CONFERENCE: Regional Studies Association Global Conference 2014: From Vulnerable Places to Resilient Territories – The Path to Sustainable Development (27 – 30 April 2014, Fortaleza, Brazil)

In a world emerging from widespread crisis, some regions thrive and have been strengthened whilst others struggle to recover.  Unforeseen events affect regions unevenly, presenting at once opportunities and challenges, prosperity and deprivation. How regions emerge from negative or positive shocks depends on their capacity to learn from their own experience and from that of others, as well as their ability to adapt to new environments in a global economy.

The RSA 2014 Global Conference in Brazil will focus on thinking about paths, policies and ideas to strengthen vulnerable places and to develop cohesive and resilient territories. We acknowledge that only adaptive and flexible regions can succeed in an ever-changing world. This conference offers to all those who share an interest in regional and urban issues an opportunity to explore and discuss these key issues. Our discussions will be stimulated and enriched by the RSA’s well established tradition of embracing and accepting diverse perspective, disciplinary backgrounds and ideas.

Conference Themes

A. Clusters and Smart specialisation K. Regional Integration and Spillovers
B. Innovation and Knowledge L. Spatial Justice and Inequalities
C. Culture and Creativity as a Driver of Regional Growth and Employment M. Spatial Planning and Infrastructure
D. Developing Rural and Peripheral Regions N. Sustainability – Climate Change, Environment, Energy and Food Security
E. The Geography of Crime O. The Geography of Finance
F. Labour Markets and Migration P. Urbanisation and Cities
G. Land Use and the Real Estate Market Q. Regional Policy in Emerging Economies
H. Mega Events and Regional Development R. Leading Regions
I.  Regional Challenges in Health and Education S. Region to Region Trade
J. Policies for Regional Growth and Development T. Economic Development Strategies and Planning

Special Sessions

Plenary Sessions

Regional Growth in Developing Countries Resilient regions and Sustainable Development Territorial Cohesion and Regional Governance
Professor Clelio Campolina Diniz, Rector of Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil Elkin Velasquez, UN-Habitat, Brazil Professor Robert Wilson, University of Texas at Austin, USA
Professor Sérgio Duarte de Castro, Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Goiás (PUC/GO), Brazil Professor Carlos Azzoni, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil Professor Simin Davoudi, Newcastle University, UK

For more information, please click here.

CALL FOR PAPERS: Conference: Is a more inclusive and sustainable development possible in Brazil? (3 May – 14 June 2014, World Economic Association, online conference)

Introduction: Main currents in Brazilian socio-economic development

Historically, changes in the orientation and the scope of the Brazilian government interventions have been associated with deep economic and social transformations. In the 1960s and 1970s, the economic outcomes were decisively affected by militarism that turned out to reinforce economic growth with social exclusion. It also led to increasing productive internationalization where key agents have been the transnational corporations from many developed countries. However, the so-called Brazilian model of development led to further concentration of income, wealth, and land ownership. As Celso Furtado pointed out, it was a false modernization as it benefited only a minority reinforcing the structural heterogeneity and inequality. After the 1970s, questions have been raised about the pattern of Brazilian industrialization that led to failed expectations. Those millions of Brazilians that had hoped for a fair and sustainable economy and society were disappointed by stagnant incomes and higher inflation.

Since the 1990s, Brazil has been subject to a new dependency where financial capital tends to dominate social and economic dynamics in a historical setting where the redefinition of the elites is part of the overall financialization process.  Consequently, as of the early 2000s, Brazil has been considered as a promising emerging economy by global institutions and investors. From 2000 to 2008, the expansion of the BRICS – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa—benefited from the combined commodity and credit cycle. During this period, Brazil experienced high rates of economic growth and was able to promote the inclusion of large portions of the population in the financial, labor and goods markets. As a result, the economy has experienced near full employment during the two years prior to the financial crisis. Income inequality dropped and inflation was kept under control. Interest rates trended downward. However, external imbalances grew and the manufacturing share of output declined while exports have been mainly driven by commodities. In this setting, the newly discovered underwater oil reserves are a major opportunity and challenge: whereas they can provide funds for investing in education and health services, they also raise the prospect of a possible Dutch disease.

