Uncategorized, application | Antonina Kanygina | 24 Січ 2007

Discourses on populism and nationalism

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Call for papers

The Construction of ‘Us’ and ‘Them’:
Discourses on populism and nationalism

University of Helsinki, 7-8 September 2007

A key
theme in politics, which translates to many fields of study, is
identification * or disidentification. ‘Us’ and the sometimes equally
relevant ‘them’ are articulated at various levels from the family circle,
to the neighbourhood, local identifications, sub-cultural groups,
political parties and social movements, and further to the level of
nationhood and beyond. These may overlap or draw from each other in the
process of their articulation. One of the cases in contemporary Europe,
are the overlapping identifications with the EU, nation, region and the
locality. They may also deal with populism, exclusion and minorities.

A useful tool for recognising and understanding the logics operating in
these processes is discourse theory. The key note speaker at the
conference is professor Ernesto Laclau - an author of, most recently, On
Populist Reason (2005), and also Hegemony and Socialist Strategy; Towards
a Radical Democratic Politics (Verso: London, 1985, with
Chantal Mouffe), New Reflections on Revolutions of Our Time (1990), and
Emancipation( s) (1996). Laclau’s discourse theory have made major
contributions in the field of politics, but also history, literary
studies and sociology, as well as area studies. This is his first visit
to Finland.

The conference seeks to discover different cases, logics and phenomena in
the construction of ‘us’ and ‘them’. Papers addressing nationhood and
populism are particularly sought for, but other ‘we’ groups may also be
studied, with focus on either empirical or theoretical problems - or a
combination of both.

The aim of the conference is to allow a truly interdisciplinary forum for
the study of these questions. The conference language is English.
Abstracts for presentations (ca. 150 words) should be emailed to the
conference organiser by 15 March 2007.

The conference is organised by Emilia Palonen on behalf of the Academy of
Finland funded research
project Nations and Their Others: The Finns and the Hungarians since
1900, led by Heino Nyyssönen. It is supported by the Aleksanteri
Institute, the Department of Government and the Collegium Helsinki at the
University of Helsinki.

Contact:
Dr. Emilia Palonen,
University of Helsinki
emilia.palonen@ helsinki. fi
emiliapalonen@ yahoo.co. uk
(please use both addresses)
Tel. +358 40 5077198


Uncategorized | Antonina Kanygina | 16 Січ 2007

Beyond the Nation

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Conference: Beyond the Nation?: Critical Reflections on Nations and Nationalism in Uncertain Times
School of Politics, International Studies and Philosophy
Queen’s University Belfast, Northern Ireland
12-14 September 2007
(Pre-conference Workshop, 10-12 September 2007)
Deadline for submission of title/abstract: 1 March 2007
Paper acceptance notification 2 April 2007
Registration Deadline: 14 May 2007

Few ideas have proved more alluring and yet controversial than nationhood and nationalism. Celebrated by some as the source of political value and a key organizational principle, decried by others as treacherous and intellectually moribund, the nation and its attendant ideologies have endured despite the momentous upheavals of the 20th century. But in an age of increasing globalization and political fragmentation, does the nation have the relevance it once had? Are we, in short, finally moving into a post-national era? A major interdisciplinary conference, “Beyond the Nation? Critical Reflections on Nations and Nationalism in Uncertain Times” will explore the nation and nationalism as realities and ideals in the early 21st century. Its goal is to bring together leading international researchers and thinkers from the fields of nationalism studies, ethnic conflict studies, multiculturalism, comparative politics, European studies, international relations/theory, political history, political theory/philosophy, social history/theory, and law to critically interrogate the role and viability of nationalism in our time.

The conference will take place in Queen’s University Belfast’s central campus and run over a three day period, from Wednesday 12th to Friday 14th September inclusive. It will be comprised of three strands, each strand taking the form of a workshop devoted to a particular sub-theme(s) or discipline(s). There will be a number of plenary and keynote speeches, as well as social events on each of the evenings, including Friday 14th September.

The conference is open to those who intend to present papers and those who simply want to attend the various workshops. If you would like to give a paper, please submit a title and abstract (150-300 words) to the appropriate workshop convenor. For further details about the conference please visit:
http://www.qub.ac.uk/schools/SchoolofPoliticsInternationalStudiesandPhilosophy/NewsandEvents/BeyondTheNationConference2007/#d.en.51488


URGENT! | Antonina Kanygina | 4 Січ 2007

CfP: EVERYDAY MULTICULTURALISM

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Call for Papers - Edited Book
EVERYDAY MULTICULTURALISM

Amanda Wise & Selvaraj Velayutham (editors)

Following a successful conference on Everyday
Multiculturalism organised by the Centre for Research on
Social Inclusion at Macquarie University, Australia
[http://www.crsi.mq.edu.au/news_and_events/everyday_multiculturalism.htm],
we have received expressions of interest from a number of
publishers keen on publishing a collection on this topic.
They have encouraged us to attract a good international
spread of papers.

While research on multiculturalism and racism is well
developed, qualitative research into everyday modes of lived
multiculturalism, remains fairly limited. We invite papers
that explore quotidian experiences of cultural difference
and diversity. Quotidian diversity has been variously
described as ‘togetherness-in-difference’ (Ang 2000), and
‘inhabiting difference’ (Hage 1998). We take the term to
mean those perspectives on cultural diversity which
recognize the embodied or inhabited nature of living with
cultural difference.

