Next Journalism [Search results for call for papers

  • Competition: Call for Papers on Environmental Security for African Scholars (author of first-place paper receives $5,000)

    Deadline: 1 January 2011

    The Climate Change and African Political Stability (CCAPS) program at the Robert S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law has issued its first call for papers on environmental security, open exclusively to scholars from and based in Africa. The Call for Papers is co-sponsored by the Strauss Center, the Institute for Security Studies, and the Pew Center on Global Climate Change.

    Mission and Topic: The goal of the Call for Papers is to publish a number of working papers on the links between climate change and security in Africa. The Call for Papers seeks to foster innovative African scholarship on these issues and foster a conversation between academics, practitioners, and policymakers in Africa, the United States, and the international community. Given its physical exposure and the immense challenges of adaptation, Africa is widely understood to be one of the continents most vulnerable to climate change. These effects are not likely to be uniformly distributed, nor are the potential consequences clearly understood. This Call for Papers seeks contributions that further global understanding of the likely location of vulnerabilities in Africa, the potential impacts of climate change on Africa’s political stability or security, and/or strategies for addressing these challenges. The Call for Papers is open to submissions from all disciplines. The paper can have a continental focus, a regional focus, a country focus, a local sub-national focus, or a mix of these. The review committee prefers submissions that will be supported by case study research.

    Compensation: Up to three papers will receive a research stipend for case study or other field research, as well as travel support to attend an international conference. The author of the first-place paper will receive a $5,000 research stipend and up to $3,000 to attend an international conference. Authors of the second- and third-place papers will each receive a $2,500 research stipend and up to $3,000 to attend an international conference. In the event of a co-authored paper, the stipend will be split equally among authors, and the lead author will be eligible for the conference travel support. A condition for receipt of the research stipend is application to an international conference. If the author is accepted to the international conference, the author must make his/her own travel arrangements and will be reimbursed for travel costs up to $3,000. The research stipend will be issued upon the author’s completion of the publication-ready version of the working paper.

    Publication: The Strauss Center will have the prerogative to publish the winning papers as part of the CCAPS program’s Working Paper Series, with an intended publishing date of August 2011. All publishing is subject to the review and editing process. Authors must be available by e-mail and willing to edit their manuscript with the Strauss Center team before publication. After the paper is published in the CCAPS Working Paper Series, the author may publish the paper in journals or other venues upon notification to the Strauss Center. Prior to publication in the CCAPS Working Paper Series in August 2011, the paper cannot appear in print elsewhere, but it may be under review elsewhere. If the paper is published elsewhere after August 2011, the author is required to include the following attribution statement: “The Robert S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law contributed greatly to the production of this paper. A version of this paper was previously published as part of the Strauss Center’s Working Paper Series on Climate Change and African Political Stability. This material is based upon work supported by, or in part by, the U. S. Army Research Laboratory and the U. S. Army Research Office under contract/grant number W911NF-09-1-0077.”

    Eligibility: Contributors must be from Africa and be currently based in Africa to be eligible for this Call for Papers. Contributors are not required to have a PhD to submit a paper. Preference will be given to authors from economically disadvantaged institutions and countries within Africa. The submitted paper cannot be previously published. The paper can be under review elsewhere, but cannot appear in print elsewhere prior to August 31, 2011.

    Deadline for Submission: Midnight, Greenwich Mean Time, January 1, 2011.

    Submission Guidelines: The paper and the author’s curriculum vitae must be submitted electronically to ccaps@strausscenter.org by the submission deadline. The paper should be no longer than 10,000 words including notes and bibliography. The paper must be a finished paper. The paper must be original work. Any work found to be plagiarized would result in the contributor’s stipend being canceled and travel assistance rescinded.

    Judging Process and Announcement of Recipients: The papers will be judged by a panel of experts from the University of Texas at Austin and leading academic institutions and think tanks in the United States and Africa. Recipients will be notified on March 1, 2011.

    Sponsoring Entities: The Robert S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law at the University of Texas at Austin is a nonpartisan research center that engages the best minds in academia, government, and the private sector to develop unique, policy-relevant solutions to complex global challenges. The Strauss Center’s program on Climate Change and African Political Stability conducts research in three core areas, seeking to investigate where and how climate change poses threats to stability in Africa, identify strategies to support accountable and effective governance in Africa, and evaluate the effectiveness of international aid to help African societies adapt to climate change.

    The Institute for Security Studies is a pan-African applied policy research institute headquartered in Pretoria, South Africa with offices in Cape Town, South Africa; Nairobi, Kenya; and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. ISS seeks to mainstream human security perspectives into public policy processes and to influence decision makers within Africa and beyond by providing timely, empirical research and contextual analysis of relevant human security issues to policy makers, area specialists, advocacy groups, and the media.

    The Pew Center on Global Climate Change is a non-profit, non-partisan, and independent organization established by the Pew Charitable Trusts to bring a new cooperative approach and critical scientific, economic, and technological expertise to the global climate change debate. The Pew Center informs this debate through wide-ranging analyses that add new facts and perspectives in four areas: domestic and international policy, economics, environment, and solutions.

    More Information: For more information, please contact the CCAPS program at ccaps@strausscenter.org.

  • Call for Papers: North Eastern Workshop on Southern Africa

    Deadline: 8 September 2011
    Contact: whaugh@stlawu.edu

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    The tenth North Eastern Workshop on Southern Africa (NEWSA) will take place on Oct 21-23, 2011 at the Bishop Booth Center in Burlington, Vermont, USA.

    Northeast Workshop on Southern Africa 2011 Call for Papers

    This is the first call for papers and discussants for the tenth North Eastern Workshop on Southern Africa (NEWSA). We encourage scholars from all disciplines who are currently working on southern Africa (Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe) to submit proposals. The meeting will be held at the Bishop Booth Conference Center in Burlington, Vermont (USA), October 21 through 23, 2011. Located on 130 acres of forest with its own secluded beach, the center is an ideal location for scholarly conversation.

    The NEWSA conference is organized around intensive discussion of pre-circulated papers. There are also many opportunities for informal conversation about work in progress. Drawing on the successful precedents of the former Southern African Research Program at Yale and the Canadian Research Consortium on Southern Africa, this program is designed to give southern Africanists the opportunity for close and intensive discussion of work across a wide variety of scholarly fields. We aim to prioritize scholarship, regardless of discipline or topic, that is evidence-based and grounded in analysis of African discourses and concepts, and which elucidates local worldviews and experience.

    We encourage the presentation of previously unpublished work, and submissions from graduate students and junior faculty in particular. We especially encourage participation from professionals, scholars and graduate students in Africa, as well as those located in Europe, Canada, and the United States.

    There are multiple ways to participate in the NEWSA conference. Participants may:

    a) present a paper
    b) propose a panel of three papers
    c) serve as a discussant

    Because of the high demand for participation relative to the size of the conference facility, and our desire to maintain the workshop atmosphere, we can only allow attendees who are presenting papers or serving as discussants.