Following the global crisis, Brazil has been seriously affected by the decline of commodity prices. In the last decade, Brazil did not improve key structural features of its economy leading to a sustainable business environment. The lack of long-term investments in infrastructure, for example, is part of the scenario that dampens the expectations around the sustainability of economic growth and social inclusion. As of 2012, only 1.5% of Brazil’s GDP goes on infrastructure investment from all sources, both public and private. To catch up, Brazil would have to triple its annual infrastructure spending for the next 20 years (The Economist, 28th September 2013)

In the aftermath of the global crisis, government intervention have supported aggregate demand and supported social inclusion. However, there are signs that the speed of the consumption and investment growth has been diminishing in a scenario characterized by inflation pressures, lower expectations of bank profitability and a diminishing rate of job creation, among other issues.  Considering the global economic integration, Inflationary pressures have put on pressure on domestic interest rates which attract “hot money” from international “carry-trade” operators and finance. Indeed, this attraction turns out to be considered necessary by the Brazilian government in order to address the trade deficit but renders the economy vulnerable to sudden changes in investor sentiment.

In this context, the long term sustainability of development, growth and social cohesion is called into question.

Call for Papers

This conference will focus on various aspects of inclusive and sustainable growth from the broader perspective of examining their interlinkages with other economic, social, and political processes. Concerns with social inclusion extend well beyond issues of justice and fairness, since the degree of economic inequality also affects social cohesion and political stability, and can also have negative implications for economic growth and sustainability. The broad themes to be covered are noted below. Papers falling within the broad topic of the conference though on aspects not explicitly noted here are also welcome. We welcome contributions from Brazilian and non-Brazilian economists, sociologists and political scientists.

1. Economic growth and development

Main drivers of Brazilian development and growth; Structural change and manufacturing; Economic and social implications of agribusiness;The South-South relations and the impacts on economic growth; Building the human and technical infrastructure: changes in education, training and in technology ;Productivity and growth; The role of foreign transnational corporations;Foreign direct investment and trade during development;The role of Brazilian transnationals ;The role of the State in Brazilian development

2. Problems and challenges associated with Brazilian development

Industrial output in the context of globalization; Balance of payments constraints; The challenges of transnationalization ; The rise of China and its implications on the structure and performance of the Brazilian economy; Challenges to Brazilian enterprises in the context of capital globalization

3. Inequality

Income and wealth distribution; Main drivers of wealth concentration; The rise of rentier incomes; Fiscal policy  and inequality; Gender inequality ; Generational inequality; Policies to lower inequality; Patterns of regional and local inequality

4. The role of finance

Global finance and the implementation of macroeconomic policy; Banking dynamics; Challenges to the development of capital markets;The policy of financial inclusion; Credit cycles and  bubbles; Rentier interests, finance, and monetary policy

5. Wage, employment, and social policies

Main patterns of job creation; Sectoral composition of employment creation and destruction; Gender challenges in the labor market; Educational challenges, employment and wages; Labor market flexibilization: social and economic impact; The role and scope of social and wage policies; Social policies  and poverty; Migration trends; Labor organization and distributive conflicts: the evolution of Trade Unions in Brazil;The changing nature of social classes in Brazil

6. Inclusion and sustainability: major challenges for Brazil

Inclusion and exclusion drivers in the Brazilian pattern of development: economic, social and political inclusion; Regional distribution; Physical sustainability: issues of resources, transport and pollution; Social sustainability; Political sustainability in the context of current social and economic problems; Sustainability of current welfare policies;Regional inclusivity

7. The global crisis and the Brazilian economy

The impacts of the crisis on the Brazilian Economy; Policy responses to the crisis; Public banks after the global crisis;Recovering from the crisis: the Brazilian and international experiences compared

Timetable

Deadline for abstracts: February 20, 2014, Deadline for papers: April 15, 2014

Discussion Forum begins on May 3, 2014, Discussion Forum ends on May 31, 2014

Abstracts and papers should be submitted to weabrazilconference@gmail.com

More information are available on the website of the World Economic Association (click here).

