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[ecrea] CfP Problem of the Public
Tue Dec 17 05:24:54 GMT 2013
Dear all, Call for Papers, New Perspectives on the Problem of the
Public, 15-16 May 2014. The Centre for the Study of Democracy at the
University of Westminster are hosting a two day conference, 'New
Perspectives on the Problem of the Public', Board Room, 309 Regent
Street, 15-16 May 2014. This inter-disciplinary conference brings
together researchers from communications and media, built environment,
education, geography and political theory to discuss the implications of
the rise of new strands of pragmatist, complexity and new materialist
approaches to democracy and the public sphere. We will examine how
non-traditional conceptualisations of the ‘public’ might be relevant to
various fields of practice and policy making. What roles remain for
institutions of governance in a complex, fluid, more pluralist world,
less amenable to modernist conceptions of power? What are the
implications if representation is increasingly understood as a barrier
to the emergence of the public, rather than as a means of accessing it?
Does it make sense to think about 'public goods' such as health and
education if the public can no longer be taken for granted? Could
understandings of the public in political theory and policy making be
enriched and problematised by their conceptualisations in other academic
fields? Guest speakers: Clive Barnett (Professor of Geography and Social
Theory, University of Exeter) - 'Emergent Publics' Andrew Barry
(Professor of Human Geography, University College, London) - 'Material
Politics and the Reinvention of the Public' Jon Coaffee (Professor in
Urban Geography, University of Warwick) - 'Citizenship and Democracy in
the City 2.0: Balancing the Quest for Resilience and the Public Interest
in Urban Development' John Law (Professor of Sociology, Open University)
- title to be confirmed Sarah Whatmore (Professor of Environment and
Public Policy, University of Oxford) - 'Experimental Publics: Science,
Democracy and the Redistribution of Expertise' We invite papers and
panel proposals on the following topics (we are keen to include a wide
variety of academic fields): * new representations of the public * the
public and the role of teaching/knowledge * materials and policy-making
* space and the production of the public * crisis, responsivity and
resilience We have some funding to support travel and subsistence for
paper presenters. The deadline for abstracts (250 words) is Friday 21
February 2014. Please send abstracts to Michele Ledda
((michele.ledda /at/ my.westminster.ac.uk)) Robert Cowley
((robert.cowley /at/ my.westminster.ac.uk)) and David Chandler
((d.chandler /at/ wmin.ac.uk)). David Chandler, Professor of International
Relations, Director of the Centre for the Study of Democracy, Department
of Politics and International Relations, University of Westminster,
32-38 Wells Street, London, W1T 3UW. Tel: ++44 (0)776 525 3073. Journal
Editor, Resilience: International Policies, Practices and Discourses:
http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/resi20 Book series Editor, Routledge
Studies in Intervention and Statebuilding:
http://208.254.74.79/books/series/RSIS/ Book series Editor, Routledge
Advances in Democratic Theory:
http://www.routledge.com/books/series/RADT/ Amazon books page:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/David-Chandler/e/B001HCXV7Y/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0
Personal website: http://www.davidchandler.org/
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