Two decades discourse about globalizing social sciences concepts, strategies, achievements. International Conference for Europe

Similar documents
Three Different Perspectives On The Role Of The Nation-State In Today's Globalized World

Introduction: Globalization, Localization, and Japanese Studies in the Asia-Pacific Region Volume I

Modern International Relations An Elective Social Science Course for Loudoun County Public Schools

A Southern critique of the Millennium Development Goals.

Ghent University UGent Ghent Centre for Global Studies Erasmus Mundus Global Studies Master Programme

Compare historical periods in terms of differing political, social, religious, and economic issues

KEY ASPECTS OF TRANSFORMATION OF THE REGIONAL FOREIGN ECONOMIC POLICY

Social Theory and the City. Session 1: Introduction to the Class. Instructor Background:

TO SAVE HUMANITY. What Matters Most for a Healthy Future. Edited by Julio Frenk and Steven J. Hoffman

World History Chapter 6.4 Vocabulary Student Materials

RE-WRITING THE RULES OF THE EU ECONOMY. By S.Ferroni

Continuous shared learning and improvement of nuclear safety and regulatory organisations through the OECD/NEA

PETERS TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL

DEGREE PLUS DO WE NEED MIGRATION?

INVESTIGATING THE TRENDS IN GROWTH OF HIGHER EDUCATION ACROSS THE WORLD WITH REGARD TO INTERNATIONALIZATION FACTORS AND POPULATION CHANGE

Great Powers. Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, United States president Franklin D. Roosevelt, and British prime minister Winston

I. What is a Theoretical Perspective? The Functionalist Perspective

Are Asian Sociologies Possible? Universalism versus Particularism

COLONIAL ECONOMY TO MARKET ECONOMY IN ASIA

The EU-Brazil Relations

Epistemology and Political Science. POLI 205 Doing Research in Political Science. Epistemology. Political. Science. Fall 2015

Introduction to the thematic issue: participating in academic publishing consequences of linguistic policies and practices

Feminist Critique of Joseph Stiglitz s Approach to the Problems of Global Capitalism

Chapter 21 Lesson Reviews

World History SGM Review Ch 1+2 Review Ch 5 Review Ch 6 Review Multiple Choice

Culture, National Identity and Security. Alex Macleod Université du Québec à Montréal. June

Precarity Platform for a Scientific Network of Political Excellence

AP WORLD HISTORY GUIDED READINGS UNIT 6: 1900-Present

9th Slovenian Social Science Conference on Social Transformations: the Global and the Local

Chapter 1: Theoretical Approaches to Global Politics

Name Date CHAPTER 28 Section 1 GUIDED READING China Responds to Pressure from the West A. Perceiving Cause and Effect As you read this section, note s

GRADE 10 5/31/02 WHEN THIS WAS TAUGHT: MAIN/GENERAL TOPIC: WHAT THE STUDENTS WILL KNOW OR BE ABLE TO DO: COMMENTS:

Dependency theorists, or dependentistas, are a group of thinkers in the neo-marxist tradition mostly

The Race to The New Reality

What happens when politics meets reality? The importance of streetlevel bureaucracy approach for the analysis of homeless policies

Taking stock and looking forward: State of markets and outlook for

APPENDIX I General Information on IOSCO

Public finances, efficiency and equity: what are the trade-offs?

Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study Modern World History

Globalisation and Economic Determinism. Paper given at conference on Challenging Globalization, Royal Holloway College, September 2009

Social Development in Brazil

History. Richard B. Spence, Dept. Chair, Dept. of History (315 Admin. Bldg ; phone 208/ ).

Marxism and the World Social Forum

List of Main Imports to the United States

Editorial: Mapping power in adult education and learning

Name: Period 7: 1914 C.E. to Present

David Istance TRENDS SHAPING EDUCATION VIENNA, 11 TH DECEMBER Schooling for Tomorrow & Innovative Learning Environments, OECD/CERI

Western Philosophy of Social Science

The Paradoxes of Terrorism

Period 3 Concept Outline,

2007 Global 300. Garry Cronan

Social Science Research and Public Policy: Some General Issues and the Case of Geography

International migration data as input for population projections

The Public Good and Public Goods in Higher Education. Presented to IFE 2020 Senior Seminar East-West Center, 6 September 2006 Deane Neubauer

How Did It All Begin? Students will examine early colonization in the U.S. Test Hands-on chronological sequence of related

INFOBRIEF SRS. Over the past decade, both the U.S. college-educated

ACCO Meeting, FIG Working Week, 14 June, Stockholm, Sweden

POSC 4931 Topics in Political Science: The Politics of Inequality Spring, 2016

The UK in the international mobilities: A country well-integrated in communication networks

BILATERAL AGREEMENTS ON LEGAL ASSISTANCE IN CRIMINAL MATTERS TO WHICH MEXICO IS SIGNATORY

causes of internal migration and patterns of settlement in what would become the United States, and explain how migration has affected American life.