    If you wish to give a paper, your proposal should include your name, academic affiliation and status, paper title, and abstract. Your abstract should explain the argument you intend to make, the source of your evidence (e.g., archival, fieldwork, survey), and the contribution your paper makes to understanding significant problems in southern Africa, to furthering conceptual debates, and/or to producing new knowledge in Southern African Studies. The maximum length for the abstract is 500 words.

    If you wish to organize your own three-paper panel, your proposal should include all the authors’ names, titles and abstracts for all three papers, as well as a brief rationale for how the papers complement each other. The organizers will be happy to negotiate alternative panel formats (such as open discussions of a current issue).

    If you wish to serve as a discussant, your proposal should indicate the areas of southern African studies on which you are most prepared to comment. Once the conference participants are selected and organized into panels, each panel will be assigned a discussant. Discussants read the pre-circulated papers by the participants in their session, and at the conference give a 10-15 minute constructive criticism/comment on the papers individually and collectively. Discussants also coordinate discussion of the papers amongst those attending the panel.

    The deadline for paper and/or panel proposals, or to volunteer as a discussant, is March 31, 2011. Please send proposals to Wendi Haugh at whaugh@stlawu.edu.

    Completed papers, not to exceed 8000 words, will be due September 8, 2011, so that the papers can be pre-circulated on this conference website ahead of the meeting. For more information, please visit other pages on this NEWSA web site.

  • Call for Papers - Access Africa: Exploring the full benefit of Social Inclusion for all Persons

    Deadline: 31 October 2010

    2011 Africa Forum - Call for Papers

    The IDP and the Ghana Blind Union (GBU) are proud to announce the call for papers for the Fifth Africa Forum, which will be held at the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA) Accra Ghana, on July 3 – 8, 2011.

    Papers for this important forum should build on the theme: ‘Access Africa: Exploring the full benefit of Social Inclusion for all Persons’

    Papers should not exceed ten to fifteen minutes duration spoken. Presenters will work in panels of 3-4 persons based on the subject of their submissions. We are seeking papers built on practical life experience, action for social transformation, academic research and/or the development of knowledge from program implementation. In addition, we encourage organizations that are involved in policy development to submit papers for open discussion on the issues that their work is addressing.

    Papers should fit into any of the following sub/themes of the forum:

    • Technology as a tool for social and economic empowerment
    • Social responsibility and access to a sustainable and enabling environment
    • Applying the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD)
    • Giving meaning to the CRPD in creating equality and opportunity for those who are blind and partially sighted
    • Diversity in the spectrum of vision loss
    Abstracts should not exceed 200 words and should be sent either via email to aubrey.webson@perkins.org and ongolo@africandecade.co.za, or via fax to +1-617-923-8076 (US). In the subject line, please note "Abstract for Fifth Africa forum." Abstracts should be sent no later than October 31, 2010.

  • 25 Writing Opportunities for African Writers with March 31 Deadline

    Here are 25 writing contests, careers, calls for submissions, and other opportunities for African writers with submissions or applications due on the 31st of March, 2011:

    • Call for African American Poets: Enter the Naomi Long Madgett Poetry Award -03/31/2011

    • Call for Papers: Co-operative Development in Africa: Prospects and Challenges -03/31/2011

      Journalists of Color Invited to Apply for The 2011 Society for Features Journalism Diversity Fellowship (Arizona) -03/31/2011

    • The SA Writers' College 2011 Annual Short Story Award For Emerging Writers in South Africa -03/31/2011

    • Call for Books: The 2011 Nigerian Studies Association Book Award -03/31/2011

    • Call for Submissions: Anthology of Middle Eastern/ Muslim Short Fiction -03/31/2011

    • Apply for the Speculative Literature Foundation Older Writers Grant -03/31/2011

    • Job Opening: Humanities Editor for Jomo Kenyatta Foundation (Kenya) -03/31/2011

    • Call for Submissions: January 25 (Revolution) Anthology -03/31/2011

    • 2011 BN Poetry Award for Ugandan Women -03/31/2011

    • Call for Submissions - Sentinel Nigeria: Online Magazine of Contemporary Nigerian Writing -03/31/2011

    • World Petroleum Congress Prize for Young Authors -03/31/2011

    • The R25,000 EU Literary Award 2011 for Unpublished Work of Fiction (South Africa) -03/31/2011

    • Third Annual South African Wine Writers Award -03/31/2011

    • Apply for The Foreign Correspondents’ Scholarship Programme in Finland (eligible African countries: Egypt, South Africa, Tunisia) -03/31/2011

    • Anthony Sampson Foundation Award for a Writing/ Reporting Project Relevant to South Africa -03/31/2011

    • Forum of Women of the Mediterranean Short Story Competition -03/31/2011

    • Win a Publication Contract: Whispers Publishing 2011 Explore Our World Fiction Contest (length: 15,000-30,000) -03/31/2011

    • Siemens Africa Profile Awards for Excellence in Science and Technology Journalism -03/31/2011

    • Excellence in Journalism Awards - Tanzania Officially Launched -03/31/2011

    • The $1,300 Mahdiya/ Aga Khan Museum International Essay Writing Contest -03/31/2011

    • Job Opening: Copy/ Sub Editor for Film Event Publishing (South Africa) -03/31/2011

    • Call for Entries: 2011 Association of Nigerian Authors Literary Prizes -03/31/2011

    • Call for Entries: Nigeria Prize for Literature 2011 -03/31/2011

    • The Beverly Nambozo Poetry Award 2011 (Uganda) Now Open for Submissions -03/31/2011

  • Call for Papers: Migration, Gender and Diversity in Eastern Africa

    Deadline: 9 February 2011

    Call for Papers: Migration, Gender and Diversity in Eastern Africa

    An International Conference by invitation at Ahfad University for Women, Omdurman, Sudan

    3 to 5 May 2011

    Background

    Eastern Africa is strongly affected by internal displacements and forced migration. The region experienced various forms of migration, flight and refuge, historically as well as contemporary, including permanent, internal and external, documented and un-documented, conflict-induced and labour transitory migration. The Sudan in particular is strongly affected by internal displacement related to conflicts in Darfur and the long-lasting north/south divide of the country. In this regard, issues of political exclusion/citizenship, the incorporation of certain groups into a particular national entity and culturalisation of conflict are of outstanding importance.

    Still – and although global interest in migration processes is rising – African migration processes are underrepresented in migration research and in the global migration discourse. Migration, despite its critical relevance to Africa’s development, is often hardly recognized in academic contexts. Theorizing migration and challenging predominant images of the migrant from African perspectives, by African scholars, is not yet prevalent.

    Besides, apart from the humanitarian concern for women being the main victims of forced migration related to armed conflicts and natural disasters, the gender dimension of the issue is still unaccounted for. Gender relations and women’s rights are contested areas in contemporary societies and they are at the core of discourses on modernity and tradition. On an international and national level, the state of gender equality is closely linked to development and increasingly considered one of its key indicators.

