SEMINAR: Juventude, Violência e Controle Socioespacial no Brasil e na França (20-21 Agosto 2012, UFRJ, Rio de Janeiro)

O seminário busca discutir o controle social sobre as classes populares, especialmente os jovens, pelos ângulos da questão urbana e o do processo de criminalização. Visa articular, de um lado, a compreensão dos fenômenos desviantes e, de outro, os processos por meio dos quais esses fenômenos são administrados ou bem são objetos de políticas públicas produzidas em contextos sociais e territoriais específicos. Este seminário reunirá reconhecidos especialistas dos dois países nessas questões.

Data e Local

20 e 21 de agosto de 2012 (segunda e terça-feira), das 09:00 às 18:00 horas

Fórum de Ciência e Cultura da UFRJ, Salão Pedro Calmon – Avenida Pasteur, 250 – 2o andar – Urca – Rio de Janeiro

Haverá tradução simultânea.
Inscrições gratuitas no próprio local do evento.

Mais informações

http://www.necvu.ifcs.ufrj.br/images/Sem.Franco.Brasileiro2012%20-Folder.pdf

SEMINAR: Seminario Internacional de Criminología Latinoamericana (10 Agosto 2011, UNSAM, Buenos Aires)

PANEL 1: Criminología y seguridad pública en el contexto latinoamericano (10h)
Expositores:
Prof. Máximo Sozzo (Universidad Nacional del Litoral)
Prof. Ignacio Anitua (Universidad Nacional de Buenos Aires)
Prof. Nilo Batista (Universidad del Estado de Río de Janeiro)
Cierre: Prof. Dr. E. R. Zaffaroni

PANEL 2: Criminología, poder y pobreza en América Latina (14h)
Expositores:
Prof. Julio Virgolini (Universidad de Buenos Aires)
Prof. Vera Malaguti (Universidad del Estado de Rio de Janeiro)
Prof. Alejandro Alagia (Universidad de Buenos Aires)
Prof. Juan Pegoraro (Universidad de Buenos Aires)
Cierre: Prof. Dra. Lola Aniyar de Castro

La actividad es organizada por el Programa de Investigación en Criminología de la UNSAM, la participación es gratuita con inscripción previa.

Se entregarán certificados de asistencia.

Inscripción

criminologia.unsam@gmail.com

Más informaciones

http://noticias.unsam.edu.ar/index.php/eventos/seminario-internacional-de-criminologia-latinoamericana/

CONFERENCE: Second ISA Forum of Sociology – Social Justice and Democratization (1-4 August 2012, Buenos Aires)

Objectives

  • The most important objective of the Forum is to provide a meeting place for the various Research Committees, Working Groups, and Thematic Groups. Organizers will be provided as much flexibility as possible in designing their respective programs within the scheduled time slots.
  • The second objective is to develop a socially significant theme involving public actors and to which different areas of sociology can contribute. Social Justice and Democratization, the selected theme for the 2012 Forum, offers RCs, WGs and TGs the opportunity to learn from public actors as well as contributing to the Forum’s main theme.
  • The third objective is to hold the interim Research Council Business Meeting attended by the Delegates from all Research Committees.