CALL FOR PAPERS: Shaping Peace: Local Infrastructures and State Formation (11-12 September 2014, University of Manchester)

What shapes peace? We are familiar with the top-down interventions organised around military, statebuilding and governance interventions, but what about the local infrastructures of peace that involve local agency? How does this agency create new institutions or interacts with existing ones? What are the sources of inspiration for these local infrastructures, and how do they relate to local, national, regional and international norms and structures of peacebuilding? These issues of hybridity, friction, socialisation and norm-formation raise important questions about the location of power, the temporal nature of international interventions, and the interaction of the top-down and bottom up. In particular, it raises questions about the nature of the state and the role of the international community is a globalised, and globally governed, world.

The ‘local turn’ has raised issues of power, structure, and agency. In particular it has placed the tension between international and local forms of peace mobilisation, and the nature and role of the state into the spotlight, as forms of agency and the state are often entwined in any peace process and settlement. The international community tends to follow liberal peace norms; global governance introduces neoliberal rationalities, and the state is perceived, top-down, as the repository for these contradictory processes. State formation arguments, however, tend to see the state as being formed by local and regional power and violence. All of these perspectives on the political and structural processes that institutionalised peace appear to be oppositional, and offer little space for local agents of peace to engage in peace-making and peace or state formation.

And yet, evidence is growing that peace forms, if only in isolated pockets, on the ground through various forms of contestation, just as the state forms through violence or other clashes of power. Local infrastructures for peace have been seen as a way of building a new social contract, connecting the state to its people, as well as being guided by international liberal and neoliberal preferences. For scholars of peace and conflict studies, such processes are a fundamental challenge. Thus, the conference welcomes single paper and panel proposals on issues relating to Local Infrastructures of Peace and Peace/State Formation, including but not limited to:

– Local initiatives of peacebuilding
Theoretical and conceptual investigations of the factors underlying peacebuilding
– The institutional characteristics of local peace initiatives
– The relationship between local initiatives and the nature of the state
– The relationship between the state and the international
– Local to global peace networks

Deadline for paper and panel proposals: 31 May 2014.

Proposals should be 250 words maximum and sent to: iapcs@manchester.ac.uk Registration costs are £20 for paid academics and £10 for students and the unwaged. The registration fee is waived for current members of the IAPCS.

Conference Committee: Roger Mac Ginty, Oliver Richmond, Birte Vogel, Ioannis Tellidis and Jasmin Ramovic. For questions email birte.vogel@manchester.ac.uk

JOB: University Lecturer in Peace and Development Research (School of Global Studies, Göteborg, Sweden)

The School of Global Studies is a creative and innovative university environment for research and education in globalization and global issues. We are looking for a person who would find it stimulating to work in a dynamic, international and interdisciplinary setting.

The Schools education programmes consist of Peace and Development Research, International Relations, Global Development Studies, Global Studies, Human Ecology, Human Rights, Social Anthropology and Regional Studies.

Subject area

Peace and Development Research

Specific subject description

Peace and Development Research with a focus on global development studies.

Job assignments

This position involves teaching in Global Development Studies but may also include teaching in other programmes offered by the School. The applicant should be specialized in development studies and theory. Teaching will be primarily at undergraduate and masters levels but may also demand some teaching at doctoral level. The successful applicant will be expected to teach both on free-standing courses and on degree programmes. The minimum amount of time that is to be allocated to professional development and research is stipulated in the current terms of reference for lecturers at Gothenburg University. The successful applicant will also be expected to participate in the Schools internal activities and pedagogical development and, when necessary, to perform administrative and leadership tasks. Since external funding is so important for financing the research activities of the Schools teaching staff, the successful applicant will also be expected to actively contribute to efforts to secure external funding.

Eligibility

The Higher Education Ordinance stipulates that applicants must hold a PhD in Peace and Development Research or equivalent, have completed training in teaching at University level or equivalent and are able to demonstrate pedagogical skill. Applicants who lack the relevant training in teaching at University level may be considered for employment initially on a one year contract (with possible extension for a second year) until such time as they have completed the required training. Thereafter, their contract will be made permanent.