    Objective

    The conference aims at contributing to further develop the agenda for research accounting for knowledge and capacity building in the field of African migration research and gender studies as intersecting areas. We especially welcome papers that focus on:

     Review of the development of theoretical and methodological approaches to African migration, including the gender dimension,
     The review of prevalent research paradigms and research findings on Migration in Africa,
     Population Mobility Dynamics and Impact,
     Gender and Migration,
     Challenges of Multiculturalism, Diversity and Nation/State Building

    We are pleased to announce our Call for Papers, any original research on migration in sub-Saharan Africa will be considered, preference is given to contributions on Eastern Africa and contributions addressing gender issues.

    This is the final in a series of three conferences on African Migration and Gender, organized by the EDULINK partnership IMMIS. The conference will take place in Omdurman, Sudan, from 3 to 5 May 2011. For more information on the project please visit www.regionalgenderinst.edu.sd or www.immis.org. We specifically encourage young and/or international academics to apply. Conference organizers try to subsidize travel costs, accommodation and meals.

    Abstracts in English, measuring 300 – 500 words, should be accompanied by a short CV including contact details. Please send your files to abstracts@regionalgenderinst.edu.sd or abstracts@immis.org until 9 February 2011. Applicants will be notified in March, full papers are due 20 April 2011.

    Contact Information

    RIG/DPR, Dr. Omeima Scheikh-Eldin
    Ahfad University for Women, Omdurman, Sudan
    omeima@regionalgenderinst.edu.sd

    The conference is hosted by the EDULINK Project IMMIS (African Migration and Gender in Global Context – Implementing Migration Studies) – a joint project by Ahfad University for Women (Sudan), Humboldt University Berlin (Germany), Makerere University (Uganda), Mbarara University of Science and Technology (Uganda), Oldenburg University (Germany) and Stavanger University (Norway).

  • World Petroleum Congress Prize for Young Authors

    Deadline: 31 March 2011

    In recognition of the importance of young people to the energy industry, 20th World Petoleum Congress (WPC) will be rewarding the best young authors at the 20th World Petroleum Congress in Qatar this December.

    The objective of the WPC Youth Awards is to encourage young professionals to participate in the most prestigious triennial event in the oil and gas industry. Young people under 35 are invited to submit abstracts for the 20th WPC Call for Papers with the chance to win a place at the event and compete for one of the three top prizes at the WPC Youth Awards.

    The 20th WPC Organizing Committee has guaranteed more than US$10,000 in prize money to be awarded to the best youth presenters. The winner will receive US$5000, while second and third place winners will be granted US$3000 each.

    An independent jury will select the winners from the best abstracts received for papers and posters at the WPC Call for Papers from young people below 35 years of age. Originality, accuracy and general worthiness will be taken into account as criteria for the judging process.

    Submissions for the 20th WPC Call for Papers can be made online via the official Congress website www.20wpc.com. The deadline for submissions is 31 March 2011. The winners will be announced at the WPC Excellence Awards ceremony attended by high level dignitaries, industry leaders and the press during the 20th WPC in Doha, Qatar, on the 5th of December 2011.

    The 20th World Petroleum Congress is sponsored by Qatar Petroleum and will take place at the Qatar National Convention Centre in Doha, Qatar, from 4-8 December 2011. Since its establishment in 1933, this is the first time that the World Petroleum Congress will be hosted in the Middle East.

    About the 20th World Petroleum Congress

    Theme: Energy Solutions for All Promoting Cooperation, Innovation and Investment

    Date: 4-8 December 2011

    Venue: Qatar National Convention Centre

    Further information: www.http://www.20wpc.com

    The World Petroleum Congress consists of a 5-day congress, the largest of its kind in the world with over 4000 delegates, 600 media and over 550 presenters. Held alongside the congress and in the same venue is the exhibition of the World Petroleum Congress. It features exhibits from the national committees of the World Petroleum Council where the most prestigious national oil and gas companies and agencies of the world are present. It also features all the most important international oil and gas companies in the world alongside the key suppliers, service companies and manufacturers. This is the only existing global exhibition dedicated to the oil, gas and energy industry.

    About World Petroleum Council www.world-petroleum.org

    The World Petroleum Council is the only international organization representing all aspects of the petroleum sector. The World Petroleum Council was established in 1933 with the intent to promote the management of the world’s petroleum resources for the benefit of mankind. The World Petroleum Council’s prime function is to catalyse and facilitate dialogue among stakeholders, both internal and external to the petroleum industry on key technical, social, environmental and management issues in order to contribute towards seeking solutions to those issues. Headquartered in London, the World Petroleum Council includes over 60 member countries from around the world representing more than 95% of global oil and gas production and consumption. World Petroleum Council membership is unique as it includes both OPEC and Non-OPEC countries with representation of National Oil Companies (NOC’s) as well as Independent Oil Companies (IOC’s). Each country has a national committee made up from representatives of the oil and gas industry, academia and research institutions and government departments. Governing body is the Council consisting of representation from each of the National Committees.

  • 13 Writing Opportunities for African Writers with March 1 Deadline

    Call for Submissions: Women of Color's Anthology "Boundaries & Borders" 03/01/2011

    Call for Submissions: Saraba Literary Magazine Issue 8 (Nigeria/ Africa-wide) 03/01/2011

    2011 Commonwealth Short Story Competition 03/01/2011

    Call for Pitches: Student Journalists Wanted at UPIU.com ($100 per article) 03/01/2011

    Call for Articles: The Africa Peace and Conflict Journal 03/01/2011

    Call for Submissions: Chocolate Flava 3 (adult romance stories that feature African-Americans, payment: $300 per story) 03/01/2011

    International Research Grant for Children's Literature 03/01/2011

    Call for Papers: Women and New Media in the Mediterranean Region 03/01/2011

    "The Message of Paradise" Competition for Muslim Students 03/01/2011

    The 7th Rawi Screenwriters' Lab for Arab Screenwriters/ Filmmakers 03/01/2011

    Call for Entries: East Africa (Print and Electronic) Media Award Competition 2011 03/01/2011

    Call for Submissions/ Works in Translation: Gulf Coast's International Issue 03/01/2011

    Sonia Sanchez and Amiri Baraka Prize in African-American Poetry 03/01/2011

  • Call for Papers: 2nd Africa Regional Conference on Endogenous Development

    Deadline: 11 January 2011

    18-19 August 2011, University for Development Studies, Ghana

    Theme:

    Endogenous Knowledge, Education and Research as a Challenge to Higher Education and Development in Africa: Theoretical Perspectives, Pragmatic Responses, Practical Challenges

    Venue:

    UDS International Conference Centre, Tamale, Ghana

    Preamble

    The Capacity and Theory-Building of Universities and Research Centres in Endogenous Development (CAPTURED) Project is an innovative effort that seeks to promote development, research and education from local perspectives. It is premised on the belief that development as a growth process should start from and build on the perspectives of local populations in order for it to respond effectively and realistically to their needs and realities. Ongoing search for development and aid effectiveness and efficiency, which have resulted in alternatives such as sustainable development and participatory development, are indicative of the inadequacy of development plans, programmes processes imposed from elsewhere.

