News
Panel on Tom Long’s new book on small states
New America, a prominent think tank in Washington, is hosting an online panel on small states in international relations, featuring Tom Long's new book, A Small States Guide to Influence in World Politics. The panel will be held at 13:30 EST/18:30 BST on 4 May 2022. The panel features Tom, Emily Wilkinson of ODI, and Wazim Mowla of the Atlantic Council. It will be moderated by Professor Jim Goldgeier.
RSVP here: https://www.newamerica.org/political-reform/events/new-research-to-bridge-the-gap-dr-tom-long/
PAIS IPE Annual Debate - 'Climate Change: Power, Resistance and Transitions' - Wednesday May 18th
Caroline Kuzemko has put together an absolutely stunning panel for the PAIS Annual IPE Debate,
This year the debate will speak to the title: 'Climate Change: Power, Resistance and Transitions' and speakers are our very own Caroline, Mat Paterson (Manchester), Pete Newell (Sussex) and Marie Claire Brisbois (Sussex).
It takes place on Wednesday May 18th, in S0.21, 2-4pm.
Thom Tyerman Shortlisted for the 2022 L.H.M. Ling Outstanding First Book Prize
Thom Tyerman has been shortlisted for the 2022 L.H.M. Ling Outstanding First Book Prize for his book "Everyday Border Struggles: Segregation and Solidarity in the UK and Calais."
Drawing on fieldwork alongside solidarity activists in Calais, as well as critical analyses of UK hostile environment policies, it explores how borders work through practices of everyday segregation and how everyday migrant solidarity resists this segregation.
Please see the Routledge website for more information on the book.
New Global Webinar Series: US FOREIGN POLICY – DE(CON)STRUCTED!
Scholars from City University London, Cambridge University and PAIS have joined together for an online global webinar series. The global webinar runs for six weeks and provides an alternative syllabus on US Foreign policy, connecting scholars from around the world with a global audience:
- America’s Exceptional Imperialism? The enlightenment, modernity and the making of American exceptionalism
- Global Racial Capitalism –violence and the forging of state, nation, and American empire
- America, Britain and White World Order
- The world and the violent American century
- American and a global empire of knowledge
- Imperial threat construction? Yellow peril politics, again?
The series is open to the public, students and academic staff.
To register: https://www.city.ac.uk/news-and-events/events/2022/april/us-foreign-policy-deconstructed
Ben Clift’s co-authored paper ‘Remembering and Forgetting IPE' is lead article in the latest RIPE
Ben Clift’s co-authored article ‘Remembering and Forgetting IPE: Disciplinary History as Boundary Work’ (with Peter Marcus Kristensen and former PAIS legend Ben Rosamond - both at the University of Copenhagen), is the lead article in the latest issue (Vol. 29, No. 2) of Review of International Political Economy
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09692290.2020.1826341
First presented to PAIS’s IPE cluster in November 2017, where the authors received fabulously helpful and constructive comments, this work explores the disciplinary politics of IPE as a field by lifting the lid on the ‘boundary work’ that disciplinary histories in textbooks perform. The paper analyses how academic gatekeepers in positions of disciplinary influence shape perceptions about appropriate conduct within the field, what constitutes its core, and what lies outside its realm. Disciplinary history entails forgetting certain events, scholars and works that do not fit the prevailing chronology, marginalising or excluding some topics, debates and questions from the core of the field. We evidence our claims about the boundary work done in narrating IPE’s origins through bibliometric mapping and network analysis of IPE citation patterns and practices. We find that IPE is a narrower, more blinkered field than it typically presents itself to be.