We welcome expressions of interest from scholars doing
grounded research on the topic of multiculturalism which
explores the ways in which people experience and (dis)engage
with cultural difference using case studies from around the
world but which also make broader theoretical points
relevant beyond the locality involved. Accessible
theoretical papers which engage with the concept of the
everyday are also welcome. We are interested in papers that
explore the intersections and relationships between cultural
groups, rather than research taking a single ethnic group as
a focus. Papers can also examine:

* Interconnections between the everyday and larger
discourses of multiculturalism and nation;
* Everyday affinities and solidarities
* Everyday disjunctures, discomforts, and racisms between
cultures;
*Modes of living with and across difference in cities,
suburbia or regional areas;
*Food, neighbouring, shopping, school, sport, etc. as sites
for multicultural encounters and negotiations at the
neighbourhood level;
*Multicultural place-sharing and battles over place identity
and belonging.

Perspectives from any discipline are welcome, especially
sociology, anthropology, cultural studies, and human geography.

Please send a proposed title, a 500 word abstract and a
short bio by 16 February 2007 to Banu Senay -
[log in to unmask]

Accepted contributions (5-7,000) words will have to be
completed by 31 July 2007 with a view to publication in
early 2008.

For all enquiries please contact - Dr Selvaraj Velayutham
[log in to unmask] or Dr Amanda Wise
[log in to unmask]


application | Antonina Kanygina | 4 Січ 2007

Third Millennium International Fellowship in Human Rights

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Deadline: 15 January 2007

The goal of this Third Millennium Foundation (TMF) initiative is to develop a cadre of young activists from different countries whose understanding of, commitment to and effectiveness in human rights work have been enhanced through a year long , in-depth exposure to and reflection on a broad range of perspectives, situations and
experiences related to human rights issues. Through these practical training fellowships, the Program aims to provide the fellows with the skills necessary to start or advance a career in the field of human rights.

The fellowship involves two different placements, one in the home country of the fellow and one abroad. Fellowships are awarded for practitioners as well as for students (graduate and undergraduate students of any faculty). One of the two placements is in the developing world or, in the country where the fellow intends to start her/his professional career.

Applicants must have two sponsoring organizations engaged in human rights work, broadly defined (or organizations related through a single project). One in the developing world, and one in the country where the fellow intends to pursue her/his professional career. These nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) will, in most cases, be involved in human rights education, monitoring, reporting, litigation,
grassroots mobilization, providing direct services or advocacy. Most of these organizations would identify themselves as part of the broader, universal human rights movement, relying on the norms found in United Nations and regional treaties and declarations.

Objectives:

To deepen the fellows’ understanding of the diversity of situations and contexts facing human rights work and human rights activists in different countries as well as their practical and theoretical knowledge of and skills in human rights work and advocacy;
To deepen their understanding of the values underlying human rights work and the moral, emotional and psychological dimensions of that work;
To provide assistance to human rights groups in different countries (including the fellows’ own countries) through the year-long work of the fellows;
To facilitate the development of friendships and collaborative partnerships with young human rights activists from other countries;
To enhance the willingness and ability of young activists from different countries to call on the strengths and experiences of activists in other countries, and lend their own strength and experiences to these same activists;
To enhance the exchange of experiences among human rights groups in different countries through the shared experiences of these young activists.

More Information:

http://www.seedsoftolerance.org/docs/hr_fellowship_app.pdf

http://www.seedsoftolerance.org/initiative_intl_fellowship.html


application | Antonina Kanygina | 4 Січ 2007

FINAL CFP: 2007 Annual Soyuz Symposium (Princeton, April 27-29, 2007

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Deadline: January 15, 2007

2007 ANNUAL SOYUZ SYMPOSIUM

Call for Papers

LOCATING “EURASIA” IN POSTSOCIALIST STUDIES:

THE GEOPOLITICS OF NAMING

April 27-29, 2007

Princeton University

The geographical and symbolic fragmentation of the “Soviet bloc” was one of the main outcomes of the collapse of state socialism in the late 1980s. A seemingly neutral and natural geographical collage of “Eastern Europe,” “the Balkans,” “the Baltics,” “the Caucasus,” “Eurasia,” and “the Central Asia” has replaced the politically enforced unity of the “Second World.” Yet, as some scholars of the region have pointed out, the new mapping of postsocialist space exhibits one persistent tendency: the “westernization” of eastern Europe is accompanied by a simultaneous “easternization” of its margins.

For its 2007 meeting, SOYUZ invites submissions for presentations on the emergence of “Eurasia” as a geocultural space, distinct from and even opposing to “Europe.” How does the reclaimed notion of “Eurasia” help to construct and symbolically uphold eastern borders of new Europe? To what extent this notion was instrumental in shaping new alliances, practices, and identities outside European borders? As at previous SOYUZ meetings, priority is given to rich ethnographic work while entertaining a broad range of topical and ideological terrains.

Presentations may be from any discipline (anthropology, sociology, geography, folklore, political science, history, cultural studies, law, economics, literary scholarship, etc.). We are looking for papers that combine solid archival and/or ethnographic material with theory. We are especially interested in submissions from scholars examining the role of “Eurasia” in the Far East. We will be able to make travel subsidies available for several foreign presenters (from the region).

The symposium has been held annually since 1992, and is at once an intimate forum where scholars can exchange ideas and engage in dialogue and also the site of cutting edge presentations from some of the most exciting thinkers within the growing field of postsocialist research.

(http://www.uvm. edu/~soyuz/ conferences. html)

The 2007 SOYUZ Program committee includes:

Judith B. Farquhar,
Professor of Anthropology and of Social Sciences (University of Chicago)

Kristen Ghodsee,
Assistant Professor of Women’s Studies (Bowdoin College); program
coordinator for SOYUZ

Sergey Glebov,
Assistant Professor of History (Smith College); co-editor of Ab Imperio.

