THIS PAGE IS OUTDATED, for current information go to:
https://sites.google.com/site/ipsarc44/our-projects/ipsa-panels/ipsa-2018-brisbane
Call for Papers
for 2018 World Congress of
International Political Science Association
Research Committee on Military's Role in Democratization (RC44)
Venue: Brisbane, Australia
21 - 26 July 2018
This is a general invitation for papers on democratization and the military to be held at the World Congress of International Political Science Association, organized by its Research Committee 44 (RC44).
IPSA 2018 BRISBANE deadline for paper proposals has been extended to 25th October 2017! Please submit directly to IPSA and let us know about your proposal through the form at the bottom of this webpage.
Our current plans for panels are as follows (you can still apply for joining the panel of your choice or propose a new one):
No. Panel title (tentative, 2017/10/16 -continuously under review):
We are also considering further organizational changes including additional panels and internal rearrangements, especially after the passing of the official IPSA deadline (25 October 2017).
As much as you can, try to incorporate the theme of the 2018 Brisbane Congress, “Borders and Margins,” into your presentation. The papers can be based on theoretical discourse, empirical case studies, comparative analysis between regions or countries or critical narrative and reflection of an ongoing situation. We also welcome interdisciplinary approaches that include other areas of study including history, geography, international relations, international law, philosophy, sociology, indigenous studies, cultural studies, feminist and gender studies, queer perspectives, security studies, anthropology, sociolinguistics, development studies, psychology and economics.
Paper titles and abstracts should be submitted directly through the IPSA Congress website until the deadline, which has been extended to 25 October 2017.
https://wc2018.ipsa.org/events/congress/wc2018/home
We encourage you to inform us about your submission to IPSA through the form below.
Paper abstracts submission form ( ~ 25 October 2017)
* This is only for internal informative purposes to the RC44. For the official submission, go to the IPSA Congress HP.
We are open to suggestions for panels and papers in other areas, including the ones listed below.
the changing role of the military in politics
the democratic oversight of the military
military as guardian of democracy
militarization of the state
authoritarianism, populism and the role of the military
the role of the military in constitutional and state reform
civil-military relations
the role of the military in peace-building
human security, societal security and securitization
militarism and democracy promotion
peace-keeping and the military
disaster relief, emergency powers and the military
police, military and internal control
resistance and people power
militarism as an ideology
democratic education, indoctrination and the military
the military, propaganda and the media
relationship between military coercion and democratic hegemony
armament buildup and militarization of society
military conflict, refugees and migration
military, democracy and marginalization
gender, LGBTQ and the military
indigenous rights and militarism
ethnicity, identity and militarism
religion, secularism and militarism
state sovereignty, globalization and the military
military justice, human rights and war crimes
overseas military deployment
cold war, deterrence and democratic peace
world wars and historical memory
military alliances and alliance politics
military occupation of foreign areas
language, intercultural communication and the military
democracy and nuclear weapons (control, proliferation, abolition)
military technology change and social impact
terrorism, extremism and insurgency
armament, disarmament and conflict dynamics
privatization of security
corporate interest and military-industrial complex
neo-colonialism and militarization
post-colonial democracy and military rule
developmental states and the military
Further information about the congress can be reached at https://wc2018.ipsa.org/events/congress/wc2018/home.
The main theme of the 25th IPSA world congress to be held between 21-26 July 2018 in Brisbane (Australia) is "Borders and Margins."
The post-Cold War acceleration of globalization and the multi-layered consequences of the 9/11 terrorist attacks have had profound effects on borders. These include empirical borders, such as state, regional, security and “glocal” boundaries that feature on maps and in organizational practices, and also conceptual ones, such as social, cultural, economic, religious, ethnic, sexual and linguistic distinctions that discipline and divide human populations through identity politics and bio-political management.
These borders create margins, through which administrative and military bureaucracies, as well as NGOs, activists, “networks” and more-or-less organized criminals and terrorists operate, empirically and conceptually. Borders between recognized states, de-facto states, sub-states, occupied territories and supra-national governance authorities are spatial creations defined through lines that separate one country, state, province, zone, “union” etc. from another, while borderlands appear to be critical zones at the margins of state control and governing institutions.
However, borders are not simple territorial lines demarcated by road signs, official checkpoints, even barbed-wire fences and fortified walls, but institutions in themselves. They have a dynamic character arising from their formal or informal functions and impacts. At a time when entire regions have been destabilized by the implosion of borders – often imposed by former and current imperialisms, rather than arising through freely negotiated or democratic means – these margins are now conflict zones and flash points in national and international politics. Such conflicts and controversies are currently presenting very serious challenges to the international governance of human rights derived from the Universal Declaration of 1948, which reaches its 70th anniversary in 2018.
In the last few decades, the evolution of information technologies has transformed the traditional “border as a barrier” by virtually enclosing people into groups with common identities and interests. These groups are dispersed throughout the globe, and so lack any form of territorial compactness or contiguity. Electronic “connectedness,” whether in information exchange, e-commerce, international academic work, financialization, security surveillance or criminality, challenges the imposition of physical barriers, bureaucratized checks and migration controls in starkly political terms. The new “Great Firewall of China” is about as ineffective as the old physical Great Wall was, and “leaks” of huge quantities of financial, commercial and security data continue to defy the attempted criminalization of “leakers.” The challenges posed by these global developments – which make headline news when violence erupts or powerful politicians are exposed – invite us to explore the fundamental dynamics of inclusion and exclusion under an all-encompassing theme “Borders and Margins.”
Along with those who constitute the current majority/minority or other identity “mix” within a state, there are also those caught in marginal zones, such as immigrant groups that are physically “inside” but are said by some not to “belong.” They are typically central to a politics of multiculturalism/cosmopolitanism, or nationalism/assimilation, or expulsion/genocide. The politics of “Borders and Margins” has a common centre of gravity: that of “otherness” or “otherization,” which, in turn, determines the borders and creates marginalizations. It is these practices which further determine inequalities of wealth and power, now very extreme in global terms. “Borders and Margins” offers participants in IPSA’s 25th World Congress broad scientific possibilities within the ethical dimensions through which the discipline operates.
These conjunctions of empirical activities and conceptual claims generate new methodologies in cognate disciplines that political scientists are keen to adopt. The Congress theme should be taken to include further perspectives including history, geography, international relations, international law, philosophy, sociology, political psychology, cultural studies, feminist and gender studies, queer perspectives, security studies and similarly engaged forms of scientific enquiry. In these fields there are crucial debates on sovereignty and identity, rights and obligations, just and unjust warfare and “interventions,” democratic theory and practice, and international governance, among other areas of concern.
We therefore expect that “Borders and Margins” will thematically unite participants and broaden their understanding of politics. “Borders and Margins” are constitutive of crucial political processes and are therefore a focus for the international political sciences which study them.