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Cornell International Affairs Review, Spring 2022 – Now accepting Submissions

Founded in 2007, the Cornell International Affairs Review (CIAR) is a biannual, student-run academic journal at Cornell University dedicated to publishing undergraduate, postgraduate, and expert scholarship on contemporary international affairs and international relations.

The Review focuses on both traditional political science approaches and multidisciplinary research, and thus welcomes submissions from any relevant field of study. Papers should preferably address events and trends that are not well-established in current international relations scholarship, yet have immediate global relevance and engage a broader and more diverse audience beyond the traditional academic sphere. We particularly encourage papers that seek to address historically underrepresented demographics, as well as lesser-studied regions, individuals, and events, as well as the submission of papers that utilise non-English language secondary scholarship or primary source research.

For further information go to: https://cornelliar.org/submissions

Final Deadlines:
• Priority: January 31, 2022
• Final: February 20, 2022

Fri 14 Jan 2022, 14:21 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate

Online Book Launch: Vernacular Rights Cultures

The Critical South Asia Group at Warwick presents: Vernacular Rights Cultures

How to decolonise global human rights? This panel discussion will launch Sumi Madhok's new book Vernacular Rights Cultures.

Thursday 20 January 2022
17:30 – 19:00 GMT (Online)

About this event

Vernacular Rights Cultures argues that decolonising global human rights requires a serious epistemic accounting of the historically and politically specific encounters with human rights, and of the forms of world-making that underpin the stakes and struggles for rights and human rights around the globe. It demonstrates that subaltern struggles call into being different and radical ideas of justice, politics and citizenship, and open up different possibilities and futures for human rights.

Speakers
Upendra Baxi (Research Professor of Law, Jindal Global Law School)
Yassin M. Brunger (School of Law, Queen's University Belfast)
Bal Sokhi-Bulley (School of Law, Politics and Sociology, University of Sussex)
Illan Wall (School of Law, University of Warwick)

Respondent
Sumi Madhok (Department of Gender Studies, London School of Economics)

Chair
Shirin Rai (Warwick Interdisciplinary Centre for International Development; PAIS, University of Warwick)

Register now on Eventbrite.

Fri 14 Jan 2022, 10:47 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate Research

Stuart Elden awarded Leverhulme major research fellowship

Stuart Elden has been awarded a Leverhulme major research fellowship for three years, to begin on 1 October 2022. The full list of awards is here.

Stuart's project has the title of 'Mapping Indo-European thought in 20th century France', looking at both French and émigré scholars, with a particular focus on Emile Benveniste, Georges Dumézil, Mircea Eliade and Julia Kristeva. The work will use the extensive archives of Benveniste, Dumézil and Eliade, located in Paris and Chicago, and historically situate the work within wider debates about the politics, languages and geography of Europe. Planned outputs include a book and linked articles.

Tue 07 Dec 2021, 14:28 | Tags: Staff PhD Research

Tom Sorell Receives AHRC-DFG Funding Award

Professor Tom Sorell has just received an AHRC-DFG funding award with Sven Berneker at Cologne University on Vaccine Hesitancy and Epistemology. The value of the UK part led by Tom is over £330,000 over 24 months, starting in February 2022. The project considers the difference between vaccine scepticism and vaccine hesitancy in relation to Covid vaccines and vaccines more generally. Vaccine scepticism rejects expert authority. Vaccine hesitancy is probably something different and is differently justified. The research will explore different influences on vaccine hesitancy, including social media misinformation and views about "natural" and unnatural treatments. The project brings epistemology and applied ethics together, and is informed by empirical health psychology while being primarily philosophical.
 

You can find out more information on the UK-Germany collaborations on the UK Research and Innovation website.

Mon 22 Nov 2021, 15:41 | Tags: Staff Research

Oz Hassan publishes 'Reassessing the European' with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Oz Hassan has published a piece with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where he was previously a Visiting Scholar. Reassessing the European Strategy in Afghanistan analyses the EU’s approach to reconstruction efforts and democracy assistance following the 2001 invasion and shows why the EU approach was deeply flawed. It argues that the EU will now have to accept lower policy ambitions following the 2021 defeat and start adjusting to a post-American world - available here: https://carnegieeurope.eu/2021/11/17/reassessing-european-strategy-in-afghanistan-pub-85776

Wed 17 Nov 2021, 16:22 | Tags: Staff Impact PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate Research

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