    Consequently, the Endogenous Development (ED) paradigm draws from positions that centre local perspectives, people’s worldviews and indigenous knowledge as the bases for initiating and negotiating development. Although contrasted with exogenous development, the endogenous development position does not condemn exogenously-informed development processes outright. Rather, it argues that such efforts would be more effective and efficient when anchored on solid local perspectives, people’s worldviews and indigenous knowledge. Hence, the ED framework draws and works from indigenous knowledge, traditional institutions and local worldviews as well as internally motivated actions as bases for seeking external support for the analysis and evolution of development plans/policies, programmes and projects.

    As institutions of higher learning, universities and research centres provide not just specialized human resources but also the policy and programming technologies, leadership and frameworks for driving national and global development. Universities educate and provide research inputs that shape and drive planning and programming in development. The CAPTURED Project has been strategically located within higher education and research institutions with the view to building the critical mass of people who would lead knowledge productions, educational processes and innovative research that would influence policy and programmes in higher education and national development.

    The 2011 African Regional Conference is the 2nd of two conferences that have been planned to share experiences and influence development thinking in Africa. This second conference, following the first in 2009, seeks to generate critical debates, share innovative responses and build alliances among African academics, educators, researchers and development practitioners committed to locally relevant knowledge, education and research for the development of Africa. It also welcomes

    others outside that space but who are interested in Endogenous Knowledge, Education and Research in higher education in Africa. The outputs of the conference, in the form of invited and thematic papers, will be peer reviewed and published in the proceedings of the CAPTURED Africa Project.

    The two-day conference will focus on the following:

    Thematic Areas

    1. Conceptual/theoretical foundations, debates, frameworks, models and possibilities for Endogenous Knowledge, Education and Research in African Higher Education

    2. Innovative programming frameworks and methodological responses in Higher Education including research ethics and policies, educational policies, curriculum processes and forms, research and development, actual and possibilities

    3. Endogenous Knowledge, Education and Research experiences and processes linking Higher Education and communities, nation states, regional bodies; Higher Education and policy, programmes and governance and ; Higher Education and commerce, industry etc

    4. Prospects, potentials and challenges of Endogenous Knowledge, Education and Research for North-South, South-South and inter- and intra-University collaborations in Higher Education in the areas of teaching and learning, curriculum development, methodologies, research and dissemination, student exchange and staff development in Africa and beyond

    5. Political and Policy Implications of Endogenous Knowledge, Education and Research for the development of Africa.

    Submissions are welcomed in any of the thematic areas. Interested persons should first submit a 300-word abstract detailing title, main thesis/arguments/issues, methodology/strategy and conclusion. When accepted, authors will be required to submit the full papers within three (3) months.

    Important Deadlines

    - November 10: Announcement of Call for Papers

    - January 11: Deadline for Submission of abstracts

    - February 11: Communication of accepted abstracts

    - April 11: Deadline for receipt of Full Papers of accepted abstracts

    Logistics

    Provisions will be made for the air travel of presenting participants living and working in Africa but outside Ghana only. In addition, there will be accommodation and food/ snacks for all registered and/or presenting participants during the conference period.

    Contacts

    All inquires and submissions should be addressed to:

    Mail post:

    CAPTURED UDS Project
    University for Development Studies
    P. O. Box 520
    Wa, Upper West Region
    GHANA
    Email: awingura2008-at-yahoo.com
    Phone: 233(0)244-581725

  • Call for Papers: AfricaAdapt Climate Change Symposium 2011

    Call for Papers: AfricaAdapt Climate Change Symposium 2011

    Deadline: 3 January 2011

    Call for papers

    AfricaAdapt Climate Change Symposium 2011

    Linking Climate Research, Policy and Practice for African-led Development

    9-11 March 2011, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

    This three-day bilingual (French/English) symposium is a landmark event focusing on evolving approaches, tools, methods and philosophies addressing the links between increasing climate change and variability in Africa and sustainable development. It will feature keynote speakers from across the continent, and also provide a space for creative new exchanges and collaboration between African research, media, policy, and community practitioners. This is an opportunity to share your knowledge and experience of this important subject and work with others to help make a difference.

    Symposium Objectives:

    1. To provide a forum for exploring and promoting the latest and best in applied research on climate change adaptation and development in Africa.
    2. To create a space for engagement between African research, practitioner and policy communities of practice.
    3. To provide African media with opportunities to interact with these communities of practice so they can better communicate efforts being made to address climate change in Africa, and so they can articulate local concerns and priorities.

    The AfricaAdapt Knowledge Sharing Network has a mission to encourage research, dissemination and sharing of knowledge on climate change in Africa, and on the ways in which Africa can encourage climate compatible development. To this end AfricaAdapt is issuing a call for papers highlighting new research and community engagement on adaptation and low carbon development in Africa.

    Themes to be explored include:

     Links between adaptation, mitigation and low carbon, or “climate compatible” development
     Roles of local and indigenous knowledge in addressing climate change
     New thinking on community-led responses: From local to global
     The roles of media and intermediaries in translating, sharing, and advocating
     National and international policy: Linking policy and practice

    The symposium is focused on Africa and we especially encourage submissions from African researchers, community based organisations, advocacy groups, and media. If your topic does not fit precisely into one of the themes above, it may still be considered if relevant to the overall subject area of the Symposium. In addition to formal papers, we are very interested to hear from policy and decision makers, donors, researchers, NGOs and community representatives who have knowledge and experiences to share that engage the symposium’s objectives and mission.

    The deadline for submitting proposals for Symposium consideration is January 3rd 2011. Proposals should be submitted as an abstract – maximum 300 words. A committee comprised of members from the symposium sponsors will assess submissions and draw up a shortlist for extended proposals. Please e-mail abstracts and/or questions by e-mail to: symposium@africa-adapt.net. Full details can be found at www.adaptation2011.com and www.africa-adapt.net.
    Limited funding is available to cover full and/or partial costs of attending this symposium.

  • Call for Papers: Africa Media and Democracy

    Deadline: 22 April 2011

    CALL FOR PAPERS
    AFRICA MEDIA & DEMOCRACY CONFERENCE 2011- ACCRA, GHANA

    The Africa Media & Democracy Institute invites papers for its annual Media and Democracy Conference, (AMDMC) to be held from 17th-19th August 2011, Accra-Ghana. Theme: Media & Democracy towards sustainable stability.

    The AMDMC Conference is organised annually and takes place in a selected African country; presentations at the conference are made by distinguished scholars and individuals from Africa and the rest of the world. The theme for the Accra 2011 Conference is ‘Media & Democracy towards sustainable stability’. The Conference aims to examine the broad impact of the media on democracy.

    BACKGROUND: Africa’s emerging democracies in the last two decades have had to co-exist with a vibrant media contestation. The media has relatively emerged as a formidable constituent as it vie for legitimacy in representing the broad masses. This contestation provides the framework for critical examination on how the media impacts on the democratic process. The Conference therefore aims to address and examine various issues of media in the practise of democratic governance in Africa. The event is open to academics, media industry professionals, government agencies, policymakers, regulators, UN agencies, donors, civil society organisations, independent consultants and research groups and students.

