc. The users of power can be located beyond the state (supranational political and judicial institutions), within the state (civil servants, police, organizations authorized by the state, municipalities, national courts), in the state (national government) or separate from the state (individuals, ngo’s, communities, companies, media).

As power relations are at the heart of the dynamics of contemporary migration in Europe, it is crucial to both analytically and theoretically grasp the users and uses of power in all their contemporary complexity. Therefore, we invite papers that explicitly address power in their analyses, theoretically and/or empirically, noting that we are very open towards the used conceptualization of power. We welcome papers from all disciplines and using different methods, as long as the analysis is about migration and its relation to the users and uses of power.

This panel will be part of the Political Sociology section (‘Power and Authority in Political Actions in Europe’) of the ECPR General Conference 2016 in Prague, 7-10 September 2016.

Researchers interested in taking part in the panel should send the title (20 words max) and abstract (500 words max) of their paper proposals to Rachel Waerniers (rachel.waerniers@ugent.be) and Chloë Delcour (chloe.delcour@ugent.be) by February 11 the latest. Please indicate the email address (of both the presenter and possible co-authors) registered in your MyECPR account (http://ecpr.eu/LoginCreateNewAccount.aspx), as we need it for the final registration.

 

Panel Proposal: ECPR General Conference 2016, Prague 7-10 September 2016

A system of locks or a tool for social change? Nationalism and inequality in comparative perspective

In Thought and Change Ernest Gellner defined nationalism ‘as a system of locks’ maintaining differences of economic and cultural status among areas of the world. At the same time, he described it as a tool for social change ‘born of the discontent of proletarians’ and capable of ‘generating enthusiasm, providing incentives and opportunities, and organising development in terms of local rather than extraneous needs and consideration’. Other authors have struggled to make sense of the Janus-faced nature of nationalism: on the one hand, erecting barriers between human populations; on the other, fostering solidarity among the members of the national community and promoting equality among national groups.

This panel intends to focus precisely on such ambivalence of modern nationalism by examining how political actors and social movements use, or can make use of, nationalism as a frame/strategy to either preserve or fight inequality—meant in a broad sense encompassing social, economic, political, and cultural/symbolic dimensions. We are especially interested in studies concerning the context of the recent economic crisis in Europe, but also open to wider historical and geographical experiences. These can include studies on minority nationalism and separatism, as well as debates relating to immigration—especially with reference to nativism and welfare chauvinism— and following a broad range of theoretical and empirical approaches. Relevant research questions may include, but need not be limited to, the following:

  • Does nationalism naturally entail inequality?
  • Does inequality foster nationalist contestation?
  • Under what conditions, and in relation to whom, is nationalism a force ?contributing to increasing inequality? And, vice-versa, when does ?nationalism foster equality and for whom?
  • Is there any correlation between inequality and nationalism in the ?context of the recent economic crisis?
  • Can we think of national identities more conducive to both in-group and ?inter-group equality?

Scholars interested in taking part in the panel should send the title (20 words max) and abstract (500 words max) of their paper proposals to Emmanuel Dalle Mulle (emmanuel.dallemulle@graduateinstitute.ch) and Eleanor Knott (E.K.Knott@lse.ac.uk) by February 7. Please indicate the email address registered in your MyECPR account, as we need it for the final registration.

This panel will be part of the Political Sociology section of ECPR General Conference 2016 in Prague, 7-10 September 2016. ?

 

Call for panel proposals for the upcoming general conference in Prague September 6-9, 2016

This is a call for panel proposals for the upcoming general conference in Prague September 6-9.  So far we have three panel proposals, one on the intersection between nationalism and inequality, one on recent conceptualizations of power in political sociology, and one on the implications (notably lobbying) of career trajectories of EU civil servants.  We need more.

Would you be interested in proposing something? For panel proposals at this stage (before November 16) we just need a good topic title with a short description of what kinds of presentations ideally would be included.   Niilo and I will look over all the panel proposals we receive and come up with a theme and description of the section proposal for ECPR.

You could also offer a section proposal though that would be more involved.  A section proposal  needs a thematic title, a description, and 4-8 panels on subtopics that fit within the thematic title.  All of that would also need to be sent us before November 16.

Finally, I would note that currently migration seems  like the elephant in the EU room.  A very important current political sociology issue.  It would be desirable if we had a panel on that topic.  Anyone interested.

For ECPR guidelines on sections and panels you can look at http://ecpr.eu/Events/Content.aspx?ID=140&EventID=95

Best regards,

David

ECPR 2015: Call for papers

The political sociology standing group’s section for the 2015 General Conference of the ECPR in Montreal is entitled  ‘Political Engagement, Scholarship and Social Trajectories’.

The call for papers has just been published. Paper proposals must be submitted by February 16, 2015.

Below are descriptions of the six panels that are planned within the section. More information can be found here 

Panel 1: Scholars and Public Intellectuals as Policy Advisers.
Jane Jenson and George Ross, University of Montreal.

How do scholars and public intellectuals respond to institutional crises? This panel invites papers exploring how veteran EU analysts and public intellectuals are responding to the Eurozone crisis. Is there an emerging collective imaginary of possible solutions or simply a polysemy of disjointed voices? Are scholarly voices being taken as seriously today in EU committees as they were in the past?

