__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

"Bridging Multiple Divides"
49th Annual Convention
International Studies Association
San Francisco, CA (USA)
26-29 March 2008

__________________________________________________


Jack S. Levy, President
Kelly M. Kadera, Program Chair
Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, Program Chair

The landscape of international relations research is diverse
and vibrant, with a wide variety of ontological,
epistemological, and methodological perspectives. IR
scholarship is empirical and normative, conservative and
liberal, systemic and individual, activist and academic,
material and ideational, positivist and post-positivist.
While these different viewpoints give us great leverage for
studying international relations, they often create
artificial barriers between scholarly communities. Our theme
for the 2008 ISA meeting seeks to bridge multiple divides in
the international relations community by creating dialogue
and integrative research between scholars from different
communities and viewpoints. We encourage the submission of
papers, panels, and roundtables that create synergies
between disciplines, subfields, theories, and methods and
that foster greater self-reflection about our research and
teaching.

Numerous divides separate scholars of international
relations. Critical theorists concern themselves with
ontological questions while empiricists search for causal
patterns. Some positivists prefer rich, detailed examination
of single cases, while others formulate generalized patterns
across large groups of like phenomena. Traditional field
boundaries artificially separate students of comparative and
international politics, despite their overlapping
substantive interests. Similarly, disciplinary boundaries
isolate political scientists, psychologists, historians,
anthropologists, economists, sociologists, geographers,
biologists, applied mathematicians, and others sharing an
interest in the study of international relations.

Yet each divide creates opportunities to build bridges. We
encourage panels and roundtables that address this challenge
by bringing together scholars from different research
communities. Important global problems, such as terrorism,
might be examined by panels mixing policy analysts, formal
theorists, large-N empiricists, and historians. Likewise,
our understanding of globalization can be enhanced by
bringing together constructivists, feminists, political
economists, and neoliberal institutionalists. Students of
the changing nature of warfare might share ideas with
scholars working in the just war tradition, and students of
human rights might join a dialogue with international
lawyers and international organization specialists. An
examination of signaling and bargaining behavior could bring
together modelers, experimentalists, and case study
researchers. Political scientists, psychologists, and
neuroscientists could jointly address how trust is
established and maintained in relationships. Geographers and
environmentalists might team up with conflict scholars
interested in resource-based explanations of political
violence. Comparativists and IR scholars could combine
efforts to discuss the determinants of state failure, the
origins and termination of civil war, and other topics of
mutual interest. Constructivists and empiricists might
exchange ideas about how arguments of the former might be
examined through the methodologies of the latter. Panels
could engage formal theorists from different modeling
backgrounds (e.g., game theory, bounded rationality, dynamic
modeling, spatial modeling, and the theory of moves) working
on similar substantive issues.

We also encourage innovative bridge-building that moves
beyond the standard research panel format. For example, we
would be eager to see submissions of papers coauthored by
individuals from different viewpoints; a roundtable
exploring the historical development of several different
research communities or the intellectual autobiographies of
leading scholars from diverse backgrounds; panels that
include two discussants who come from distinct perspectives;
and sponsorship of panels by sections that normally have
relatively little contact with each other (e.g., Peace
Studies and the Scientific Study of International Processes,
or the English School and International Organization).
Another non-traditional format might include participants
from various types of institutions (U.S. research
universities, non-north American schools, small liberal arts
colleges, co-educational, public, private, and so on) who
are willing to share and discuss their innovative strategies
for teaching international relations.

Some of the dialogues described above already take place at
our annual meetings, but they tend to be sporadic. We want
to facilitate these dialogues on a grander scale, and to
make them the defining theme of our 2008 annual meeting. It
is only fitting that we convene in San Francisco, a city
defined by its multiple bridges, physical and cultural.

DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS: JUNE 1, 2007
Proposals may be submitted online using the following links:

Paper submission:
<http://www.isanet.org/SFSubmit/PaperSubmit.htm>

Panel submission:
<http://www.isanet.org/SFSubmit/PanelSubmit.htm>

For more information on the 2008 Annual Convention please see
<http://www.isanet.org/sanfran2008/> or email <[email protected]>.


__________________________________________________

InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

Reply via email to