    GUIDELINES FOR SUBMISSION:

    ABSTRACTS & PAPERS:

    Please email abstracts (maximum one page) along with contact information and a 500-word bio to: info@amdmc.org. All Abstracts must be in English, full papers may be submitted in either English or French.

    Deadlines:

    Deadline for receipt of abstracts: 22nd April 2011
    Notice of acceptance of abstracts: 22nd May 2011
    Deadline for receipt of full papers: 22nd June 2011
    Notification of Acceptance of Paper/Panel/Workshop: 30th July 2011

    For further information and other enquiries please contact Conference Team.

    ENQUIRIES HOTLINE 24HRS

    MOBILE: + 233 0200723197 - Tel: + 233 303 208185 or visit www.amdmc.org

    Email: info@amdmc.org

  • Call for Papers: Co-operative Development in Africa: Prospects and Challenges

    Deadline: 31 March 2011

    INTERNATIONAL CO-OPERATIVE RESEARCH CONFERENCE FOR AFRICA (ICRCA)
    CALL FOR PAPERS

    Main Theme: Co-operative Development in Africa: Prospects and Challenges

    Venue: MOSHI, TANZANIA Dates: 26th – 28th September 2011

    1. Background Information

    Co-operatives are important privately-owned, member-based organisations that foster economic and social development of all mankind globally. They cherish democratic ideals and promote human dignity in a globalized market economy. Co-operatives have been promoted in various regions and countries with support from governments, nongovernmental organizations, as well as multilateral agencies. They have gone through series of turbulences – be it political, social, economic or financial crises. The recent economic crisis brought about by financial depression is a good case to reckon. It is a well appreciated fact that co-operatives are effective mechanisms for individuals to pool together their scarce resources and skills towards realization of the economies of scale in various areas related to production, marketing, processing, logistics, finance, and technology. For instance in countries where access to financial resources have been difficult, such as in most Sub-Sahara African Countries, financial co-operatives play a significant role in organizing such services to the bulk of its members. On the other hand, marketing co-operatives have been the sole player in agricultural marketing in countries like Tanzania prior to the introduction of agricultural trade liberalization in the early 1990s.

    2. International Co-operative Research Conference for Africa (ICRCA)

    The International Co-operative Alliance (ICA) has a thematic Committee on Co-operative Research (ICA-CCR), which coordinates the link between academic research and the cooperative world. The ICA-CCR aims at making research on co-operatives more accessible and relevant to the co-operative movements. The ICA–CCR does this by organizing research conferences at global and regional levels. Thus, the International Co-operative Research Conference (ICRC) is a common event organized by the ICA Research Committee annually with varied themes. The Moshi University College of Co-operative and Business Studies (MUCCoBS), which is an Associate Member of ICA, in collaboration with other stakeholders is organizing such an International Co-operative Research Conference for Africa (ICRCA). Other ICA Regional blocs – Europe, Asia, and the Americas have been organising such conferences for years now. Inspired by the initiatives of these other blocs, the MUCCoBS has decided to organize an African Conference as a way of making its humble contribution to co-operative development in the continent.

    Co-operatives in Africa are currently faced with a complex set of challenges brought about by the economic, social and political changes resulting from democratization, globalization, decentralization, economic structural adjustments and environmental changes specifically climate change. The effects of these changes are diverse and vary from country to country. However, at the same time there are opportunities for innovation and growth for the co-operatives. This conference, will therefore address, among others, these developmental issues pertaining to co-operative development in Africa.

    3. Conference Objectives

    The overall objective of the conference is to provide a forum for practitioners, professionals and policy makers to share ideas and experiences in the contemporary cooperative development processes in Africa and strategize on the way forward for the African cooperatives.

    4. Conference Sub-themes

    The main theme of the conference is subdivided into four sub-themes as follows:

    i. Marketing and Production in Co-operatives,
    ii. Co-operatives and Financial Services,
    iii. Co-operative Governance, and
    iv. Co-operatives and Climate Change

    Interested researchers are cordially invited to write on any topic provided it falls in line
    with one of the above sub-themes. It is expected that about 20 presentations will be made
    at this conference based on the four sub-themes.

    5. Submission of Abstracts and Full Papers

    Potential writers are invited to submit abstracts of their intended presentations/research
    papers by March 31st, 2011. Submission of full papers is by July 31st, 2011.

    6. Participants

    The participants are expected to come from various organizations representing the cooperative movement across Africa and the hosts Tanzanians, government ministries, research and academic institutions, development partners, and non-governmental organizations. Others are from multilateral organisations such as ILO, IFAD, etc, and financial institutions. This advert is also available at www.muccobs.ac.tz

    7. Contact

    For all communication purposes, please write to:
    Chairperson,
    Organizing Committee,
    International Co-operative Research Conference for Africa (ICRCA),
    Moshi University College of Co-operative and Business Studies,
    Sokoine Road, P. O. Box 474, MOSHI. Tanzania.
    E- mail: icrca@muccobs.ac.tz

  • Call for Papers - Digital and Media Literacy: New Directions (Arab-US ACE)

    Deadline: 15 April 2011

    Mobile phones, blogs, online social networks, wikis, user-generated news, and a plethora of ubiquitous digital media have facilitated access to information; allowed people from around the globe to connect; offered enormous potential for communication about, from, and among civil society groups, democracy advocates, and political activists; and presented vast possibilities for national development projects.

    But the potential of digital media diffusion cannot be realized if people lack the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and create media content. Increasingly, digital literacy and media literacy are viewed as agents for the acquisition of such skills and knowledge, and as essential components for all levels of education and every member of society.

    Integrating digital media literacy into educational curricula and public agendas will ensure that citizens, groups, and institutions are equipped with the essential analytical and communications skills required for success in the 21st century.

    The AUSACE 2011 conference theme brings together these critical two concepts of digital literacy and media literacy. Participants are encouraged to interpret this theme broadly, and include issues as diverse as: new directions for media education, for national development, for democracy, for civil society, and for global engagement. Research papers, panels, and poster presentations submitted to the conference may include but are not limited to the role of digital and media literacy in:

    * Changing media education curricula at the school and university levels.
    * Empowering civil society, advocacy groups, and political and social activism.
    * Strengthening democracy and citizenship, and changing political processes.
    * Supporting national development projects.
    * Bridging the digital divide, empowering economically disadvantaged populations, and creating new jobs and markets.
    * Evolving journalism and media professions, including mainstream and citizen journalism, traditional and new forms of journalism.
    * Innovating in the marketing, advertising, public relations, and political communications professions.
    * Mediating the effects of globalization.
    * Promoting government, media, and business accountability and transparency.
    * Resolving or exacerbating conflict, war, and political turmoil, and promoting awareness of and offering potential solutions to global issues, such as global warming, poverty, diseases, etc.
    * Empowering women, minorities, and disadvantaged and disaffected groups in society.
    * Addressing and solving the problems of sectarianism and religious fundamentalism.
    * Media, communication, and mass communication theories and concepts.

