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Conference Announcement

"Whatever Happened to North-South?"
IPSA-ECPR Joint Conference
International Political Science Association (IPSA)
European Consortium of Political Research (ECPR)
Brazilian Political Science Association (ABCP)
University of São Paulo (USP)
São Paulo (Brazil)
16-19 February 2011

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The first Joint Conference organised by the International Political
Science Association (IPSA) and the European Consortium of Political
Research (ECPR) will explore the continuing relevance of the
international North-South divide. The Conference will be organised
into three broad Themes. 

THEME 1: CHANGING PATTERNS OF IR/REGIONAL INTEGRATION

For informal enquiries contact the Theme Convenors: Dirk Nabers
([email protected]) and Miriam Prys ([email protected])

In recent decades, traditional patterns of international relations
have been drastically influenced by various aspects of the
globalisation process, including: the rise of new regional and global
powers such as Brazil, China, India and South Africa; an increasing
transnationalisation of international politics; and new issues such
as terrorism, global warming, migration and changes in the
international division of labour on the agenda. These changing
patterns have led to increased cohesion in regional interaction,
while the rapid development of various cross-border activities has
coincided with an intensification of social problems beyond the
control of nation states. The theme will address these complex
dynamics, focussing on structures and processes at the level of
foreign policies as well as regional and global governance. Sections
and panels are therefore invited which address any aspects of these
themes.

Sections in Theme 1:

Conflict, Violence, and Security in a Regional Context
Foreign Policy Analysis
Global Public Goods and Development
International Relations of the Asia-Pacific
Regional Powers and Security
Open Section on Changing Patterns in International Relations and
Regional Integration Regionalism in the Global South: The Promises
and Problems of Regional Integration among Developing 

THEME 2: POLITICAL REGIMES, DEMOCRATIC CONSOLIDATION AND THE QUALITY
OF DEMOCRACY

For informal enquiries contact the Theme Convenor: Thomas Poguntke
([email protected])

While the number of democracies has grown considerably over the past
decades, academic analysis is far from agreeing on what constitutes
the minimum requirements for democratic governance. This is
intimately related to debates over the quality of democracy, the
choice of the most suitable institutional configurations and the role
that intermediary actors, such as political parties, interest
organizations and NGOs, can play in the process of democratic
consolidation. Moreover, many countries have undergone substantial
institutional change following transition to democracy. At the same
time, established democracies have experienced shifts of power
between levels of governance as well as between the roles played by
individual and collective actors. This opens up multiple comparative
perspectives. Sections and panels which address any aspects of these
themes are welcome, especially those which propose to compare, across
time and nations, different parts of the world.

Sections in Theme 2

Comparative and National Perspectives on the Quality of Democracy
Comparative approaches to the qualities of democracies: challenges
and transformations Comparing autocracies and hybrid regimes
Democracy and Inequality
Democracy in the Age of Globalization
Participatory democracy: An impetus for 'real' democracy in the early
21st century? Parties, Institutions and the Quality of Democracy
Political Parties and the State
Presidentialism, Parliamentarism & Semi-Presidentialism:
Constitutions & Democratic Performance Transitional Justice,
Reconciliation and the Quality of Democracies What are elections for?

THEME 3: ECONOMIC TRENDS AND POLITICAL, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL CHANGES 

For informal enquiries contact the Theme Convenors: Rachel Meneguello
([email protected]) and Lucio Rennó ([email protected])

Global processes of change cover the economic and financial
integration of emerging market polities into the world system as well
as having political and cultural implications. They refer not only to
the speed with which information, money and commodities travel around
the world but also to new economic, political and cultural effects.
The processes highlight the limits of state-based policy making and
problem-solving, thereby changing the perceptions that shape domestic
as well as transnational political and economic cultures. While
integration into global markets go hand in hand with democratization
in some countries, in others such global processes remain dissociated
from or poorly related to democracy. New political uncertainties were
generated by the response of national and regional authorities in the
context of the 2008-2009 crises. Economic and social changes have, in
some cases, produced despair and given way to the movement of illegal
labor across boundaries. This labor is sometimes seen as economically
threatening and culturally inferior and the cause of new ethnic and
political conflicts. For historical or cultural reasons, some
societies may possess attitudinal and institutional frameworks that
facilitate coping with the challenges, while others may not. Nowadays
most countries face these challenges, as people adopt new or
forgotten origins, party identities and patterns of political
culture. To what extent do changes in the political realm brought
about by democratization, as a global process, affect the reordering
of North-South relations? To what extent does the access of newcomers
to national systems of social protection, welfare, and justice
reflect commitments to extend political rights and obligations
inseparable from citizenship? How does the emergence of hybrid forms
of democracy and “electoral authoritarianism” reflect changes in the
institutional frameworks and regulatory mechanisms that aim to
improve global governance? The theme addresses these complex
dynamics, focussing on actors, institutions and processes, and
sections and panels focusing on these issues are welcome. 

Sections in Theme 3

Development and Institutions in Latin America:capitalist trajectories
in North/South Relations Financial crisis and institutional change on
the global stage Globalised Political Communication: Trends and Issues
Migration, Citizenship and Democracy
Political, Economic and Social Trends in Comparative Perspective
Social and Economic Changes, Federalism and Territorial Politics

Conference website:
http://www.saopaulo2011.ipsa.org
 
 
 
 
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