OxPo (Oxford-Sciences Po Network) Academic exchanges
The OxPo (Oxford-Sciences Po Network) offers several visiting schemes for academics and students wishing to spend time to conduct individual research at the other institution, with OxPo visitors encouraged to take an active role in academic and graduate seminars at either institution.
The OxPo exchange scheme is open to:
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doctoral students from the four partner departments in Oxford
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doctoral students from the School of Research in Sciences Po
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early career researchers who have recently defended their PhD at the School of Research in Sciences Po
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permanent academic faculty from the four partner departments in Oxford
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Sciences Po faculty.
Opportunities will be posted at the bottom of this webpage, when open for applications.
All applications for an exchange in the academic year 2023-24 must be submitted by Tuesday 14 March 2023.
Une réunion d'information aura lieu le 15 février à 10h30 sur zoom avec Florence Faucher,
directrice d'OxPo : https://sciencespo.zoom.us/j/91055512148
CIVICA | Final Conference DEMOS
- Photo credits: Aditya Joshi, Unsplash
CIVICA Paris Conference,
February 9-10 2023 (provisional program and titles):
Democracy and Its Discontents. A Historical Examination of the Current Predicament of Democracy
Thursday, Feb 9
- 2pm – 4 pm
Welcome Remarks
- Paul-André Rosental, Head of the Center for History, Sciences Po, CHSP
- Mathias Vicherat, Director, SciencesPo (TBC)
Opening Session:
Chair: Mario Del Pero (Sciences Po, CHSP)
- Andrea Colli (Bocconi), From Globalization to Fragmentation
- Claire Andrieu (SciencesPo, CHSP), What’s new in commitment? A longue durée perspective. From the 1848 club movement to the Gilets Jaunes.
- Nicolas Guilhot (EUI), Populism and Conspiracism
- 4.30-6.30 pm
I Panel: Democracy, Sovereignty and Institutional Compromises, 17 th -20 th century examples
Chair: Dina Gusejnova (LSE)
- Laurelin Middelkoop (EUI), Sovereignty in Early Modern Confederations
- Maria Stella Chiaruttini (Vienna - Bocconi), Unified Italy and Its Discontents: From the Risorgimento to Neo-Bourbonism
- Edoardo Vaccari (LSE), How to Establish Democracy Through Federalism. Comparing the Movimento Federalista Europeo and Libérer et Fédérer (1941-1945)
- Grace Ballor (Bocconi), European Commerce Against European Policy: Retail Associations and the Social Dimensions of the Single Market Program
Friday, February 10
- 9 – 11 am
II Panel: Rethinking Democracy during and after the End of the Cold War (and of history)
Chair: Nicolas Guilhot (EUI)
- Jeff Hawn (LSE), Testing the narrative of the Russian Constitution prior to the 1993 Crisis
- Marc Lazar (Sciences Po, CHSP), Fascism, Populism and the resilience of democracy in Italy
- Balazs Trencsenyi (CEU), The legacy of interwar crisis discourses – populist and neoliberal visions of „permacrisis”
- Victoria Philips (LSE/Columbia), Freedom from Want: Hunger and Food in Cold War Psychwar
- 11.15am -12.45 pm
III Panel: 2008 as a Watershed? Democracy and the Crisis of Globalization
Chair: Marc Lazar (Sciences Po, CHSP)
- Georgios Giannakopoulos (LSE) and Iason Zarikos (University of Athens), Anti-liberal internationalism and the European South during the global financial crash
- Mario Del Pero (SciencesPo, CHSP), 2008 and the Predicament of American Democracy
- Sylvain Kahn (SciencesPo, CHSP), The idea of a crisis of democracy in Europe in the light of Brexit
2.30 – 4.30 pm
IV Panel: Democracy in the Age of Fracture. Contemporary Examples and lasting legacies
Chair: Balazs Trencsenyi (CEU)
- Alessandra Pozzo (EUI-CNRS), Anti-democratic communication codes: an overview
- Dina Gusejnova (LSE), How Europe’s Postwar Ended: Russia's war against Ukraine and the Dark Legacies of Nuremberg
- Thomas Fetzer (CEU), "Economic nationalism: The strange career of an interwar
concept".
- Leyla Safta-Zecheria (CEU), A diachronic comparison of necropolitical public crises around asylums for people with disabilities in Romania from the late 19 th to the early 21st century
- 4.45 – 6 pm Final Roundtable
Sergei Guriev (SciencesPo)
Federico Romero (EUI)
Dorit Geva (CEU)
▸ CIVICA
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 101017201. Please visit this webpage for more information on the collaborative research projects funded by CIVICA Research.