    Directions and deadlines for submissions:

    All Submissions: Researchers, scholars, experts, and advanced graduate students interested in presenting at AUSACE 2011 are required to first submit an abstract of their research, panel, or poster presentation by emailing the proper form to:

    ausace2011@aub.edu.lb by the deadline of April 15, 2011.

    Research Papers: To present a research paper, please submit an abstract of your research using the following Research Abstract Form by April 15, 2011. Research Abstracts should be no longer than 500 words and include a brief explanation about: the topic under study, its scope and context, its significance, the methods used, its main findings, and its relationship to the conference theme: Digital and media literacy. Those submitting research papers and wish their submission to be considered for the various conference awards and for publication in Arab Media and Society are required to submit a full paper by the deadline of July 15, 2011. Full papers should be scholarly in nature, original, and innovative, and may employ quantitative, qualitative, or mixed methods. Papers should be no longer than 8,000 words, including tables, figures, references, and notes.

    Panels: To suggest a panel, please submit the following Panel Abstract Form by April 15, 2011. Members of your panel presenting scholarly research papers and wish their full papers to be considered for the various conference awards and for publication in Arab Media and Society, are required to submit a full paper by the deadline of July 15, 2011. Panels should include no less than three and no more than four presenters. Conference organizers may add additional members to the suggested panel.

    Poster Presentations: Posters are the format of choice for research that is still at an early stage of development or for presentation of multimedia tools, portfolios, and classroom instruments. Acceptance of a poster for presentation holds the same status as any other panel or paper presentation. Presenters who elect this form of presentation will have more time for displaying there work and a greater opportunity for interaction and discussion between the author and interested attendees visiting their poster stands. When preparing the poster submission, please indicate the equipment needed for display. In most cases, authors should plan to present their work in tabular or graphic form on an poster board. If special tools are needed (computer, TV, DVD player, speakers...), it is the presenter's responsibility to acquire and set-up the equipment. We will do our best to assist in setup. Please submit the following Poster Submission Form by April 15, 2011.

    Authors will be notified of acceptance starting February 15, 2011.

    Regulations and Guidlines for presenting:

    1. At least one author of an any accepted presentation should be in attendance at the conference to present the paper. Papers whose authors do not show up will be canceled and not included in the conference proceedings. No substitute presenter will be permitted.
    2. Time limits of each presetation will be strictly enforced. In most cases, you will only get 12-15 minutes or less (poster presenters get around 45 minutes to display and discuss their work). Presenters and panelists are encouraged to allocate most the presentation time to the original findings and results, as well as the methods used.
    3. Prenesters are required to pay their registration and other dues before presenting. Participants may present in English or Arabic.

  • Call for Papers: The 7th Pan-African Reading for All Conference, Botswana

    Deadline: 31 December 2010

    Gaborone, Botswana
    11th – 14th July 2011

    FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS [Deadline Dec 31, 2010]

    Organised by Reading Association of Botswana (RAB) International Development Committee - Africa (IDC-A) International Reading Association (IRA)

    THE 7TH PAN-AFRICAN READING FOR ALL CONFERENCE

    The purpose of the Pan-African Reading for All Conference(s) is to develop ways of translating “Education for All” into “Reading for All”. The 7th Pan-African Reading for All Conference will be hosted by the Reading Association of Botswana and will be an opportunity for teachers, writers, librarians, publishers, and development workers from Botswana and other nations to continue developing a coordinated approach to literacy in Africa. In addition, the network of educators and other professionals across Africa for sharing best practices and research will be strengthened. A greater responsiveness among authors and publishers to the needs of the newly emerging literate populations of Africa anticipated as a result of Education for All will be provoked. Overall, the conference will highlight support structures needed, to be established or strengthened, for the promotion of reading as a cornerstone for the Education for All process, nationally and internationally.

    The Pan-African Reading for All Conference has become an important literacy event on the African continent. It provides a platform for policy makers in government and the donor community to interface with literacy professionals, and researchers at all levels to share vital knowledge and information on appropriate ways and strategies of delivering literacy and reading skills to all communities. In the six countries where the conference has been held, the positive developments registered have included growth and development of community libraries, adult literacy classes and children’s reading tents; the emergence of reading and writing clubs in schools and communities; and, positive policy pronouncements in favour of the book sector and publishing industry. The first conference, which was held in Pretoria in 1999, focused on reading among children. The second, held in Abuja in 2001, considered the role of communities in building a reading culture. The emphasis of the third, which was in Kampala in 2003, was on analyzing and ultimately surmounting the factors that impede the transmission and use of literacy skills. In 2005, the fourth conference was taken to Swaziland where the emphasis was on exploring the connection between literacy and sustainable development. The fifth conference, held in August 2007, took place in Ghana where Literacy for Human Liberation was the main theme. The most recent was The 6th Pan-African Reading for All Conference, which took place in Tanzania from August 10th -14th, 2009. There the focus was on Literacy for Community Based Socio-economic Transformation and Development. The determination of the conference theme draws from the local scene of the hosting country, but extends to matters of regional and global interest. Objectives of The 7th Pan-African Reading for All Conference

    The objectives of the conference are to:

    • Strengthen capacity within Africa in collecting and analysing data to support formulation of policy and interventions that address the barriers that make it difficult to achieve the vision of literacy for all; • Generate frameworks for the development and implementation of new initiatives that address specific literacy problems;

    • Consider how reading and writing can be harnessed effectively for opening up social futures across Africa and the world at large;

    • Interrogate a range of approaches to literacy that promote reading in families, facilitate the setting up of rural libraries and encourage the development of reading materials.

    CONFERENCE THEME, SUB-THEMES AND TOPICS

    A. Conference Theme: A Reader, the Empowered Leader

    B. Sub-themes

    i) Literacy and empowerment

    ii) Literacy, leadership and marginalized groups

    iii) Innovation and literacy instruction

    iv) Literate citizenry and a participatory society

    v) Literacy and Human Rights

    vi) Broadening literacy

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR SUBMITTING PROPOSALS

    Presentations will be of the following types:

    • Individual papers: These will be presented by one, or more, individual(s) and will be allotted 30 minutes each (20 minutes for the presenter(s) and 10 for discussion).

    • Colloquia: These will be presented by four or five people working together and will be allotted 2 hours. The presenters may divide the time amongst themselves as they like but should allow at least 40 minutes (not necessarily all together) for audience reactions.

    • Workshops: These will be interactive sessions, in which the presenter is expected to act as a facilitator rather than as a speaker. Each will be allotted one hour. A workshop should have a practical purpose and involve the participants in some activity.

    • Poster sessions: These will be graphic displays of information, which will be posted on the walls of the session rooms and/or in the corridors. Each display will stay up for several hours, and a period of 20-30 minutes will be allotted for conference participants to come and discuss it with its presenter.

    • Films: These should be presented on video tape and will be allotted 30 minutes each. Tapes should be no more than 20 minutes long to allow time for viewers’ questions and comments.

    Presentations should fall under one of the sub-themes listed and may address literacy issues at any level of learning. To propose a presentation, please fill out the proposal form provided here.