In the selection process equal weight will be given to scientific and to pedagogical accomplishment. Qualifications in development theory will be awarded particular value in the evaluation of scientific and pedagogical skills.

Assessment

In the evaluation of scientific skill, particular weight will be given to the applicants research in recent years and to their ability to independently initiate and conduct research. Scientific skill should be demonstrated in research and publication within relevant fields. Assessment of pedagogical skill covers planning, delivery, evaluation, supervision and examination. Pedagogical achievements should be well documented so that their quality can be assessed. Administrative skills are also considered important, as are the ability to work together with society at large and to disseminate information about research and development work. The applicant should be able to conduct teaching, supervision and examination in both Swedish and English. The ability to attract external funding is a merit. The selection process will involve sample lectures, interviews and references. Where appropriate, these elements may form the basis of the evaluation. After assessment of all aspects of the applicants skills that are relevant for this position, the person who is considered best qualified to carry out the required tasks, cooperate with other staff and contribute to the development of our School will be selected.

The application deadline is 28 February 2014.

More information can be found here.

FELLOWSHIP: Global Governance Futures (Global Public Policy Institute & Robert Bosch Foundation)

The Global Governance Futures (GGF) program is looking for 25 young professionals from Germany, China, Japan, India and the US to look ahead 10 years and recommend ways to address global challenges.

Building on the success of the first two rounds of the program – GGF 2020 and GGF 2022 – the next round, GGF 2025, will assemble 25 individuals from Germany, China, Japan, India and the United States (five from each country). Over the course of 2014 and 2015, the fellows will participate in four dialogue sessions: in Berlin (June 2014), Beijing and Tokyo (October 2014), New Delhi (January 2015) and Washington, DC (May 2015).

The selected GGF fellows form three working groups that explore a particular issue area of global governance. In GGF 2025 they will focus on internet governance, geoengineering governance and global arms control up until the year 2025. Using instruments from the field of futures research, the working groups will produce scenarios for their respective issue areas. Based on their findings, the fellows will put together a range of publications, including reports and commentaries, that present concrete recommendations on how to foster effective, accountable governance.

GGF draws on a broad array of dedicated supporters. The program consortium comprises 10 academic institutions and think tanks from across the five participating countries. The core responsibility for the design and implementation of the program lies with the GGF program team, which is based at the Global Public Policy Institute (GPPi) in Berlin. In addition, GGF relies on the advice and guidance provided by the GGF steering committee, made up of senior policymakers and academics. The program is generously supported by the Robert Bosch Stiftung.

The application deadline is 10 February 2014. More information and the application requirements can be found here.

CONFERENCE: “Where is Latin America heading?” – PILAS Annual Conference 2014 (12-13 June 2014, University of Sheffield, UK)

PILAS, the postgraduate affiliate of the Society for Latin American Studies (SLAS), is inviting postgraduate researchers to debate and reflect on the place of Latin America within a changing international context, in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Discussing contemporary regional integration processes, scientific and technological advances, ongoing socio-political movements, and the existing poverty and inequality, among other topics, PILAS Annual Conference 2014 aims to extend the debate across disciplinary boundaries and explore the implications of change. How do we develop new forms of regional integration? What is the role of the region within the international community? How can we explore the emergence of new cultural and ideological phenomena?

Students are invited to submit abstracts on ANY ASPECT of their research and ANY DISCIPLINE within the field of Latin American Studies for PILAS 2014. We are looking forward to receiving a wide range of interdisciplinary postgraduate research on Latin America. PILAS also welcomes papers that engage with the conference’s main theme, “Where is Latin America heading?” We welcome papers from across the disciplines, as we wish to attract as many views on Latin America as possible. Following last year success, in 2014 we will also be making a “Poster Presentation” space available throughout the conference.