Bruce Grant,
Associate Professor of Anthropology (New York University)

Mark von Hagen,
Boris Bakhmeteff Professor of Russian and East European Studies and Chair,
Department of History (Columbia University)

Krista Hegburg,
Doctoral Candidate, Anthropology (Columbia University)

Serguei Alex. Oushakine,
Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures (Princeton University)

Please send an abstract (no longer than 500 words) and a brief CV to Serguei Oushakine (oushakin@princeton. edu) by January 15, 2007.

Applicants will be notified of the program committee’s decision in February 2007.


Uncategorized | Antonina Kanygina | 25 Гру 2006

http://geostudycenter.blogspot.com/

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http://geostudycenter.blogspot.com/


application | Antonina Kanygina | 18 Гру 2006

Policy-Connect Collaborative Research Grants

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Policy-Connect Collaborative Research Grants
US Department of State’s Title VIII Program

IREX is pleased to announce the 2007 Policy-Connect Collaborative
Research Grants
competition. IREX’s Policy-Connect program seeks to attract, select,
and support advanced research by US experts in policy-relevant
subject areas related to Southeast Europe and Eurasia, facilitate
collaboration among and between US and international scholars, and
disseminate knowledge about Europe and Eurasia to a wide network of
constituents in the United States and abroad.

Policy-Connect provides American scholars with the means and support
necessary to conduct
research, particularly on lesser-studied regions such as the Balkans,
Central Asia, and the
Caucasus, where issues central to the national security and foreign
policy interests of the
United States must be studied. The knowledge and expertise gained by
the grant recipients become a valuable resource for the policymaking
community, as the scholars share the results of their research
through research briefs, policy fora, and individual meetings.

The Policy-Connect Program provides fellowships to US scholars and
professionals for overseas
research on contemporary political, economic, historical, or cultural
developments relevant to
US foreign policy. Fellowships support collaborative teams of two or
three US scholars
and professionals for up to 12 months. Upon completion of the
project, scholars will be
requested to present their research findings at a Policy Forum at the
US Department of State and to write a short policy paper.

This year applications will be accepted for research on the following
topics and regions:

• Eurasia & Southeast Europe: ethnic and religious conflict,
transition economics, access
to information, youth and women’s issues, and citizen participation
in politics and civil society.

• Cross-regional: Post-Soviet relations
between Eurasia and the Middle East/North Africa and/or South Asia.

Eligible Countries of Research Focus

• Eurasia: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan.

• Southeast Europe: Albania, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Kosovo, Macedonia
(Former Yugoslav Republic of), Romania, Serbia and Montenegro.

• Cross-regional: Countries of Eurasia
(see above) and Algeria, Afghanistan, Bahrain,
Egypt, India, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait,
Lebanon, Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, West Bank/Gaza, and
Yemen.

Applications and supporting materials for
Policy-Connect Collaborative Research Grants are
available on the IREX website at:
http://www.irex. org/programs/ policy-connect/ index.asp

¯ Grant Award: Up to $30,000
¯ Duration: Up to 12 months
¯ Application Deadline: April 1, 2007

Policy-Connect Collaborative Research Grants are funded by the US
Department of State’s Title VIII Program and John J. and Nancy Lee
Roberts.

Questions may be addressed to the Policy-Connect
Program Staff at policyconnect@ irex.org or by calling (202) 628-8188.

IREX, 2121 K Street NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC 20037 USA


application | Antonina Kanygina | 11 Гру 2006

11th Cultural Studies Symposium: “Memory and Nostalgia” !!!!!

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11th Cultural Studies Symposium, Ege University
EGE UNIVERSITY

11th INTERNATIONAL CULTURAL STUDIES SYMPOSIUM

May 9-11, 2007

Ege University, Faculty of Letters, Izmir, TURKEY

CALL FOR PAPERS

“Memory and Nostalgia”

The dialectic between `Memory’ and `Nostalgia’ has always been a significant issue for various disciplines like history, sociology, psychology, cultural studies, gender studies, media studies, literature, etc. Especially nostalgia, as Sean Scanlan states, has “an uncanny ability to exceed any constraining definition” (1).
As a Greek term, comprising the two parts “nostos” (to return home) and “algos” (pain), nostalgia, Linda Hutcheon explains, was coined in 1688 by a Swiss medical student “as a sophisticated … way to talk about a literally lethal kind of severe homesickness” (1). In Nicholas Dames’ terms, nostalgia is a form of “retrospect that
remembers only what is pleasant and only what the self can employ in the present; … [it is] an absence; what it lacks is what… has come to be regarded as memory in its purest form” (4). Nostalgia, then, is a “memory that is always only the necessary prehistory of the present [which] consists of the stories about one’s past that
explain and consolidate memory rather than dispersing it into a series of vivid, relinquished moments and … [which] can only survive by eradicating the `pure memory’” (Dames 4).

Nostalgia has always been a useful compensatory tool to construct an alternative historical reality created by the images of the golden past, especially when there is discontent with the present socio-economic situation in any culture. Just like governing bodies, modern global corporations also use nostalgia to advertise their
commodities by relating either their products or companies to a more desirable time in the past. By implanting modified images in the prospective clients’ minds, such advertising strategies rewrite history through forged memories about the good old days when prices were more reasonable, goods more durable, and services were more
satisfactory.

As Dylan Trigg, the author of The Aesthetics of Decay: Nothingness, Nostalgia, and the Absence of Reason (2006) claims, “nostalgia demands … the fixation of the past … Thus, both static images – memories – and lived experience – place – serve as homogenous platforms for the nostalgic conscious to impose and identify itself” (1). Both memory and nostalgia, then, have always had some spatial and territorial connotations, whether real or ideal, either in some negative or positive sense.