  • Call for Papers: International Conference on Arts, Society and Sustainable Development (Pretoria, South Africa)

    Deadline: 31 December 2010

    Overview

    In line with its vision to be an Arts Faculty that nurtures creativity, innovation and cultural understanding; and a mission to contribute innovatively to the socio-economic development of Africa and the world through culture-led social, economic and physical regeneration, the Faculty of the Arts at the Tshwane University of Technology is inviting abstracts for papers to be delivered at its Arts, Society and Sustainable Development Conference.

    The aim of the conference is to assemble art practitioners (visual and performing), professionals, designers, academics, researchers, government officials, cultural workers, and industry partners to share creativity, knowledge, and understanding across boundaries; and to offer a platform for the interrogation of the relationship between the arts and community development. This will assist in strengthening arts’ engagement and participation and become part of the momentum that will carry our industry forward into the coming decade.

    Development is a vast area of human endeavour. Development is not limited to the narrow confines of economic growth and improvement of infrastructure in the urban areas. Development is taken holistically to include “The ability of the members of a community to relate creatively to themselves, their neighbours, their environment, and the world at large, so that each one might express his maximum potential. Such development, then, has a lot to do with the distribution of power and of resources – who gets what, how, and why? It is, basically, a process of empowerment” (Pradervand, 1989: xvii).

    The conference encourages debates around socio-cultural development of the community, development of products, entrepreneurship, and the economy. Aspects such as ability to brand, to determine niche markets, to develop business plans and attract customers, should be investigated because in today’s knowledge economy they play critical roles in the development of the arts and design. Are there challenges militating against the development of policies to nurture growth in the culture industries? What are the challenges?

    Presentations should be geared towards centre-staging arts’ capacity to help shape the past, present and future of contemporary societies. Papers must address the conference theme and the sub-themes.

    Conference Theme: Arts, Society and Sustainable Development

    Sub-Themes:
    • Craft and national development
    • Participatory theatre and community development
    • Arts education and cultural development
    • The arts, democratic ideals and state-building processes
    • Arts and technological development
    • Artistic innovation and social change
    • Creative industries and economic development
    • Cultural planning, policy, rural and urban regeneration
    • Art products as cultural symbols
    • Fashion design and entrepreneurship
    • Socio-cultural aspects of clothing
    • Literature/film in the service of humanity
    • Multi-media and skills development
    • Music industry and cultural/economic development
    • Popular culture
    • The arts and conflict resolution
    • Entertainment technology and commercialisation.

    (Presenters may not limit themselves to the listed sub-themes. Exploration of issues in related areas is encouraged).

    CALL FOR PAPERS
    International Conference on Arts, Society and Sustainable Development
    27 – 29 June 2011 | Pretoria, South Africa
    Venue
    CSIR International Convention Centre,
    Meiring Naude Road, Brummeria, Pretoria
    www.csiricc.co.za
    Conference Dates
    27 – 29 JUNE 2011

    Call for Abstracts
    Presenters are to submit topics/abstracts (500 words; Pdf/MS Word format) to reach the Conference Secretariat by 31 December 2010. Receipt of abstracts will be acknowledged and letters of acceptance of abstracts will be mailed on 28 February 2011.

    Guidelines for Submission of Abstracts
    • Electronic submissions of abstracts are encouraged. Abstracts (hard copies) sent by mail will also be considered. E-mail your abstracts to Irene Botes: botesjc@tut.ac.za or Gladys Sibanda: sibandag@tut.ac.za.
    • Abstracts received will be blind peer reviewed.
    • Submissions must include a separate title page containing: title of paper; title, names and institutional affiliation of author(s); postal address; telephone and or/ fax numbers; e-mail addresses; and four or five keywords.
    • Accepted abstracts will be published in the conference programme.
    • Each abstract should be accompanied by a short bio-data of the presenter/author.
    • A conference proceeding with an ISBN number will be published after the congress.

  • Call for Papers: First International Forum on Media and Information Literacy (Morocco)

    Deadline: 25 February 2011

    SIDI MOHAMED BEN ABDELLAH UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND HUMANITIES FES-SAIS FEZ, KINGDOM OF MOROCCO

    CALL FOR PAPER SUBMISSION

    The First International Forum on Media and Information Literacy (MIL) will be
    organized by the Laboratory of Discourse, Creativity and Society: Perception and Implications at the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Fes-Sais of Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University, Fez, Morocco on May 12-13, 2011. The forum aims to raise awareness about the importance of MIL in this media-saturated / information-overloaded world, to find ways and means to build up media and information literate societies, and to make of mass media important actors at the service of democracy, justice, and development. To this end, the forum adopts a holistic approach to MIL.

    While addressing basic concepts of definition and typology, focus will be laid on approaches to MIL from various perspectives in order to provide a comprehensive view of the issue.

    They invite contributions from experts and professionals in the various disciplines of human sciences of relevance to the topic of the forum: media, communication, information and communication technologies, education, curriculum development, sociology, psychology, history, geography, political sciences and international relations. The organizers also call for the participation of media organizations, research groups/centres, professional associations, civil society actors, NGOs and international organizations advocating media and information literacy for all.

    The main axes of the forum include information and communication technologies; access to information and media; information and media competencies; media / information and basic rights and obligations; global information and communication orders; approaches to media and information literacy; the power of mass media and the empowering MIL; media effects and influences, media processes and industries; new trends in journalism; the watchdog function of the press; media, commerce and audiences; media, politics, and ideology; media governance, culture and ethics; and ways and means to enhance free and responsible media, and build up media and information literate societies.

    Proposed papers would be welcomed, but not exclusive to topics, as the following:

    * Media Literacy / Information Literacy: Theory and Practice
    * Media and Information Literacy Integration in Schools and Communities
    * Media and Information Sourcing, Sharing, and Evaluation
    * Empowering the Media Consumers, Knowing their Rights and Responsibilities
    * Creative Cultural Production Perspectives of Media and Information
    * Building Knowledge Structures on MIL
    * Internet Addiction Disorders and Antidotes
    * Freedom of Expression / Freedom of Information: Cross-Cultural Perspectives
    * News Media / News Values: Interdisciplinary Approach
    * Digital Literacy / Visual Literacy: Theory and Practice/ Digital and Information Divide
    * Media Ethics / Media Governance: Comparative Approach
    * Media Discourse / Media Diversity: Comparative Interdisciplinary Approach
    * Media and Public Opinion / Media and Public Relations: Who Shapes What?
    * Media and International Relations / Media and Modern warfare: Blurred
    * Interactions: Interdisciplinary Cross-Cultural Approach
    * Media and Public Policy / Media and the Political Sphere: Interdisciplinary Approach
    * New Trends in Journalism / Critical Media: Comparative Historical Perspectives
    * Media Research / Media Audiences / Media Effects: Interdisciplinary Approach

    Participation Fees: European Euro. 80

    Deadlines:

    - Abstract Submission: 25th February, 2011

    - Notification of Acceptance: 15th March, 2011

    - Submission of Final Papers Ready for Publication: 13th May, 2011 for publication in the Edited Book of the Forum Proceedings. Manuscripts: WORD Form, 7000 words maximum.