Research Committees

RC02 Economy and Society

RC03 Community Research

RC04 Sociology of Education

RC05 Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations

RC07 Futures Research

RC09 Social Transformations and Sociology of Development

RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management

RC11 Sociology of Aging

RC12 Sociology of Law

RC13 Sociology of Leisure

RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture

RC15 Sociology of Health

RC17 Sociology of Organization

RC18 Political Sociology

RC19 Sociology of Poverty, Social Welfare and Social Policy

RC20 Comparative Sociology

RC21 Regional and Urban Development

RC22 Sociology of Religion

RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology

RC24 Environment and Society

RC25 Language and Society

RC26 Sociotechnics, Sociological Practice

RC29 Deviance and Social Control  – with Maria Alejandra Otamendi

RC30 Sociology of Work

RC31 Sociology of Migration

RC32 Women in Society

RC33 Logic and Methodology in Sociology

RC34 Sociology of Youth

RC35 Conceptual and Terminological Analysis

RC36 Alienation Theory and Research

RC37 Sociology of Arts

RC38 Biography and Society

RC41 Sociology of Population

RC42 Social Psychology

RC43 Housing and Built Environment

RC44 Labor Movements

RC45 Rational Choice

RC46 Clinical Sociology

RC47 Social Classes and Social Movements

RC48 Social Movements, Collective Actions and Social Change

RC49 Mental Health and Illness

RC51 Sociocybernetics

RC52 Sociology of Professional Groups

RC53 Sociology of Childhood

RC54 The Body in the Social Sciences

Thematic Groups

TG03 Human Rights and Global Justice

TG04 Sociology of Risk and Uncertainty

TG05 Visual Sociology

TG06 Institutional Ethnography

TG07 Senses and Society

Working Groups

WG01 Sociology of Local-Global Relations

WG02 Historical and Comparative Sociology

WG05 Famine and Society

More information

http://isaconf.confex.com/isaconf/forum2012/webprogram/programs.html

Registration

https://participants.congrex.com/scripts/jmevent/Registration.asp?Client_Id=’CXST’&Project_Id=’12080023’&Form_Id=1&Form_Number=2&Stand_Id=0&A=&Language_Code=0&template_id

CALL FOR PAPERS: Militarización de la seguridad ciudadana (December 2012, FLACSO, Ecuador)

El incremento de la delincuencia y el crimen organizado en América Latina es una constante en las últimas décadas, para enfrentar este fenómeno los gobiernos de cada país han optado por varias políticas y transformaciones en el tema de la seguridad interna. Por un lado, se han realizado reformas jurídico – constitucionales en el marco legal, y por otro lado, se han efectuado modificaciones doctrinarias en términos de roles y misiones de las institucionales encargadas de la seguridad.

En este contexto, la intervención de las fuerzas militares en aspectos policiales – como la seguridad interna y ciudadana – es una medida recurrente por parte de los gobiernos de la región que está puesta en debate y discusión en los momentos actuales, debido a que implica cambios doctrinarios y una modificación del “deber ser” militar. ¿Están las sociedades y los gobiernos latinoamericanos preparados para asumir las implicaciones de este tipo de medidas? ¿Existe un balance de las intervenciones ya existentes independientemente de la tendencia ideológica y política de cada gobierno?

Teniendo en cuenta este marco general, proponemos las siguientes líneas o campos específicos en los que se requiere profundizar:

  1. Competencias legales y reforma institucional para la presencia de las Fuerzas Armadas en la seguridad interna en la región.
  2. Costos y beneficios de la participación militar en la seguridad interna.
  3. Evaluación de derechos humanos y el uso de la fuerza militar en la seguridad interna.
  4. Doctrina y formación militar para la seguridad interna.

Fecha límite:

El mes de publicación de URVIO Nº 12 es: diciembre de 2012. La fecha límite para envío de propuestas: LUNES 3 DE SEPTIEMBRE DE 2012.

Más informaciones:

http://www.flacsoandes.org/urvio/img/Convocatoria_URVIO_12.pdf

Las personas interesadas en participar deberán mandar sus trabajos a la dirección de correo electrónico: jponton@flacso.org.ec

SYMPOSIUM: El Estado en Acción: Las fuerzas de seguridad y el sistema de justicia, saberes y prácticas en perspectiva comparada (November 2012, Santiago, University of Chile)

Conference: III Congresso Latinoamericano de Antropología, Antropologías en Movimiento, Universidade de Chile

Symposium: El Estado en Acción: Las fuerzas de seguridad y el sistema de justicia, saberes y prácticas en perspectiva comparada

Objetivo

El simposio busca reunir investigaciones en ciencias sociales que aborden desde una perspectiva etnográfica, la inscripción social y estatal de las fuerzas policiales y de seguridad en el contexto latinoamericano. Se interesa por los análisis de aquellos aspectos referidos por ejemplo a: rutinas y dinámicas de trabajo, procesos de selección y ascenso, aspectos simbólicos y valores morales, procesos de reforma de las fuerzas de seguridad, políticas públicas hacia las fuerzas, situaciones y relaciones establecidas entre agentes y con otros grupos estatales y sociales, entre otros factores.

Abstract

Los estudios empíricos sobre el quehacer de policías, gendarmes, penitenciarios y prefectos, muestran que: valores morales, sentidos de pertenencia y adscripciones sociales, nociones de la legalidad, formas de clasificación de los conflictos y delitos, imágenes, emociones y sentimientos, entre otras dimensiones, componen su trabajo en el ámbito del Estado. Más allá de las funciones que cada institución tiene asignadas, las relaciones que sus miembros establecen entre sí, y con otros grupos y actores sociales, van configurando estilos, modos y sentidos de sus oficios, aunque sin desatender a la atribución central de afirmar la labor ostensiva y represiva que los define como agentes de Estado.