This symposium, then, aims to explore how memory and nostalgia collaborate to construct a meaningful space in a given culture, both individually and collectively, either through “the willing suspension of disbelief” or as a state apparatus, with reference to such issues as globalism, consumerism, nation-states, neo-conservatism, etc. During the symposium we hope such questions as Linda Hutcheon raises about the relationship between postmodernism and nostalgia will also be discussed: “Was [the] postmodern recalling of the past an example of a conservative – and therefore
nostalgic – escape to an idealized, simpler era of `real’” (1). Or, if “nostalgia is given surplus meaning and value at certain moments – millennial moments, like our own,” has nostalgia become an “obsession of both mass culture and high art” or is it only “the media’s obsession”? (Hutcheon 1).

Proposals might include, but are not limited to:

· Nostalgia and Collective Memory

· Cultural Memory as Cultural Repression

· Cultural Memory = Nostalgia?

· Culture as Nostalgic Object and Commodity

· Nostalgia, Consumerism, and the Heritage Industry

· Nostalgia and Ideology

· Diaspora and Nostalgia

· Diaspora as Temporal Displacement

· Nostalgia and Ideology

· Homologies of Religious Faith and Cultural Memory or Nostalgia

· Nostalgia as a Social Disease

· The Violence of Cultural Memory

· Nostalgia as the Abdication of Memory

· Community without Nostalgia?

· Trauma, Collective Memory, and Nostalgia

· Pain and Authenticity

· Nostalgic Structures of Feeling in Cultural Studies

· Mourning and Melancholia in Cultural Memory

· Reflective and Restorative Nostalgia

· Nation, Narration, and Nostalgia

· Counter Nostalgia

· Literature and Art as Cultural Memory

· Media of Memory (Historical Monuments, Public Archives, Oral Histories, etc.)

· Popular Culture, Amnesia, and Nostalgia

· Personal Memory, Collective Identity, and Nostalgia

· Historiography, Autobiography, and Nostalgia

· Memory as a Means of Cultural Regeneration

· Nostalgia, Memorabilia, and “Subcutaneous Advertising”

· Values and Nostalgia

· Nationalist Interests and Nostalgia

The deadline for submission of proposals: January 05, 2007.

The notification for acceptance of proposals: January 22-26, 2007.

We welcome proposals for individual papers, entire sessions, presentations, performances, films, roundtables, workshops, conversations, or alternative formats both in English and Turkish. However, there will be no simultaneous translations during the conference. The time allowance for any presentation is 20 minutes.
Abstracts for papers should be 250-300 words in length and should include a title. Please e-mail your proposals and short bios to: css2007@mail. ege.edu.tr and egeucss@gmail. com or mail/fax them to:

Atilla Silkü

Ege Üniversitesi, Edebiyat Fakültesi,

Amerikan Kültürü ve Edebiyatý Bölümü,

35100-Bornova, Ýzmir, Turkey

Fax: +90 (232) 388 11 02

Please note that selected papers will be published in the forthcoming proceedings.

Seminar Registration Fee: USD 50 regular, USD 30 graduate students and research assistants. USD 75 On-site registration

Please deposit the non-refundable seminar fee to:

Garanti Bankasi, Bornova Branch (Branch # 524), Izmir , Phone: +90 232 342 6002

USD Account # 9093282 ( For International transfers: Swift Code: TGBATRISXXX )

YTL Account # 6298461

Mail or fax your registration form and a copy of your bank receipt to:

Atilla Silkü (address above)

For further information please visit symposium web site:

http://css.ege. edu.tr

Co-Organized by:
Ege University Departments of American Culture and Literature &
English Language and Literature
The Embassy of the United States of America
The British Council

The American Studies Association of Turkey (ASAT)


application | Antonina Kanygina | 11 Гру 2006

Literature for Europe, Sweden, May 2007

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ESF-LiU Conference - Literature for Europe, Sweden, May 2007
Please find below information on an ESF Research Conference which may be of particular interest to you:

ESF-LiU Conference
Literature for Europe : European Identities and European Literature in a Globalizing World
Vadstena Klosterhotell, Sweden
12-16 May 2007
Chaired by: Theo L. D’haen (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, BE)

Scientific programme and application form are accessible on-line through www.esf.org/ conferences/ 07230
(closing date for application & for abstract submission: 28 February 2007).

Some grants available for young researchers to cover the conference fee and possibly part of the travel costs.

Many thanks for passing on the attached flyer to your colleagues who may be interested in this event.

Contact person at ESF: Mr. Rachid Adghoughi (radghoughi@esf. org).

Kind regards,
Corinne Wininger - Le Moal
Publicity Officer - Research Conferences

European Science Foundation - Research Conferences Unit
1 quai Lezay-Marnésia, BP 90015 67080 Strasbourg , Cedex
Phone: +33 (0)388 76 71 35
Fax: +33 (0)388 36 69 87
clemoal@esf. org
www.esf.org/ conferences


Uncategorized | Antonina Kanygina | 11 Гру 2006

Jean Monnet International Summer Seminars, Rome and Bozen, Italy,

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Jean Monnet International Summer Seminars, Rome and Bozen, Italy,
18th June – 13th July 2007

“INTEGRATING EUROPE IN A CHANGING WORLD”

In order to mark the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Rome Treaty, the traditional Jean Monnet Chair International Summer Seminar, which has by now reached its 4th edition, doubles!!! The University of Rome Tor Vergata, in collaboration with the Free University of Bozen, proposes 3 intellectually stimulating Seminars dedicated to the exploration of the changing “nature of the European beast” in an ever-changing world. They all propose an innovative and stimulating teaching method with over 10 different speakers every week!

