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Graduate Conference Listings

Are you looking for an opportunity to showcase your research, or try out new ideas on your peers? Post it on our Graduate Conference Listings below. If you're organising a grad conference, email occ@gsacarleton.ca to let us know and we'll add it to the list!

Call for Papers: Fault Lines of Revolution! The Fourth Annual Conference in Critical Social Research - May 4th, 2012

The Fourth Annual Conference in Critical Social Research 
When: Friday, May 4th, 2012 
When: Carleton University

In the last year the world has witnessed many destabilizing movements against neoliberalism, austerity, and authoritarian regimes:

Popular movements from Tahrir Square to Zuccotti Park of Occupy Wall Street have revitalized the belief in the organizational capacities of peoples to challenge authority and transform relations of power. Postcolonial struggles from those of the Athivasis to the Tamils have echoed the subaltern voices of the world. Imperial wars from Afghanistan to the Somali territories have stimulated discussions on popular armed struggle and renewed criticisms of imperialism. Neoliberal challenges to organized labour, from the continued neglect of precarious working conditions to policies of austerity, have in some instances united workers in defiance and solidarity.

These movements are clearly challenging the status quo in different forms and diverse spaces. Yet it remains to be seen how these destabilizing forces will unfold, and whether they will provoke the fault lines of a much broader revolutionary shake-up.

In light of the present global political economic context, we intend to re-visit theoretical and practical issues concerning these ‘revolutionary’ moments and spaces by asking critical questions:

· What can be learned from (un)finished revolutions of the past? 
· How should the revolutionary moments of the present be unpacked theoretically? 
· What are the ideological inspirations (if any) of these revolutionary attempts? 
· What do today’s social movements have to say about relations of race, class, and gender? 
· How do feminist approaches to politics respond to these movements? 
· What are the implications of contemporary revolutionary movements? 
· Where does revolutionary philosophy stand with regard to the present moment of dissent? 
· What does the future hold in store given present environmental and ecological crises?

The Critical Social Research Collaborative (CSRC) is inviting academics, researchers, graduate students and activists to submit proposals for panels and individual presentations that explore the ‘fault lines of revolution’ from diverse theoretical and methodological orientations in historical and/or contemporary contexts.

Please send your proposal, including an abstract of no more than 250 words, title, your name and a brief biography to the conference organizing committee at csrcproject@live.ca by February 20, 2012. Decisions on proposals will be communicated in mid-March. Accepted submissions may be solicited for publication.

The CSRC is dedicated to organizing inclusive events; there will be no registration fee.

Keynote Address by Professor Emeritus Michael Lebowitz, Simon Fraser University

The Critical Social Research Collaborative (www.csrcproject.ca) is an interdisciplinary research collective consisting of students, faculty, trade union and community activists based at Carleton University. We aim to promote, support and create a platform for the sharing and dissemination of critical perspectives and research conducted on the defining social issues of our time.

Psychology 'Outside the Box' Conference - Call for Papers - University of Ottawa May 7th -9th

Psychology has emerged from its beginning as an offspring of philosophy to a sophisticated and prolific scientific discipline that examines virtually all dimensions of the human being. Nevertheless, psychology is now confronted by three major issues.

First, it has become fragmented as several paradigms compete to explain the same phenomenon. 
Second, it is dislocated from other academic disciplines, notably other social sciences, in an endeavour to establish itself as scientific.

Given these circumstances, it is time to think about psychology outside of the box. It is an effort to engage psychology in a process of rearticulating its different paradigms, to extend its reach to other academic disciplines, and to make psychological research more accessible to the general public. This conference is an invitation to University of Ottawa community to come together and share their perspectives on those issues through the dissemination of research that takes psychology outside of the box.

Abstract Submission ……… Open until March 1st, 2012

 Full information here.

 

Environmental Studies Association of Canada Conference - May 30-June 2, 2012

“Environmental Knowledge: People and Change”

When: May 30 – June 2, 2012
Where:
Conference will be held jointly at the University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario
Deadline for submissions:
January 20th, 2012.

This year’s theme is “Environmental Knowledge: People and Change,” purposefully broad to stimulate participation, discussion, and collaboration.

Please visit the ESAC website for additional details on how to apply.

Progressive Economics Forum at the Canadian Economics Association (CEA) June 8 and 9, 2012

The Progressive Economics Forum holds its annual meetings at the Canadian Economics Association (CEA) conference. Read the lineup of sessions for June 8 and 9, 2012, at the University of Calgary. To attend, please register for the main CEA conference and/or contact the PEF.

Canadian Public Health Association 2012 Annual Conference - June 11-14, 2012

Public Health in Canada: Creating and Sustaining Healthy Environments

When: June 11-14, 2012
Where:
Shaw Conference Centre, Edmonton, Alberta
Deadline for submissions:
Friday, December 2, 2011

The CPHA 2012 Annual Conference will explore the role of public health in creating and sustaining a diverse range of healthy environments using the following tracks:

  • Built Environment;
  • Leadership & Communications; and
  • Economics & Development;
  • Society & Culture.
  • Ecosystem Health
For further information, please email conference@cpha.ca or visit conference.cpha.ca