En tiempos en los que las “demandas de seguridad” ponen de relieve la actuación de policías, gendarmes, penitenciarios o prefectos, este simposio se propone analizar y debatir los aportes de la antropología social y de la etnografía al conocimiento de cómo lo estatal, la estatalidad y/o el Estado cobran existencia en la perspectiva de estos agentes. Asimismo buscará entablar un diálogo crítico con investigaciones empíricas cuyos objetos aborden desde diversas perspectivas de las ciencias sociales, las cuestiones antes señaladas. Debido a las características de la historia latinoamericana, se trata de temas que sólo recientemente se han constituido en foco de interés antropológico y de las ciencias sociales en general, arrojando resultados significativos que llaman a la reflexión no sólo sobre los abordajes teóricos y metodológicos hoy adoptados, sino también sobre posiciones éticas y políticas involucradas en la relación posible entre la investigación científica y las políticas de Estado.

Las reflexiones y debates teóricos contenidos en los trabajos deberán sustentarse en resultados de investigaciones empíricas basadas en trabajo de campo: observación participante, entrevistas y/o análisis de fuentes o documentos.

Contato

Dra. Sabina Frederic (CONICET-UNQ Argentina), sabinafrederic@yahoo.es

Dra. Ana Paula Mendes de Miranda (INEAC-UFF Brasil), ana_paulamiranda@yahoo.com.br

Dra. Mariana Galvani (CONICET-UBA-FSOC-IIGG Argentina), marianacgalvani@gmail.com

Dr. José Garriga  (UNSAM – IDAES)

More information

http://www.facso.uchile.cl/noticias/80932/el-estado-en-accion

http://www2.facso.uchile.cl/antropologia/ala2012/index.html

CONFERENCE: Security, Democracy and Cities: The Future of Prevention (12 – 14 Dec 2012, Aubervilliers, France)

Organised by the European Forum for Urban Security (Efus) in partnership with Aubervilliers and Saint-Denis (France), this interdisciplinary and international conference will be dedicated to the exchange of practices, experience and knowledge on crime prevention in Europe and around the world.

Structure of the conference

• some 15 topics on which the European Forum and its network are working, such as mediation, addictions and drugs, the shared use of public space, minorities, cities and organised crime, large sporting events, police and prevention, and violence against women. These topics will be addressed either during round tables, or through field visits, training sessions, and films. They will be co organised with the cities of Aubervilliers and Saint-Denis, the national Forums for Urban Security, local associations, and various international institutions partnered with Efus, such as the International Centre for the Prevention of Crime (ICPC), and the Council of Europe. They will also be invited to contribute to developing the Manifesto.

• debates at the plenary sessions focused on four key issues of urban security: risks, technologies and prevention; governance and citizenship; cities and sustainable development; a Europe open to the world.

• lectures from representatives of international, European and national institutions, as well as from experts in various fields. These sessions will be dedicated to evaluating urban security policies over the past 25 years, the challenges for the future of prevention, and the main themes on which local authorities are currently working.

• the adoption of the Manifesto. The 2012 international conference will allow participants to draft a common policy platform. This political positioning will be reflected in the Manifesto released at the end of the conference which will be named after the two host cities. It will succeed previous Manifestos published in the wake of Efus’ international conferences of Montreal (1989), Paris (1991), Naples (2000) and Saragossa (2006).

Contact

2012conference@efus.eu

More information

http://efus.eu/en/2012-conference/

Registration will be open online from June 2012.

SEMINAR: Citizen Security in Venezuela, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington DC

Wednesday May 30, 2012
8:45 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. 
Fifth Floor Conference Room
1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC

Rates of crime and violence in Venezuela are the worst in South America and among the highest in the entire world.  What factors led to the rapid deterioration of citizen security, particularly in urban areas?   What strategies have been adopted at the national, state, and municipal level to address it?  What impact does Venezuela’s highly polarized political environment have on citizen security and related debates?  With presidential elections in Venezuela only five months away, does this issue have political salience?