Seminar 1 will take place from the 18th to the 22nd of June in Rome and will focused on the Decision-Making, Negotiations and Lobbying in the European Union. The lectures will alternate with theoretical background with roundtables with practitioners – decision-makers, MEPs, EU officials, lobbyists, etc and will end with the simulation of a co-decision. This Seminar will therefore be an exciting hands-on course focusing on the complex EU decision-making procedures under Pillar I and the way it can be influenced by both internal and external actors.

Seminar 2 will take place from the 25th to the 30th of June in Bozen and will devote its attention to the Economic and Monetary Constitution of the European Union. The lectures will focus on the implications of the principle of free movements of goods in the evolution of the EU. The changing nature of national barriers, the European Monetary Union and the adoption of the Euro and their implication both for the internal market and the trade relationships with third countries are just a few of the issues tackled with during this Seminar.

Seminar 3 will take place from the 2nd to the 13th of July in Rome and it is our traditional and highly-prestigious Summer Seminar dedicated to the domestic and external dimensions of Integrating Europe in a Changing World. The first week will be dedicated to the EU domestic integration, with particular focus on the impact of the 2004 and 2007 enlargements and the status of the Treaty for a European Constitution in the process of “widening and deepening” Europe. The second week will be dedicated to the impact of the EU in the world; particular focus will be put on the changing nature of the transatlantic relations and the impact of the recent US
legislative elections in their current evolution, on the role of the EU in the Middle East peace process and the rise of Asia as an undeniably important actor in the world affairs.

The Seminar is organized in collaboration with the Center for American Studies, it is financed by the European Commission in Brussels and goes under the patronage of prestigious local and international institutions such as the Italian Parliament or the Lazio region and Municipality.

The Opening Lecture will be given by the Vice President of the European Convention and the former Prime Minister of Italy, Prof. Giuliano Amato. Other esteemed speakers – coming from all over the world - will include Prof. Andrew Moravcsik (Princeton University);
Amy Verdun (Jean Monnet Chair at the University of Victoria, Canada);
Leopoldo Nuti (University Rome 3);
Stefano Grassi (Secretariat General of the European Commission);
Martin Holland (National Centre for Research on Europe in New Zealand);
Prof. Geoffrey Miller (New York University, Stuyvesant P. Comfort Professor of Law);
Prof. Jean-Victor Louis (Emeritus Professor, Université Libre de Bruxelles);
Philomena Murray (Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence of Melbourne, Australia);
Charis Xirouchakis (Head of the Public Relations of the Council of EU Ministers) and many other international faculty, diplomats, academicians, journalists, EU officials, etc.

The Summer Seminars addresses primarily graduate and PhD students, young professionals. Exceptionally skilled senior undergraduates can be accepted on an individual base. It will be a highly intensive and selective programme, according to the tradition of the Rome Summer Seminars, held under the umbrella of the Jean Monnet Chair.

The teaching body will be composed of an unique mix of top international Policy Makers, Diplomats and Academicians, from both Europe and US and there will be over 10 different speakers each week! The participants will have the opportunity to obtain ECTS/US Credits: Summer Seminars 1 and 2 will award 4 ECTS/2 US credits each, whereas Seminar 3 will give 8 ECTS/4 US credits to its participants. Additional credits (up to 4 ECTS/4 US credits) can be gained by writing a paper on a topic assigned by the Jean Monnet Chair.

The tuition fee is of 900€ per week (i.e. 1800€ for the Summer Seminar 3). Students attending more than one course will be entitled to a 20% discounts. Some scholarships are available and awarded on the basis of merit and need. Room and board are not included in the tuition fee. Organizers may assist students in these issues.

The deadlines for applications are the 31st of March 2007 (for grant requests) and 30th April 2006 (for full-tuition paying students). Acceptance will be notified within one month after the deadline.

Applicants shall provide: the filled in Application Form, a personal statement of purpose, a letter of recommendation, a Curriculum Vitae, a copy of diplomas or a transcripts of grades. Applications by email are warmly advised.

For further information, please visit our website at www.ue.uniroma2. it or contact us at eu.summer.school@ uniroma2. it.


application | Antonina Kanygina | 11 Гру 2006

American Councils Programs for Research & Language Training in Eurasia

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GRANT- American Councils Programs for Research & Language Training in Eurasia
American Councils for International Education: ACTR/ACCELS announces the following Fall 2007 and Academic Year 2007-2008 fellowship programs: Title VIII Research Scholar Program: Provides full support for three to nine-month research trips to Russia, Central Asia, the South Caucasus, Ukraine, Belarus, and Moldova. Fellowships include roundtrip international travel, housing, living stipends, visas, insurance, affiliation fees, archive access, research advising, and logistical support in the field. …далі »


application | Antonina Kanygina | 11 Гру 2006

Стипендії для навчання в країнах Вишеградської четвірки

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У 2007-му навчальному році Вишеградський Фонд пропонує українським студентам 64 стипендії (32 стипендії для аспірантів та 32 стипендії для студентів магістратури) на навчання в країнах Вишеградської четвірки.

Останній строк подання заявок – 31 січня 2007 р.

Більш детальну інформацію можна отримати на сайті Вишеградського Фонду - www.visegradfund.org


application | Antonina Kanygina | 7 Гру 2006

The Netherlands: R. Descartes Pre-Doctoral Fellowships at Tilburg University

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The Tilburg Center for Logic and Philosophy of Science invites applications for two doctoral fellowships commencing on September 1, 2007. Candidates should have a Masters degree (or equivalent) in philosophy, work in one of the areas covered by the Center and have a commitment to interdisciplinary and collaborative work. We are especially interested in students who want to work in one of the following fields: Bayesian epistemology, general philosophy of science, or the philosophy of a special science (e.g. economics or psychology). The fellowship includes a stipend of 750 Euro per month for a period of three years, at the end of which we expect the PhD thesis to be completed. Tuition fees are waived. Funds will also be available for computer equipment and the attendance of conferences.