Le retour de l'Histoire
- Actualité Sciences Po
Open call for two postdoctoral researchers at HDK - Valand Academy of Art and Design
Postdoctoral positions in ERC-funded project THINGSTIGATE
HDK-Valand Academy of Art and Design at University of Gothenburg
Application deadline: December 22, 2022
HDK-Valand Academy of Art and Design at University of Gothenburg
Kristinelundsgatan 6-8
SE-SE-405 30 Gothenburg
Sweden
www.gu.se
Instagram / Facebook / Twitter / YouTube
We are now welcoming applications for two postdoctoral positions for the European Research Council-funded project THINGSTIGATE, that aims to discover how aesthetic objects instigate sociopolitical change.
The University of Gothenburg tackles society’s challenges with diverse knowledge. 56,000 students and 6,600 employees make the university a large and inspiring place to work and study. Strong research and attractive study programmes attract scientists and students from around the world. With new knowledge and new perspectives, the University contributes to a better future.
HDK-Valand—Academy of Art and Design, at the University of Gothenburg, conducts education and research in Design, Film, Photography, Fine Art, Crafts and Literary Composition—as well as teacher education in Visual Arts and Sloyd. We provide highly specialized degree programmes in an outgoing, international environment—where our unique and broad range of subjects also enables our students and staff to foster a broader artistic perspective, as well as to explore new working models and research fields. Together with our sister department—the Academy of Music and Drama—we form the most broad-ranging faculty of arts in Scandinavia.
THINGSTIGATE—Things for Politics' Sake: Aesthetic Objects and Social Change
Many believe that art is transformative, that it can change society and politics. But how does art exactly do this? THINGSTIGATE hypothesizes that this transformation pivots on aesthetic objects, and occurs within a tripartite framework of imagination, emotion, and sociopolitical institutions. The project combines archival studies, participatory art in everyday life, and longitudinal tracing of aesthetic objects, specifically ones that stimulate imagination and emotion on the nation-state as a sociopolitical institution. It will reinvent methods from large-scale studies of contentious politics to grammatically analyze the sociopolitical relations emanating out of objects in three decades of socially engaged art archives. Findings will be tested in public interventions—both physically in Sweden, Italy, USA, and digitally in Indonesia—where participants assemble and make aesthetic objects. These objects will be traced longitudinally to pinpoint when and how they instigate transformations within sociopolitical institutions. Visit here for further information on the research project THINGSTIGATE—Things for Politics' Sake: Aesthetic Objects and Social Change.
Postdoctoral research positions
We are now seeking two postdoctoral researchers to join the core team of the research project "THINGSTIGATE—Things for Politics' Sake: Aesthetic Objects and Social Change"(European Research Council grant 101041284), led by artist Dr. Tintin Wulia (Principal Investigator/PI).
One of these postdocs will specialize in public interventions/field methods. For this position, applications are encouraged from participatory art practice-based researchers, visual sociologists and visual anthropologists, art historians, cultural studies researchers, sociologists and anthropologists of visual culture and material culture, STS researchers, political scientists, and other researchers in cognate disciplines with a doctoral degree. This position is for two years starting from March 1, 2023 or a date we later agree upon. Information on duties, eligibility, assessment criteria, and how to apply to this postdoctoral position can be found here.
The other postdoc will specialize in archival research methods. For this position, applications are encouraged from sociologists and anthropologists of visual culture and material culture, political scientists, STS researchers, cultural studies researchers, visual sociologists and visual anthropologists, art historians, participatory art practice-based researchers, and other researchers in cognate disciplines with a doctoral degree. This position is for two and a half years starting from March 1, 2023 or a date we later agree upon. For detailed information on duties, eligibility, assessment criteria, and how to apply to this postdoctoral position visit here.
Applications must be received by: December 22, 2022 through the University recruitment system, see position specific links above.
Contact information
If you have any questions about the position, please contact artist/PI Dr Tintin Wulia, tintin.wulia@gu.se. If you have any questions about the recruitment process, please contact Human Resources at HDK-Valand, hr@hdk-valand.gu.se
Call for Papers | LSE-Sciences Po Seminar in Contemporary International History
- Actualité Sciences Po
LSE-Sciences Po Seminar in Contemporary International History
Call for Papers
The LSE-Sciences Po Seminar in Contemporary International History invites proposals for the 2023 Lent Term (January-March).
The seminar welcomes papers from advanced PhD students and early career researchers on any aspect of 20th or 21st century international history, broadly defined. We welcome a wide range of different historical approaches including research exploring transnational networks, non-state actors, and geographies beyond the Global North.
The seminar is an ideal environment to workshop work-in-progress. Presenters will be asked to submit a 15-20 page paper ten days before their presentation, which will be circulated to participants beforehand. During the seminar, presenters will introduce their work for no more than 15 minutes followed by comments from a discussant and wider Q&A discussion.
All seminars will be held on Zoom on Wednesdays from 4-5:30pm GMT / 5-6:30pm CET.
Applicants should submit a provisional title, a brief 250-word abstract, and a CV by December 22, 2022