The Graduate Student Government ‘s (GSG) first meeting on Thursday 9/13 began with guest speaker Dean George Watson, Chair of the Provost Search Committee, presenting students with information regarding UD’s search for a new Provost. Dean Watson explained that the provost is the academic head of the university, overseeing the academic deans, the director of the library, and the dean of students. GSG President Emily Bonistall sits on the committee representing graduate students.
When the Search Committee was initially formed, President Harker discussed with Search Committee members what qualities provost nominees should possess. These qualities, along with supplemental selection criteria, can be found on the Committee’s Position and Candidate Specification document. The Search Committee would like graduate student input; graduate students are encouraged to read the document and contact President Bonistall with feedback. The Provost Search Committee vets candidates and makes a recommendation to President Harker, who makes the final decision. Dean Watson also noted that this search is highly confidential. Thus, there will probably not be an opportunity for the public to meet the candidates – all the more reason to check out the position document! Meeting minutes are available on the GSG website.
The first SPPA faculty meeting was held on Friday 9/14, and SAPA Board Members Jen Lazo, David Barnes, and Rachel Linstead Goldsmith attended. The faculty reviewed reports on the incoming class, discussed the Doctoral Program Curriculum, and talked about recruitment strategies to ensure diversity and develop relationships with undergraduate schools. The faculty also addressed course scheduling, which has become a problem for students and professors alike as course offerings have grown more complex over time (in the fall semester there are 109 sections, with 113 in the spring).
The Academic Curriculum Committee has created a course map for the next three years to identify holes that the current faculty cannot fill. The course map will help to justify requests for new hires, and will also create a database to manage course information. The new system will be put into operation during the Fall 2013/Spring 2014 schedule. Eventually, this system will be posted on SPPA’s website, and will include a schedule of course offerings for the next four years. Academic advisors will have access to the system to help students navigate their degree program plan.
On Thursday 9/20 SAPA hosted an overview workshop on how to approach abstract submissions. There is an easy format you can use (check out these slides to see it) and you can seek funding to attend conferences (through the grad office, SPPA, and the research centers)!
Here’s another conference opportunity that Dr. Justice sent along:
International Interpretive Policy Analysis Conference (IPA) 2013:
Societies in Conflict: Experts, Publics and Democracy
Vienna (Austria), 3-5 July 2013
The Department of Political Science at the University of Vienna together
with the Life-Science-Governance Research Platform (LSG), the Austrian
Political Science Association Institute of Forest, Environmental, and
Natural Resource Policy at the University of Natural Resources and Life
Sciences Vienna (BOKU) hosts the 8th International Interpretive Policy
Analysis (IPA) conference under the title “Societies in Conflict:
Experts, Publics and Democracy”.
Call for panels: Please submit your panel proposal at ipa2013@univie.ac.at by 30th November 2012
Affairs such as Stuttgart 21, the Occupy movement response to the financial crisis, ecological problems, or diverse controversies around novel technologies, are timely examples of conflicts between groups of publics and the political establishment. Such movements put into question the status of legitimate knowledge and the articulation of legitimate representation. They question, at the same time, routine operations of traditional democratic institutions, and reintroduce the question of how to define the political and politics in general.
The 8th continuation of the IPA conference gives therefore a special
focus to the intersection of policy analysis with Science and Technology
Studies (STS) by highlighting the relation between publics and experts around one of the fundamental keywords of politics: =93conflict=94. We conceive conflicts as constellations of knowledge and power, in which diverse actors are gathered around values, meanings and practices. The complexity of current policy issues and the institutional ambiguity create a demand for new forms of dealing with conflicts. They also invite us to study formats, in which the meaning of expertise and citizen participation can be renegotiated in performative manners.
Rearticulating policy settings along the relation between experts and
publics is one of the main challenges of current research on democracy,
governance and policy practices. Actors increasingly establish their
positions through argumentations or performances, while the increased
need for public acknowledgment recasts the issue of citizen participation or the framing of experts. These ideas are not entirely new:
interpretive policy analysts have investigated mechanisms through which knowledge becomes the central device of power, creates institutions and governs them and/or legitimizes agendas of policy actors. In a similar vein, STS scholars have shown that scientific knowledge can legitimize political agendas or block them. Towards that end, they have investigated, how experts get their status and how they shape and are shaped by publics. By debating and analyzing the shape of diverse publics, they have also launched the question of whose knowledge counts as legitimate in specific time and place.