A hardcopy of the application package (including a curriculum vitae, certificates and transcripts of courses taken, a project proposal of no more than 5000 words, and two letters of recommendation) should be sent to Pre-Doctoral Fellowships Committee, c/o P & O, Department of Philosophy, Tilburg University, Warandelaan 2, P.O. Box 90153, 5000 LE Tilburg, The Netherlands, or email to solliciterenfdl@ uvt.nl. The deadline for applications is January 15, 2007. Successful candidates will be automatically enrolled in our PhD program. No separate application for the PhD program is required. Informal enquiries may be directed to S.Hartmann@lse. ac.uk.

For more information about the Center, visit:
http://www.tilburgu niversity. nl/faculties/ fww/tilps/

The fellowship is named after the famous mathematician and philosopher René Descartes, who spent some of his most productive time in the beautiful town of Breda, just twenty miles away from Tilburg.


application | Antonina Kanygina | 6 Гру 2006

Formations of the Global:Globalization and Cultural Studies

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Call for Applications

“Formations of the Global:
Globalization and Cultural Studies”
Doctoral Scholarships
University of Mannheim
Mannheim (Germany)

____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ __

The Graduate Program “Formations of the Global:
Globalization and Cultural Studies” is offering four
doctoral scholarships for international students (beginning
April 1, 2007).

Applicants are expected to write interdisciplinary
dissertations within the thematic framework of the program.
Participating disciplines are: American Studies/English,
Romance Studies, German, History, Media and Communications
Studies, and Philosophy.

Applicants must have successfully completed an M.A. degree
or the equivalent to a German Magister or Staatsexamen by
April 2007. Further requirements are the fellows’ presence
in Mannheim, participation in the accompanying graduate
studies program, and a working knowledge of German (language
of instruction) . Scholarships are awarded for a period of
two years (up to three in exceptional cases) according to
the regulations of the Landesgraduiertenfö rderungsgesetz
(LGFG) of the state of Baden-Württemberg.

All application materials (including an application form, a
CV, a project proposal of up to ten pages, and two letters
of recommendation) must be sent to the program director by
January 15, 2007:

Prof. Dr. Ulfried Reichardt
University of Mannheim
Anglistisches Seminar
Schloss EW 159
68131 Mannheim Germany

Further information on the application process and the
program available at www.mappingglobaliz ation.de.

Please address all inquiries to the program coordinator:

Karin Fischer (Coordinator)
“Formations of the Global”
University of Mannheim
Schloss EW 259
68131 Mannheim Germany
Tel: +49(0)621/181- 2363
Fax: +49(0)621/181- 2343
Email: promotionskolleg@ uni-mannheim. de
Web: http://www.phil. uni-mannheim. de/pk_globalisie rung


application | Antonina Kanygina | 5 Гру 2006

Swiss scholarships for university studies

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Through the Federal Commission for Scholarships for Foreign Students (FCS), the Swiss Government grants foreign students university scholarships (Swiss universities, Federal Institutes of Technology). These scholarships are offered on the basis of reciprocity (fixed number of scholarships for each country) or within the frame of a scholarship pool (scholarships without fixed distribution by country). They are intended for students who have graduated from university (postgraduates) and who, by staying in Switzerland, will be able to further their education and to undertake research work in the fields in which the Swiss universities are particularly active.

To a limited extent, scholarships are also offered for postgraduate studies at the Universities of Applied Sciences. This applies to the group of Western (AP-1) and Central and Eastern European countries (AP-2) included in the scholarship pool. Students must have graduated from a university or university of applied sciences with at least a Bachelor Degree and enrol in Switzerland for studies at post-graduate level. This offer applies for the seven universities of applied sciences, not including teaching colleges. In the field of the arts (design/music), the conditions for arts students relating to the country offer apply (see below).

This program is valid only for studies in Switzerland. It is not valid for on-the-job studies, part-time studies or correspondence courses.

In the framework of a special allocation, scholarships for advanced arts students (without fixed distribution by country) are offered to the best applicants who are already at an advanced stage of their training. This offer is restricted to those countries which are listed under AR, AP-1 and BR-1.

The scholarships are offered in principle to foreign governments. The applications have to be submitted for a preliminary selection to the national institution in charge and the Swiss diplomatic representation in the student’s country of origin. The Swiss diplomatic representation will thereupon forward the pre-selected applications to the FCS for definitive selection. Finally the Federal Department of Home Affairs awards scholarships on the advice of the FCS.

As part of a special allocation, the Swiss Government provides a number of additional scholarships to postgraduates from Central and Eastern European countries (pool system, no fixed number of scholarships for each country).
Source of Info and more detail at:
http://www.sbf.admin.ch/htm/bildung/stipendien/eskas-e.html#2


application | Antonina Kanygina | 5 Гру 2006

Львівська урбаністика

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для всіх небайдужих до урбаністики!
відкрилась нова унікальна можливість тут:
http://www.lvivcenter.org/en/research


application | Antonina Kanygina | 4 Гру 2006

M.A. Scholarships for Durham University

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M.A. Scholarships for Durham University
The Faculty of Arts and Humanities is making available ten M.A. Scholarships to support students planning to start ‘taught’ or ‘research’ M.A. programmes in October 2007. The Scholarships fully fund fees at the full-time UK/EU rate (currently £3,168), but the Faculty welcomes applications from overseas students as well as from UK and other EU students. The M.A. Scholarships Scheme covers ‘taught’ and ‘research’ programmes in all of the following departments:

- Department of Classics and Ancient History
- Department of English Studies
- Department of History
- Department of Music
- Department of Philosophy
- Department of Theology and Religion
- School of Modern Languages and Cultures

If you are planning to study for an M.A., full-time, next academic year, and you are seriously interested in the possibility of studying for a Ph.D. after you have completed your programme, you are eligible to apply for an M.A. Scholarship.