Call for Panels (Now Open):

To submit an abstract of a panel: http://pilasuk.wix.com/conference2014

A Panel proposal should include:

  • Title of the proposed panel
  • Short abstract (a maximum of fifty words)
  • A long abstract (a maximum of five hundred words)
  • Name of the convener/s (no more than three)
  • At least two participants

After the deadline, within ten days, we will contact the accepted panels which will be ready to get paper proposals when the Call for Papers open.

Call for Papers:

To submit a paper proposal: http://pilasuk.wix.com/conference2014

A Paper proposal should include:

  • Title of the proposed paper
  • Short abstract (a maximum of fifty words)
  • A long abstract (a maximum of five hundred words)
  • Name of the author/s
  • An indication of whether it is a submission to a Panel or as an individual paper.

Individual papers will be taken together in panels as the organisers see fit, therefore we suggest participants to propose a paper to an already accepted panel. However, if no panel suits your proposal we still encourage you to send you work.

Call for Posters

A Poster proposal must include:

  • Title of the proposed poster
  • Abstract (a maximum of three hundred words)
  • Name of the authors.

A final version of the poster will be required for its revision once accepted.

All posters must be portrait, size A1. The author is the only responsible for printing.

All students planning to attend PILAS 2014 – whether to present a paper or simply to enjoy the conference – should register for the conference.

Key Dates:

Call for Panels: Now Open.

Deadline: 17th of February, 16.00 hrs.

Call for Papers/Posters: 24th of February.

Inscriptions: Now Open – until May 5th

More info: pilas.slas.org.uk or pilasblog.wordpress.com

CONFERENCE: Conflicts in the City Congress: Reflections on Urban Unrest (2-4 April 2014, University of Valencia, Spain)

Welcome to the international research conference on conflict and protest movements research. This confererence is organised by the Spaces in Conflict and Crisis research group in partnership with Aula Ciutat and the Observatoire de Conflits from the Quebec University in Montreal (Canada) and will be hosted by the Instituto Interuniversitario de Desarrollo Local at the University of Valencia (Spain).

Conflicts around planning issues represent an important element in urban politics. Their relevance as a vehicle of political mobilization is growing alongside their impact in terms of public opinion. This congress responds to a social claim in a context of increasing criticism on metropolitan governance and planning practices in many cities: the need for more discussion and reflection on the causes, dynamics and outcomes of locational, spatial, urban or territorial conflicts.

This conference aims at bringing together different perspectives on conflicts around urban planned developments, with a focus on the role planning practices may play both in defining/framing and in possibly solving/reframing conflicts. In particular, it will focus on crucial aspects of urban geography: the multi-scalarity of urban phenomena and policies; new approaches in conflict and protest movement research; the spatial dimension of social mobilization; the growing claim for deliberative democracy mechanisms or the limits to existent institutional structures and practices for decision-making.

Call for Papers

The conference invites contributions focusing on (although not necessarily limited to):

  • Conflict research theories and methodologies: papers focusing on methodological approaches, states of the art and theoretical frameworks around the concepts of urban protest, spatial, locational or urban conflicts, neoliberal urban planning and  disenfranchisement.
  •  Strategies, actors and new social movements:  papers focusing on actors, strategies and the changing nature of conflicts and participants in conflicts, from NIMBY attitudes to more general and complex protest movements, such as 15M or Occupy the Wall Street movements. In general, about the transformative potential of social mobilization.
  •  Contesting urban planning and projects: the changing nature of urban planning practices and their influence on public opinion formation, including forms of protest and social mobilization in opposition to planned developments. Reflections or case studies on urban, spatial or locational conflicts.

Abstracts (in English, max 500 words) and a brief biographic note of the author(s) (English, max 200 words) should be sent to conflictsinthecity@gmail.com. Additional enrollment will be accepted limited to room capacity. PhD Students are encouraged to submit paper proposals based on their doctoral research.

Important dates

20th December at 15:00h: Deadline for abstracts submission.

20th January 2014: Publication of the list of accepted papers.

1st March 2014: Deadline for the submission of full papers

For more information, please click here.