Panel 2: The Relationship between social trajectories and political careers: the revolving door of MPs, officials and lobbyists in the EU and in other national contexts
Stephanie Yates, University of Montreal and Hélène Michel, University of Strasbourg

Revolving door social trajectories of public office holders (POH) likely impacts their apprehension of political issues, their political decisions, and ultimately public policy. When POHs transfer to private activities within the same sector or when private sector leaders become POHs with responsibilities in the same arena conflicts of interest can emerge that politicize public service and compromise public institutions with private interests.
The objective of this panel is to discuss comparatively the revolving door in the European Union and in other national and subnational contexts: How frequent is the phenomenon? Has it been a growing trend in recent years? Which sectors of activities are the most concerned? Is it closely associated with particular political ideologies?

Panel 3: The Long-Term Impacts of 1970’s Feminist Activism in Various Contexts
Olivier Fillieule, University of Lausanne and Alban Jacquemart, Centre d’étude de l’emploi, Paris, France.

Personal and biographical consequences of feminist activism can affect the life-course of individuals in decisive ways. How do feminist commitments generate or modify dispositions to act, think, and perceive that are either consistent or contrast with previous socialization. In this panel, we would like to address (empirically, methodologically, and epistemologically) these kinds of questions with particular concerns for issues of sexual freedom and orientation, alienation from previous movement engagement, rethinking gender roles, and how « the personal is political » actually plays out in family and professional life.

Panel 4: Persistence and Transformation of Political Involvement: How Activism Reverberates through Diverse Life Spheres
Emilie Biland, Laval University and Bleuwenn Lechaux, University Rennes 2

This panel will devote special attention to how one’s activist involvements in political events or in formal or informal collectives can impact various life spheres (professional, family, and private). Paper proposals could address such questions as how activist skills transfer into professional skills, how one’s conceptions of family, affective relationships and friendship are revised or perpetuated, how activist social ties persist through time even after disengagement, and how commitments themselves are transformed or redesigned in the light of previous activist experiences?

Panel 5: Studying Activism: Methods of Data Collection and Analysis of Activism and Activists’ Careers
Davide Morselli, University of Lausanne and Julie Pagis, University of Lille 2

This panel will focus on methodological aspects of researching activist’s trajectories. Activists represent a non-randomly distributed population for which conventional survey and sampling methods may not apply. Political engagement and radicalization can impact activists’ lives far beyond the political sphere, such as in career, fertility, family, and health. Thus, the study of the diverse effects of activism faces the challenge of collecting complex and multifaceted data and using multiple analytical strategies able to take in consideration holistic processes. Paper proposals could address different methodological questions such as: What sampling strategies can be applied to study activism and activists’ life-course? What are the implications of using certain data collections modes (e.g. web survey, questionnaires, dairies, autobiographical interviews) and analytical methods (e.g., phenomenological analysis, longitudinal mixture methods, multi-channel sequence analysis, self-organizing-maps) ?

Panel 6: Academics as Politicians. 
David Swartz, Boston University and Niilo Kauppi, Academy of Finland

The panel will address a question that has been, at least since Max Weber’s writings, on the agenda of political science and political sociology: the relationship academics have with politics. A key issue is the conversion of academics into either professional politicians or political activists and public intellectuals. Examples of these are numerous and include professors of IR becoming presidents of the European Commission (Manuel Barroso), or academics getting engaged in social movements (Michel Foucault, Pierre Bourdieu) or in political debates, like Jürgen Habermas concerning the future of the EU. Under what conditions do these conversions take place? What are the links between political culture and political engagement?

Conference ‘Sexual Causes. Sexuality and Collective Mobilization’, University of Lausanne, June 5-7 2014

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.

Conference organized by the Centre de recherche sur l’action politique (CRAPUL)

Information on the conference program here 

Research Sessions 2014, University of Essex, 8 – 11 July 2014

The political sociology standing group encourages submissions for the 2014 ECPR Research sessions.

The Research Sessions offers established collaborative groups the opportunity to step away from their hectic work schedules and focus on commencing, or completing their research in an environment suitable for concentrated discussion
Helping your project succeed 
Held in superb facilities and organised to make sure you have peace and quiet to fulfil your aim — each Session will have access to AV facilities, tea and coffee breaks, and be completely free of interruptions. Your accommodation and food will be organised by the ECPR to make sure your experience as stress-free as possible. Being a part of the Research Sessions, groups receive additional support and recognition that the standard of work meets the expectations of the ECPR. In addition, groups have the added opportunity of publishing with the ECPR Press.
If your group would like to attend the Research Sessions, please submit a proposal which will be reviewed by the ECPR Academic Convenors.
 
How do I submit a proposal?
 
The proposal, which should be no longer than 3000 words, should specify the research question and locate it within the relevant scientific debate and theories. It should include:
  • the guiding hypothesis;
  • the main ‘message’ or the major and innovative contribution that the research group wants to make;
  • methodology;
  • data;
  • research steps;
  • milestones;
  • a rough publication plan;
  • a list of members.

The deadline is 7 February 2014. For more information on criteria for groups and proposals please see our website. To submit your proposal, click here. For any further questions please contact Jenna Barnard at jbarnard@essex.ac.uk.

Registration fees
 
Fees for the 2014 Research Sessions will be €75, which includes accommodation, food and facilities for each person attending.

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/