To apply for a Scholarship, you must complete a short application form, which you can download here in either PDF or word format. You must send
the completed form to the Department or School no later than *Friday 9th March 2007.*

If the Department or School nominates you for a Scholarship, you will receive a letter from the Dean’s Office, notifying you of the outcome of the procedure, in the second half of April.

Please note that if you are a UK or EU student, and you are nominated for an M.A. Scholarship by the Department or School, you will be required to submit an application for M.A. funding to the Arts and Humanities Research Council.


Uncategorized | Antonina Kanygina | 1 Гру 2006

STATEMENT ON WORLD AIDS DAY

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WORLD ASSEMBLY OF YOUTH

STATEMENT ON WORLD AIDS DAY

1 DECEMBER 2006

Today is World AIDS Day – an occasion to commemorate the challenges posed by a pandemic that has had a devastating effect on mankind, in particular the youth.

More than half of the 60 million people who have been infected by HIV in the past 20 years have been young people aged between 15 and 24. Twelve million young people are today living with HIV/AIDS, and 6,000 more infected every day: that is 250 infected every hour.

On this revered occasion, we would like to call upon all stakeholders, partners, governments and youth organisations to reflect on the recommendations made by the World Assembly of Youth (WAY) at its 14th General Assembly (Windhoek, 2005):

Youth and Policy

1. National Youth Councils (NYCs) need to be involved throughout the development process of any policy affecting youth and HIV/AIDS

2. Create an enabling environment for appropriate laws and polices by promoting policy dialogue for HIV/STI prevention and care at all levels to mobilize resources, ensure ownership and sustainability, and promote a rights-based approach

3. Foster the participation of all youth in HIV/AIDS policy development and programmes, including those with disabilities and people living with HIV/AIDS

4. Work closely with a single-coordinating National AIDS Council and promote the decentralization of AIDS councils down to the local levels

5. NYCs need to be autonomous to prevent overly strong influence from their ministries to enhance their prominence at regional and international levels

6. Establish Youth Parliaments in countries where they do not exists to create a platform of consultation among lawmakers and youth

Gender Dimensions

7. Mainstream gender dimensions into all aspects of STIs and HIV/AIDS interventions, including: educational attainment, elimination of gender-based violence/coercive sex, empowerment of women and girls to exercise rights, empowerment to negotiate condom use, elimination of harmful traditional practices and all forms of stigma and discrimination, redefinition of stereotypical gender roles, and increased positive involvement of men and boys

Prevention

8. Prevention must remain the key strategy in combating HIV/AIDS. Preventive-educatio n consisting of raising awareness, developing knowledge and skills to reduce infections, access to care, support and counseling, and empowering decision-makers from national to community levels

Multi-Sectoral Approach

9. Employ a multi-sectoral program approach as the roots of the HIV/AIDS epidemic are complex, reflecting cultural, economic, legal, and gender-based challenges

10. Policies and programmes must address the underbelly of the HIV/AIDS epidemic by simultaneously focusing on gender, culture, poverty, and human rights to eliminate the vulnerability barriers surrounding HIV/AIDS

11. Respect cultural dimensions of HIV/AIDS while addressing harmful practices, and supporting adherence to the internationally endorsed principles of human rights

Community Mobilization

12. Results-based programmes targeting behaviour change should be founded on evidence-based socio-cultural research of culture, attitudes, and practices of all beneficiaries reflecting young people, and the community leaders who are the custodians of cultural norms and practices

13. Engage community and its traditional, religious and cultural leaders in programme design to encourage ownership, acceptability, utilization and sustainability

14. Family-unit must be targeted in HIV prevention programming as the first agent of socialization among young people

Sexual and Reproductive Health

15. Capacity development for professionals, service providers, teachers and other members of the school community, as well as peer educators and parents to address youth sexual and reproductive health needs

16. Utilize Sexual and Reproductive Health programmes as entry point for HIV/AIDS initiatives (i.e. maternal health, family planning, and STI management) to provide HIV prevention counseling, HIV voluntary counseling and testing, male and female condoms, STI management, and antiretroviral drugs

17. Comprehensive condom programming to improve availability, access and use of both male and female condoms for dual protection;

18. Development of skills for prevention and management of STIs and counseling

19. Advocacy for voluntary counselling and testing for HIV (VCT) care and support;

M&E

20. Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) plan must be integrated into any NYC-lead programme on HIV/AIDS, and NYCs should strive to provide monitoring assistance to government-driven HIV/AIDS programmes among young people

Knowledge Sharing

21. Adopt culture of information- sharing and cross-fertilization of good practices between countries at all levels

22. Networking between regional NYCs should be systemized

23. Networking with community associations and institutions playing critical roles in defining social norms

24. Take initiative to train ourselves as youth leaders to understand and enhance the role of young people in moving youth platform forward

25. Promote and package awareness and advocacy initiatives that build on the positive socio-cultural values and norms in communities to address the adolescent/youth SRH needs and concerns

Resources

26. Investment of modest resources to combat HIV/AIDS now will prevent high economic and human costs in the future

27. Programme design must ensure that maximum resources allocated through National Youth Councils are reaching intended beneficiaries

28. Advocate for government support towards research and development of nationally produced ARV’s, and lobby for access to free and/or subsidized ARVs