CALL FOR PAPERS: Policy Analyst (Willy Brandt School of Public Policy, University of Erfurt, Germany)

The Policy Analyst is an academic publication produced by the students of the Willy Brandt School of Public Policy at the University of Erfurt. It seeks to engage in multidimensional discussions, covering topics that range from the war on drugs to the economics of conflict and intercultural development, and present analyses made through the lenses of different disciplines, including but not limited to Political Sciences, Economics, Law and Sociology.

War on Drugs

Over the past 40 years, drug trafficking has had a major impact on the lives of millions of people, not only in the countries where the narcotics are produced but also elsewhere. Although there have been major efforts to combat drug trafficking, the traditional War on Drugs – initiated in the 1970s by former U.S. President Richard Nixon – has proved ineffec-tive and has resulted in catastrophic collateral effects. Instead of causing a reduction in the drugs market, millions of people have died caused by drug-related violence, more than one trillion dollars have been spent in an attempt to cut off the sources of supply, and new drug-related trade routes that have destroyed the social fabric of various regions and jeopardized democracy have emerged.

In response to the failure of traditional drug policies, the Global Commission on Drug Policy, an independent group led by international leaders, has advocated for a new and more progressive approach to tackle the issue as a public health problem instead of as a criminal activity. Their proposal aligns with a worldwide change in the collective mindset of people toward drugs. According to a recent survey from Gallup, for the first time in history, more than 50% of U.S. citizens are in favor of the legalization of marijuana. In accordance with this trend, some countries like Uruguay, The Netherlands, Portugal and some states in the U.S.A. have been implementing ground-breaking reforms decriminalizing drugs.

With the drug policy summit to be held in the UN General Assembly in 2016, it is high time to review current policies and our understanding of drug use. The pressing questions are:

  • How should drug policies be designed and implemented in different countries?
  • Is the Global Commission right in regarding it is a matter of public health or should it be considered a criminal problem?
  • Which side effects might the approach proposed by the Global Commission have?
  • How will drug cartels react if governments follow this trend of decriminalization of drugs and how should negotiations with drug cartels be structured?
  • How can the international community promote the exchange of best practices and experiences on innovative approaches to drugs?
  • How can the problem best be tackled, on a global or local level?

The Policy Analyst would like to invite you to contribute to this discussion by looking at drug policies as a multidimensional topic. Academic papers and opinion pieces will be published respectively under the sections “Global Perspectives” and “Points of View” in our following issue.

Please check the Brandt School’s website (http://www.brandtschool.de/home/current-students/journal-policy-analyst.html)  for further requirements (length, style, etc.) and submit your work to wbs.policyanalyst@uni-erfurt.de by March 1st, 2014.

We are looking forward to your contributions.

CALL FOR PAPERS: Children, Youth, and Security. Intersections of Research & Practice (6-8 March 2014, Dalhousie University, Halifax Nova Scotia, Canada)

Graduate Student Research Symposium

The main goal of this interdisciplinary conference is to explore the security and well-being of children and youth in situations of armed violence, disaster, and other challenging contexts, including child soldiers, war-affected and displaced children and youth, youth gangs, human trafficking, child labour, street-involved youth, and other vulnerable groups.

We welcome abstracts from various disciplinary perspectives in the following areas:

  • Research related to the security of children and youth, including child protection, human security, human rights, law, humanitarian aid and development, peacebuilding, social work, etc.
  • Best practices in working with children and youth to advance their security and well-being
  • Youth engagement
  • Research methods and ethics
  • Gendered violence and resilience
  • Canadian domestic and foreign policy regarding the security of children and youth

Applications must include an abstract (300 words) and brief bio-sketch (200 words) and be submitted to: gradsym@dal.ca. The deadline is December 15TH, 2013.

Travel subsidies will be available to presenters. Selected papers will be considered for publication in a special In Depth feature on OpenCanada.org, and an edited volume by the Centre for Foreign Policy Studies.

The Symposium is sponsored by the Roméo Dallaire Child Soldier’s Initiative, The Children and Youth in Challenging Contexts Institute, the Centre for Foreign Policy Studies, and the Department of Political Science.

For more information, please click here.