POLI 111: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

Hello and welcome to As It Is from VOA Learning English! I m George Grow in Washington.

Migration, Coordination Failures and EU Enlargement

Asian Studies in the Age of Globalization

DEVELOPING OR PREVENTATIVE ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION FOR THE ECONOMY OF THE REGION WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON THE ECONOMY OF KOSOVO

Chapter 1 Education and International Development

INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION IN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN: A SUMMARY VIEW OF TRENDS AND PATTERNS

Globalization in History

Geopolitical Economy: After US Hegemony, Globalization and Empire. The Future of World Capitalism

Study Abroad in Oslo, Norway Bjørknes University College Peace and Conflict Studies

The Political Economy of Policy Implementation. David K. Levine and Andrea Mattozzi 13/02/18

ernationa evelopment

LIMITE EN COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 1 February /1/09 REV 1 LIMITE CIREFI 36 COMIX 902 NOTE

Corporate Ownership and Control

Call for applications. BRAIN DRAIN or BRAIN GAIN?

Crime and Media from Cultural Criminology Point of view

Civil society in the EU: a strong player or a fig-leaf for the democratic deficit?

EU MIGRATION POLICY AND LABOUR FORCE SURVEY ACTIVITIES FOR POLICYMAKING. European Commission

NEW DIRECTIONS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE. Political Science Today New Directions and Important Cognate Fields

CURRICULUM VITAE - ANDREAS FERONAS Assistant Professor, Dept. of Social and Educational Policy, University of Peloponnese

Shaping the Future of Transport

Markets in higher education

Period 3 Content Outline,

Part 1. Understanding Human Rights

IS - International Studies

Exploring relations between Governance, Trust and Well-being

2. Tovey and Share argue: In effect, all sociologies are national sociologies Do you agree?

US Public Divides along Party Lines on Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Dirk Pilat:

FROM MODERNIZATION TO MODES OF PRODUCTION

The New Normative Spaces of Globalization

Curriculum Pacing Guide Grade/Course: World History and Geography 1500 to the Present Grading Period: 1 st 9 Weeks

HIS F SBS+ ZINNIA CAPO

PART 1B NAME & SURNAME: THE EFFECTS OF GLOBALIZATION

Women in the EU. Fieldwork : February-March 2011 Publication: June Special Eurobarometer / Wave 75.1 TNS Opinion & Social EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

Meiji Institute for Global Affairs MIGA COLUMN GLOBAL DIAGNOSIS

North Carolina Essential Standards for Social Studies Grade 7

A comparative analysis of poverty and social inclusion indicators at European level

Chinese Nationalism in the Global Era

Transcription:

Two decades discourse about globalizing social sciences concepts, strategies, achievements International Conference for Europe 26-29 April 2018 Lisbon, Portugal University Lisbon Call for papers Deadline for abstracts 30. November 2017 Supported by the

