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[ecrea] Call for papers - UK Economic and Social Research Council Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change (CRESC) Annual Conference 'The Social Life of Methods', Oxford, 31 Aug - 3 Sep 2010
Tue Dec 08 05:59:16 GMT 2009
Call for Papers
The Social Life of Methods
During the past century and longer, social
scientific methods have come to be extensively
deployed in government, administration and
business, as well as in academic research. Maps,
enumerations, surveys, interviews, indicators,
software and visualizations proliferate. The aim
of this conference is to consider how we can
best understand the role of social science
methods in both shaping, and themselves being
affected, by economic, social and cultural
change, both historically and in the current
context when digitalization poses challenges to
established social science methods.
Mindful of the ideas developed within Science
and Technology Studies, which show how objects
in the natural and medical sciences can be
social agents, we seek to broaden this agenda to
focus more particularly on methods within the
social sciences and humanities. Papers are
invited from interdisciplinary audiences addressing the following issues:
· Is it useful to explore how agency can
be located in certain kinds of social scientific methodological repertoires?
· What kinds of methods succeed and which
fail? What are the respective powers of
different sorts of qualitative and quantitative
forms of analysis? How can we explain why
certain sorts of methods become hegemonic in particular domains?
· What is the role of the visual in
social science methods? How is this changing?
· With the proliferation of digital data,
are we currently seeing a crisis of standard
social science methods based around the sample
survey and the interview, and what does this
portend for our understanding of socio-cultural
change? Does the idea of a descriptive turn
offer a useful way of grasping the role of these new methods?
· What is the transformative and critical
potential of social science research methods, both historically and today?
We are interested in reflecting theoretically
about how actor network theory, genealogy,
complexity theory, feminist theory,
anthropological studies of expertise, ecological
studies of knowledge, political economy and
field analysis can be used to understand and
illuminate these issues. There will be four
themes which will structure the sessions of the conference:
1: The device: what kinds of devices have come
to play an important historical role, and which
have failed? How can we better understand the
histories of nations, social groups, individuals
and organizations through a focus on devices?
2: The challenge of digital data: what is the
implication of the proliferation of digital
information for the ordering of economic,
social, political and cultural knowledge?
3: Envisaging the visual: how have visual
methods historically competed with textual and
numerical methods, and how is their role changing in the current context?
4: Transformative practice: history, discipline
and movements: how can methods be mobilized to
critique and challenge dominant methodological
repertoires, focusing especially on the role of
historical analysis, ethnographic, feminist, and subaltern methods?
Plenary speakers include: Andrew Abbott
(Chicago), Nicholas Dirks (Columbia), Engin Isin
(Open University), Katie King (Maryland), Patti
Lather (Ohio State), John Law (Lancaster), Celia
Lury (Goldsmiths), Donald Mackenzie
(Edinburgh), Mark Peel (Monash), Susan Leigh Star (Pittsburgh)
Please submit either (a) proposal for individual
papers, or (b) panel proposal including 3 papers
by the end of February 2010. Guidelines and
Proposal Forms are available on the CRESC
website
<http://www.cresc.ac.uk/events/conference2010/index.html>http://www.cresc.ac.uk/events/conference2010/index.html
CRESC Conference Administration, 178 Waterloo
Place, Oxford Road, University of Manchester,
Manchester M13 9PL, Tel: +44(0)161 275 8985 / Fax: +44(0)161 275 8985
<(CRESC.AnnualConference /at/ manchester.ac.htm)>(CRESC.AnnualConference /at/ manchester.ac.uk)
<mailto:(CRESC.AnnualConference /at/ manchester.ac.uk)>
/ <http://www.cresc.ac.uk>http://www.cresc.ac.uk
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web: http://www.ecrea.eu
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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