In the last decades, questions like these have regained the interest in
both policy analysis and STS. How do we think about the study of conflicts through interpretive lenses? What aspects do we consider both as analysts and practitioners, when facing conflicts and controversies in
environmental, urban, planning or health care policies? In how far do the current policy debates force us to rethink, what we mean by political and
politics? What is the role or function of policy analysis and analysts in times of multiple crises? These are some of the pending issues that will be addressed at the IPA conference 2013.
We therefore welcome proposals for panels that reconsider the
relationship between publics and experts and engage one or more of the following themes:
Questioning of traditional models of government, administration
and policy-making in response to the relationship between experts and
publics.
Theoretical reflections on the ontological dimension of a conflict: investigating the meaning of politics and the political.
The intersection of STS approaches with particular theoretical or philosophical approach (e.g. pragmatism, hermeneutics, post-structuralism, etc.).
The role of performativity and engagement in policymaking and democratic governance
Case studies from particular policy issue arenas that deal with conflict (e.g. the new challenges of environmental politics; bio-politics; local governance; asylum or immigration policy; food policy; urban and
regional planning; issues of risk and novelty).
Interpretive perspectives on community conflict resolution practices; policy evaluation; leadership; network organizations; and other public management questions.
The relationship between practitioners and policy analysis.
Clarification of approaches in use (e.g. varieties of discourse analysis or narrative analyses; the role of rhetoric and metaphor, the role of arguments, the role of emotions).
Methodological issues in doing critical policy analysis (e.g. reflexivity in policy analytic practices; getting, and using, feedback from informants; issues in using new recording technologies; data collection and analysis; evaluating software programs).
Panel proposals should have no more than 500 words and should contain a theme, a rationale for the session, and a brief discussion of its
contribution to the IPA community. Proposals should list a chairperson and names of all organizers of the panel, including institutional affiliations and (electronic) addresses. Panel proposals should be based on the
assumption of hour time slots with fifteen minutes per presentation.
Please submit your panel proposal at ipa2013@univie.ac.at by 30th
November 2012
Note: After the notification about acceptance of the panel, a call for
papers will be launched, to which scholars can respond. A limited number of free-floating papers will be accepted.
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General information on IPA 2013
Interpretive research in the study of politics represents a leading
challenge to positivism and scientism in the name of a methodological
pluralism that is sensitive to meaning, historical and social context,
and the importance of human subjectivity. Important revisions of policy
analysis in its linguistic, argumentative or practice turns have promoted recent research in the field. These concepts and streams have shown to which extent politics and policy practices are governed and shaped by discourse.
The Department of Political Science at the University of Vienna together
with the Life-Science-Governance Research Platform (LSG), the Austrian
Political Science Association (=D6GPW) Institute of Forest, Environmental, and Natural Resource Policy at the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna (BOKU) hosts the 8th International Interpretive Policy Analysis (IPA) conference under the title “Societies in Conflict: Experts, Publics and Democracy”.
The IPA conference is an annual meeting of researchers and practitioners from around the world. Its 8th continuation gives a special focus to the intersection of policy analysis with Science and Technology Studies (STS) by highlighting the relation between publics and experts around one of the fundamental keywords of politics: How do we think of the study of conflicts through interpretive lenses? What are current societal challenges of politics and how do these challenges shape the general understanding of democracy, expertise and power? What implications can we derive for policy analysis, when investigating conflicts and controversies in environmental, urban, or health care policies? How are these implications handled in the field of science and technology studies, and what can policy analysis learn from this scholarly work?
The IPA plenary sessions and panels are aimed at rethinking and debating the theory and practice of different methods of interpretation and critical explanation in policy analysis, in particular the relation of policy expertise to publics and democratic governance.