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Call for Papers

"Global Studies and International Relations:
Complementary Perspectives or Competing Paradigms?"
2010 GSA Conference
Global Studies Association (GSA)
Journal of Critical Globalisation Studies
Merton College, University of Oxford
Oxford (United Kingdom)
2-4 September 2010

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The nation-states, civilizations and empires that constitute the
traditional units of analysis in International Relations no longer
seem to adequately capture the cascading interconnectedness and
so-called fluid processes of the globalizing world. If relations
between nations dominated 20th century understandings of world
events, it may now be the case that Global Studies offers new sets of
vocabularies, new conceptions of relationships and better ways of
imagining the complexities of the 21st century world.

Nevertheless nation-states still exist. They are still powerful
actors and they are still a pervasive way of categorizing,
quantifying and understanding human behaviour – both in the
theoretical attitude of the academic and individuals making sense of
their worlds. Power politics has not disappeared with the rise of the
‘global’, nationstates still have standing armies and the relations
between them still determines the living conditions of great
populations. Most recently, it is states that have shored up the
faltering global economy.

The 2010 GSA conference seeks to probe the relationship between these
two different approaches to understanding world social relationships.
Indeed, the conference’s central problematic asks whether the advent
of Global Studies is an extension of International Relations, on a
continuum with it, or does it represent what Foucault termed a new
episteme, with the implication that International Relations and
Global Studies cannot speak to each other for lack of a common
language? Moreover, can Global Studies challenge the dominance of
International Relations in both social science departments and
policymaking fields? Or will global ‘outlooks’ still depend upon
visible territorial borders, the outcome of historical and
territorial conflicts between states?

The conference will offer a rare opportunity for scholars from both
IR and those working under the umbrella of Global Studies to engage
in debates concerning the very foundations of their respective
disciplines, in order to address the possibility of a more mutual
understanding of the world. The intention is to establish a creative
and progressive forum that will benefit researchers from all relevant
disciplines. To this end we invite papers that address the conference
theme and can include, but not be limited to, the following areas:

- International Law
- Risk Society and Network Society
- Conceptions of inside and outside
- The transformation of (state) borders
- The empowerment of the global individual and non-state entities
- The importance of transnational and hybrid identities
- Changing ideas of nationalism and citizenship and ramifications for
  IR
- The European Union and ideas of regionalisation
- Global ‘terror’ and international war
- The making of place, the imagining of life worlds
- International and the global: continuum or epistemic break?
- Global Studies and IR: methodological issues
- Teaching International Relations and Globalization in the
  university
- Theoretical approaches: possibilities for disciplinary alignments?

Proposals for papers should take the form of a 300 word abstract and
may be submitted on any aspect of the conference theme. The
organisers will allocate papers to an appropriate panel.

The deadline for submission of abstracts is 30th April 2010.


Contact:

Journal of Critical Globalisation Studies
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.criticalglobalisation.com
 
 
 
 
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