Agenda

8:45 a.m. – 9:00 a.m.           Introduction and Welcome

9:00 a.m. – 10:45 a.m.        Panel 1

  • Roberto Briceño-León, Universidad Central de Venezuela; Woodrow Wilson Center Fellow
  • Ana María Sanjuán, Andean Development Corporation
  • Daniel Luz, United Nations Development Program
  • Moderator: Cynthia Arnson, Latin American Program, Woodrow Wilson Center

10:45 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.      Coffee Break

11:00 a.m. – 12.45 p.m.      Panel 2

  • Rogelio Pérez Perdomo, Universidad Metropolitana, Caracas
  • Jesús E. Machado S.J., Fundación Centro Gumilla
  • Tito La Cruz, Universidad Católica Andrés Bello
  • Moderator: Carlos Basombrío, Latin American Program, Woodrow Wilson

More information

http://wilsoncenter.org/event/citizen-security-venezuela

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: Systemic Peacebuilding, Conflict Transformation & Post-War Recovery and Reconciliation (PCTC, 25 – 29 June 2012, Cluj-Napoca, Romania)

Systemic Peacebuilding, Conflict Transformation & Post-War Recovery and Reconciliation (PCTR) is one of IPDTC’s best attended global programmes designed for UN agencies, government officials, diplomats, staff of inter-governmental organisations, and national and international experts and practitioners working in peacebuilding, post-war recovery, peace consolidation and armed violence prevention. The programme will provide participants with a rigorous training grounded in extensive on-the-ground operational experience. The programme is hand-on, and brings together highly experienced experts and practitioners working in prevention, peacemaking and peacebuilding during war, and post-war recovery and peace consolidation. Agencies and organisations sending multiple participants and early applicants are available for course fee reductions.

The PCTR Programme is implemented in affiliation with the Peace Operation Training Institute’s Certificate of Training in United Nations Peace Support Operations (COTIPSO).

Bringing together experienced practitioners and policy makers from governments, the United Nations, regional organizations (EU, AU, OAS, ASEAN), and national and international organisations and agencies, the program provides a unique opportunity to exchange experiences and practical learning together with those working in conflict situations world-wide. One of the best evaluated programs in the field internationally, the PCTR is also unique in addressing all three phases of violence and war – before, during and after – based on practical operational experiences.

The PCTR program is a five-day intensive training which provides middle and senior-level experts with a forum for reflection and professional development in a dynamic and stimulating environment.  Given the issues it addresses, it is also relevant for those working in political, gender, security, human rights, development, and humanitarian fields, donors, and diplomats, working in areas affected or threatened by war and armed conflict or in post-war situations.

Participants include

Senior experts, field staff working in areas affected by violent conflict and war and in post-war situations, international diplomats, national and local level politicians in countries affected by war and conflict or with portfolios responsible for issues dealing with peacebuilding, conflict transformation, and development policies, policy makers, UN staff and heads of missions, people involved in grass-roots and community-based peacebuilding, and practitioners of conflict transformation and mediation.

Fees

With Full Accommodation, Course Fee & Meals Included: EUR 895 (OECD Participants); EUR 595 (Non-OECD Participants); Special discounts are available for: Early Payment, Multiple Participants, Two Courses Taken Together

More information

training@patrir.ro

www.patrir.ro/training

CALL FOR PAPERS: International Journal – STABILITY of Security & Development

Over the course of the past two decades, interventions to end conflicts, prevent conflict recurrence and foster peace have been launched across the world. These have involved transitional administrations in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo and Timor-Leste as well as efforts aimed at countering insurgencies and gang violence in Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Colombia, Chechnya, Mexico and elsewhere. Research, policymaking and programming in this area has been on the rise. It has brought together militaries, multilateral institutions, national aid agencies, non-governmental organisations (NGOs), international financial institutions, regional development banks, charities, the private sector and others.

While initially viewed as a form of international intervention in developing countries, many have come to recognise that stabilisation has long applied to national authorities attempting to combat organised crime and extend their authority in weakly-governed parts of their cities and countries, including in developed nations. This recognition has helped demonstrate the need for anthropologists, sociologists, criminologists, legal professionals and psychologists to enter into discourses such as stabilisation along with their colleagues in political science, international relations, economics and development studies.