29. Advocate for non-politicalizatio n of the Global Fund to ensure funds are provided fairly and to countries with limited resources and worst affected by HIV/AIDS

30. Create and maintain partnership with governments, Donors, UN agencies, Breton Woods Institutions (BWI), regional and sub-regional institutions and others to mobilize resources, materials and technical assistance for HIV/AIDS programming

Actions for World Assembly of Youth

31. Establish a WAYAIDS Fund through the Secretariat to coordinate, catalyze and mobilize funds for NYC-managed HIV/AIDS Programmes

32. Utilize the central WAYAIDS Fund to expand strategic alliances with national governments, NGOs, bi/multi-lateral donors, private sector, media, FBOs, CBOs, PLWAS

33. WAY ExCo and NYCs should better reflect gender equity in its membership

34. WAY should define and practice a consistent classification of “youth” to ensure suitable participation, and that program and policy is addressing intended beneficiaries.

Let us rise to meet the HIV/AIDS Challenge!


application | Antonina Kanygina | 29 Лис 2006

JAPAN YOUTH ENCOUNTER ON SUSTAINABILITY (YES) 2007

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JAPAN YOUTH ENCOUNTER ON SUSTAINABILITY (YES) 2007
Hosei University Tama Campus and Mt Fuji Seminar House, Japan, 26 March - 8 April 2007

Applications Now Open! Deadline: 15 December 2006

Dear Colleagues and Friends,

ETHsustainability, the Center for Sustainability at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, along with Hosei University in Japan, is please to announce the opening of the application process for the 2007 Youth Encounter on Sustainability (YES) Japan. The two week course aims to sensitize participants to the complex issues of sustainable development in a global context, while exploring issues pertinent to Japan and the region, though course work, field trips, workshops, group work, discussions and practical learning experiences, combined with unique social and cultural activities. The unique program builds on 7 years of experience successfully running the Youth Encounter on Sustainability YES program in Switzerland, Latin America and Central and Eastern Europe.

A total of 36 places are available in the course, with 24 places reserved for international applicants, and 12 places reserved for Japanese applicants. All participants must have a good working command of English, be between the age of 20 and 30 years, be currently enrolled at a university either in the final stages of their undergraduate study, or at any level of graduate study. The entire course will be held in English and applications are welcomed from diverse disciplines and nationalities. More information on the course is available in the brochure attached.

Location: Hosei University Tama Campus and Mt Fuji Seminar House, Japan

Dates: 26 March - 8 April 2007

All applications must be submitted online. The online applications are now open at: http://www.sustainability.ethz.ch/en/activities/japan.cfm

Deadline for applications is: 15 December 2006 (International Applicants) / 15 January 2007 (Japanese Applicants)

Please forward this information to colleagues, universities, organisations and institutions that may be interested. We appreciate your help to promote this unique learning experience!

For more information please contact Ms. Michelle Grant (details below).

Japanese applicants are requested to contact Ms. Michiko Yoshikawa, Project Manager, Faculty of Humanity & Environment, Hosei University, email: hosei@ur-service.com, Fax: +81-3-3264-9663 / Phone: +81-3-3264-9438

Sincerely,

Michelle Grant
Project Manager
ETHsustainability
Center for Sustainability at ETH Zurich
Bolleystrasse 9 CH 8006 Zurich Switzerland
+41 44 632 5898 Office
+41 76 429 2600 Mobile
+41 44 632 1597 Fax

michelle.grant@sl.ethz.ch


application | Antonina Kanygina | 28 Лис 2006

2007-2008 Returning Scholars Fellowship Program

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Open Society Institute
International Higher Education Support Program
Academic Fellowship Program

2007-2008 Returning Scholars Fellowship Program

The Returning Scholars Fellowship Program (RSFP) invites applications from talented scholars who seek university positions and academic careers in their home countries after studying abroad. The program is open to citizens of Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Macedonia, Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Tajikistan and Ukraine.

RSFP, a part of the Academic Fellowship Program (AFP), welcomes scholars from these countries who have received (or will receive by September 2007) an internationally competitive postgraduate degree in anthropology, area/cultural studies, gender studies, economics, history, political science, international relations, psychology, public administration, philosophy, social work, sociology, public health, human rights and public law, or journalism/media studies. The program does not support scholars in philology, the visual and performing arts, or business.

AFP fellows are placed in carefully selected university departments that are amenable to change and demonstrate a realistic and clear vision for future development. RSFP helps universities in the region retain promising young scholars, who are essential to the revitalization of departments and to the sustainability of higher education reforms. The program represents part of a conscious strategy to combat “brain drain” by offering financial, institutional and professional development support, as well as further opportunities as program alumni. Returning Scholars and partner departments also benefit from the presence of AFP-supported International Scholars, who provide expert mentorship in such areas as professional development, curriculum development and reform, research methods, and teaching/learning methodologies specific for their discipline.

AFP supports placement of Returning Scholars generally in AFP partner departments. A list of current Academic Fellowship Program partner departments can be found on our website. The list is subject to change in the 2007-08 academic year, and applicants are advised to explore placement possibilities with their respective Region Manager or Country Coordinator.

Fellowships include a monthly stipend and various allowances, in addition to the opportunity to participate in departmental and professional development projects.

Application deadline: March 23, 2007. Fellowships begin in August or September 2007 and normally last one academic year, with the possibility of renewal. For applications (see attached file) and guidelines, please see our web site: http://www.soros. org/initiatives/ hesp/focus/ afp

Open Society Institute
Higher Education Support Program
Academic Fellowship Program
October 6 utca 12, H-1051, Budapest, Hungary

E-mail: afp@osi.hu
Telephone: (36-1) 235 6160
Fax: (36-1) 411-4401