Issues Towards the end of 20th century the social sciences discovered a new phenomenon, they coined as globalization. Responding to this global turn the social sciences across the world since then discuss for about two decades that and how the social sciences also need to be globalized. What have we learned from the two decades discourse about the globalization of the social sciences? What has been discussed about what the globalization of the social sciences means and what globalized social thought aims at? What does it mean if social sciences advocate the need of a globalization of social thought, those very social sciences which forced the rest of the globe with their institutional power to take them as the one and only way to theorize about the world? What is the shift they are proclaiming, shifting the existing world reign of social sciences towards globalising social sciences? Reflecting on the achievements of a discourse provides shared views on what globalizing social sciences aims at and the two decades discourse shows anything else but such shared views about what globalizing social sciences are and what they are aiming at. For national science policies across the world it is very clear that globalizing social sciences means aiming at promoting national science communities to hold a strong position in a competition about which national sciences have the say in the global production of knowledge. Therefore they establish all sorts of incentives supporting their national sciences in a global battle about about what? About knowledge? What is a competition about knowledge? What is the scientific substance of competing flagships and what is their role in globalizing social science theorizing about the world? Discussing the global competition of nationally constructed knowledge bodies such as southern, western knowledge are categories populating also the debates among academic social science thinkers when they theorize about globalizing social sciences. How do they create these political knowledge bodies? How does a theory become part of such politically constructed bodies of knowledge? And: What are national science communities, a creature of the discourse about globalizing social sciences? Are national science communities, an entity that may be only exists in the minds and policy agendas of national sciences or in scientific discourses, which discuss globalizing social science from a view sharing the view of national science policies? How come that also critical views on the debate about globalising social sciences, mainly articulated by social sciences from the developing world, also preferably argue about the status of national science communities and critique inequalities, scientific imperialism, or borrowing a category from the military jargon - oppose a scientific asymmetry? Is it a shared view across the world, shared also among social scientists as between academics and science policies that globalising social sciences is, rather than about shifting social thought towards thinking about the world about creating social thought as the material for representing nation states positions in global political-scientific rivalries? What is the discourse about globalisation of social sciences about and aiming at if these discourses argue about Northern versus Southern theories, if they create and argue about such political distinctions between political entities as Western theories, categories that replace the older notion of European social sciences, once critically coining an approach to

social sciences, now replaced by categories that are constructing global social thought as a matter of political knowledge entities? Is this idea of globalizing thinking aiming at knowledge about the social world? Or are these discourses engaged in how measuring global social thought aiming less at knowledge about the world, but at the concern which national knowledge bodies have the say in interpreting the social world? As much as it is the case, that the world beyond the secluded nation social entities has gained the attention of social science theorizing, there is also no doubt, that the main body of these globalized theories consist of comparing phenomena, which are inter-nationally defined topics, but which still not only confine their theorizing towards nationally confined contexts, but which also explicitly advocate to reflect about these entities through national perspectives. Is this, the agglomeration of nationally constructed knowledge what globalizing social science knowledge is about? Moreover, do these nationally constructed theories really understand what is going on in any individual country if they theorize about them through national perspectives? Do social sciences understand the world if they now in globalized social sciences theorize about what is going on in more than the country they come from, all created through such explicitly biased theories? Is globalising social sciences then after all creating a multiplicity of locally provincialised theories? Globalising social sciences is knowledge that consists of a gathering and comparison of the many local knowledges? And: How to compare knowledge constructed through national perspectives? Reflecting on these and certainly many other questions, including their critique as well as the development of alternative questions, the Lisbon conference welcomes abstracts progressing with the knowledge about what globalizing social sciences are or should better be. The following topics might be addressed A. Concepts of global social thought What is/are differences between post-colonial globalizing social thought and the universalization of social sciences during colonialism? How is this related to the notion of a globalising world? What is globalization and what are globalizing social sciences? What are the main theories about globalizing social thought? What are local, global, glocal, or universal social sciences? How are social sciences made global, glocal or local? What are the differences between the globalisation and the internationalizing social sciences? What are the main discourses and controversies among global social sciences about? What are the driving forces making social sciences global or local? Who are the scientific players - and who are not?

B. Strategies What are common practices making social sciences global, international, local? Are the creation of social science theories and the discourses about them affected by globalizing social science and how? Are there particular methodological approaches making social sciences global, local, international? Have global/local/ social sciences changed the topics social sciences theorize about? Have they changed the ways social sciences create theories and the ways they are debated? What are the main topics addressed in global/local theorizing? C. Achievements Have social sciences been globalized, localized and how has this affected the social sciences as a whole? Have the social sciences changed thanks to their globalization or localization? Has there been any progress in the creation of knowledge about a globalized world thanks to globalize/localize social science theorizing? What have we learned from 20 years discourses and controversies? Has the globalization of social sciences affected the role/position they have in the globalizing world? Scientific Committee Member Seyed Javad, Tehran, Iran Michael Kuhn, WorldSSHNet Shujiro Yazawa, Tokyo, Japan Nestor Castro, Manila, Phillippines Hebe Vessuri, Morelia, Mexico Luong Ngoc Vinh, Hanoi, Vietnam, Antonio Dores, Lisbon, Portugal Enzo Colombo, Milano, Italy Pierre Guibentif, Lisbon, Portugal Abstracts/papers should be kindly sent by the 30 November 2017 Please send them to the following two email addresses: antonio.dores@iscte.pt michaelkuhn@knowwhy.net