This fusion of academic fields and the linking of international and national policymaking provide a tremendous opportunity for genuinely interdisciplinary research which directly applies to communities of policy and practice. Until this point, research into stabilisation and the nexus of security and development, broadly defined, has been fragmented across several journals and has often been published according to timelines that do not reflect the needs of policymakers and practitioners. Scholarly journals looking at these issues have published excellent research, though ensure a timeline publication process has not necessarily been prioritised. Evidence gathered in mid-2011 may not make its way into print until the end of 2012 or, likely, later. It would take longer still for this research to makes its way into policy and practitioner discourses.

Stability overcomes these limitations by:

  • Including a rigorous but expedited peer-review process;
  • Publishing articles online and without delay in the spirit of open-access;
  • Foregoing fees for users to access research (or for authors to publish);
  • Actively disseminating research into policy and practice communities; and
  • Accepting articles from experienced practitioners and policymakers alongside academics.

Unlike a number of open-access journals focused upon security studies and international development, Stability has not been established to feature the research of any particular institution, military, donor agency or company. It is supported by a wide range of institutions and is genuinely independent. The editors and peer reviews evaluate submissions strictly according to the quality of the research and the relevance of the findings to interventions in conflict-affected contexts.

Scope of the Journal

Stability welcomes articles from a range of disciplines, including political science, development studies, international relations, sociology, criminology, anthropology, psychology and the law, among others. The journal will focus upon stabilisation through international missions as well as by governments within their own territories. This may include crime prevention efforts or counter-narcotics strategies insofar as they include a range of means and tactics (e.g., coercive force, diplomacy, communications, humanitarian or development assistance, etc.). However, for demonstration purposes, the following topics would likely appear relatively regularly:

  • Civil-military interaction
  • Conflict prevention/risk reduction
  • Constitutional and legislative affairs
  • Correlates of conflict
  • Corruption and illicit networks
  • Counterinsurgency tactics
  • Crime reduction
  • Demographics and human geography
  • Disarmament, demobilisation & reintegration
  • Economic growth and livelihoods
  • Governance and political legitimacy
  • International cooperation/organization
  • Judicial/justice sector reform
  • Law and legal regimes
  • Organised crime and gang violence
  • Peacekeeping or peace support operations
  • Security sector reform
  • Stability operations
  • State- and nation-building
  • Urban studies and challenges
  • Whole of government or whole of system approaches

Many other topics will be considered for publication. If you are uncertain as to whether your research would match this journal’s criteria, please contact the editors (info@stabilityjournal.org).

Article Types

Stability will primarily publish research articles but will also feature shorter “practice notes” and “commentaries” insofar as they are well informed, critical and contribute to knowledge and thinking in a useful manner.

  • Research articles must be between 5,000 and 8,000 words, including all notes but not including the reference list/bibliography. Under special circumstances, articles up to 10,000 words may be accepted for publication. Research articles should present original findings based upon rigorous empirical or theoretical research.
  • Practice notes must be between 2,000 and 4,000 words, including all notes but not including the reference list/bibliography. These should provide an account of a programme related to stabilisation which appears to be particularly effective, ineffective, innovative or otherwise notable. These should NOT comprise glowing case studies of projects implemented by the author or his/her organisation and must contribute useful analysis.
  • Commentaries should be between 1,000 and 2,000 words and should reflect upon or critique a “happening” such as a policy shift, release of a major study or other notable occurrence related to stabilisation. Commentaries are particularly welcome from distinguished specialists. Authors interested in submitting a commentary piece should discuss the content with the editors before submitting a manuscript.

In order to ensure a smooth and quick peer-review, editing and publishing process, authors must adhere to all basic rules of grammar and to Stability’s style guide. The full style guide is available online at www.stabilityjournal.org, though key elements are also included in an appendix to this call for papers.

Submitting Your Article

Authors should send their submissions to submissions@stabilityjournal.org. Your submission must include an abstract (150-250 words), a brief biography for each author (not to exceed 100 words each) and complete contact details for the (one) corresponding author. All identifying information will be removed from the article before it enters the peer-review process.

More Information

http://www.stabilityjournal.org/call-for-proposals

New blog author: Alexandra Abello Colak, University of Bradford

Please join me in welcoming our new author, Alexandra Abello Colak, to our researchingsecurity blog.

Alexandra is a PhD Student at the Department of Peace Studies, University of Bradford, as well as a Marie Curie Fellow at the Centre for Conflict Studies, University of Utrecht.

Her research is about Security Provision in Impoverished Urban Communities and the Construction of Social Orders: The case of Medellin (2002-2012) in Colombia.