    Submissions:

    - Submissions of abstracts are to be done by e-mail to: an.medialiteracyforum@gmail.com; Cc: Dr. Abdelhamid NFISSI and Dr. Drissia CHOUIT nfissichouit@gmail.com

    - Maximum length of abstracts is 300 words.

    The following details are required:

    -Name, title (Dr., Prof., etc.) organizational affiliation, postal address and e-mail address

    - Title of the paper

    - Short biographical sketch of each participant, including main publications, field work and participation in national and international scientific events, awareness-raising campaigns, (pilot) projects aimed to enhance media and information literacy at national and regional levels, etc.

    Please note that applicants whose papers are accepted for presentation in the forum are responsible for their round ticket to Fez, Morocco, while the organizers will take in charge accommodation and food for all participants from 11th to 13th May, 2011.

  • Call for Papers for Research Initiative on Young Children in Black Immigrant Families (honorarium: $1,000 to $3.000)

    Deadline: 15 December 2010

    The Migration Policy Institute’s (MPI) National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy is embarking on a research initiative to examine the well-being and development of young children in Black immigrant and refugee families. The purpose of the initiative is to encourage and build understanding of an important and understudied population: children in the first decade of life (birth to age 10) with Black foreign-born parents from Africa or the Caribbean.

    To this end, we are soliciting papers by established and/or young scholars in child development, psychology, education, sociology, anthropology, demography, economics, and public policy. We welcome papers documenting how these children are faring in the United States and papers offering international comparisons with how young children in Black immigrant and refugee families are faring in Canada, the United Kingdom, and/or other European countries. Core support for this project has been provided by the Foundation for Child Development (FCD).

    Paper Topics

    The project’s broad areas of inquiry include, but are not limited to, the topics below. We welcome and encourage suggestions for other topics and population-specific case studies. The well-being and development of young children in Black refugee families, including the resilience and risk factors (high parental expectations, discrimination, e.g.) that influence well-being. Geographic patterns of settlement in receiving countries, including metropolitan area clustering, segregation within cities, quality of education in settlement communities, and availability of health and social services for children. Family and parental resources, including family structure, parental human capital, and parental employment. Health and well-being of young children in Black immigrant families, including family income, poverty, housing conditions, food security, health, and child care arrangements and their implications for policy. Development and preparation for school of young children in these families and their implications for policy.

    Submission deadline: December 15, 2010

    Educational progress and language acquisition of children in these families from birth to age 10 and their implications for policy. Comparative studies of Black immigrant families in other settlement countries, such as Canada, France, Spain, and the United Kingdom.

    Research Symposium

    Selected papers will be presented at an interdisciplinary research symposium for scholars of this topic, hosted by MPI and FCD in early summer 2011. Research will be widely disseminated as MPI publications and/or MPI will work with authors to publish their research in academic journals.

    Timeframe for Paper Proposals

    We request that all submissions be made by December 15, 2010.

    Submission Guidelines

    Please submit the following:

    Preliminary title Abstract up to 500 words Brief description of data sources (qualitative or quantitative) Brief description of population studied (age range, country of origin, and country of settlement) and, if applicable, any comparison populations Current CV or brief biography (100 words or less) indicating any current affiliations for each author*

    *Papers with multiple authors will be considered.

    Honorarium

    An honorarium of $1,000 to $3,000 will be offered for completed papers presented at the symposium.

    Papers are to be completed by May 15, 2011, with the symposium held in mid-June 2011.
    Submit paper proposals and any questions electronically to:

    Kristen McCabe
    Migration Policy Institute
    kmccabe@migrationpolicy.org
    202-266-1933

  • Call for Submissions: New Media, Public Opinion and Democracy in the Arab and Muslim World

    Deadline: 15 March 2011

    Call for Papers: Special Issue

    NEW MEDIA, PUBLIC OPINION & DEMOCRACY IN THE ARAB & MUSLIM WORLD

    Satellite TV and the internet have transformed the media landscape in the Arab and Muslim world. Although their development is a recent phenomenon, new media have not only opened up new opportunities for journalism but also empowered audiences and civil society organizations with unprecedented platforms for 'free' expression and social activism. The recent social revolution in Tunisia and the current ongoing protests in Egypt are said to be fuelled by social media networks and satellite TV.

    The Wikileaks phenomenon is said to have empowered the public with a wealth of secret information previously hardly if not impossible to obtain about governments in the Arab world. New technologies are also said to have reinvigorated a sense of an 'Arab transnational public sphere' and a 'pan-Arab market'; brought together the concerns of Arab audiences and united a region geographically vast.

    The aim of this special issue of the Journal of Arab and Muslim Media Research is to develop and publish a timely collection of papers representing current research in this area. Of particular interest are papers that present empirical findings of fieldwork. Papers welcomed in this special issue include, but are not necessarily confined to the following topics:

    - Blogging and bloggers as citizen journalists; are bloggers making a social difference?
    - Social media and the people's revolution in Tunisia
    - Satellite TV and the internet as cites of resistance/alternative media or sets of 'censored national enclosures'
    -E-campaigning and political/social groups in Egypt and other Arab countries
    - Wikileaks, political corruption and the right to know
    - How are activists/the youth interacting with platforms like 'Youtube', 'Myspace', 'Flicker', 'Faithtube', 'Facebook' and 'Blogging' to pursue their objectives?
    - The internet, development and civil society in the Arab and Muslim world
    - Women bloggers and the mediation of women issues
    - Youth subcultures and new media
    - In the absence of real democracy in some parts of the Arab and Muslim world is new media creating a new form of social/political capital: e-democracy?
    - What functions are the internet and satellite TV playing in mobilizing public opinion?

    Submissions:

    Manuscripts to be considered for publication should be submitted via e-mail. Each manuscript should be no more than 8500 words in main text and 150 words in abstract. All submissions will be blind-refereed. Please refer to the Submission Guidelines for the Journal of Arab and Muslim Media Research before you formally send your paper. Please make sure that your paper includes the following: Title, name of the author, affiliation, complete contact details, abstract, keywords, author's bio, main body, bibliography etc. The style referencing must follow the Harvard system all the way through.

    Deadline for submission of full papers: 15th March 2011

    Please send your completed papers to:

    Dr Noureddine Miladi (Editor)
    School of Social Sciences, University of Northampton,
    Park Campus, Northampton NN2 7AL, UK
    E-mail: noureddine.miladi@northampton.ac.uk

    Journal website: http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-journal,id=148/

    Submission Guidelines:

    The Journal of Arab and Muslim Media Research welcomes contributions from around the world about the above mentioned areas of enquiry. Manuscripts to be considered for publication should be submitted electronically, via e-mail, to the Editor. Each manuscript should be no more than 8500 words in main text and 150 words in abstract. Review articles should be between 1500-2000 words and interviews should approximately be 3000 words. All submissions will be blind-refereed.

    Articles should be original and not under consideration by any other publication. They should be written in a clear and concise style. Margins should be at least 2.5cm all round and pagination should be continuous. Full articles and all correspondence with respect to any aspect of
    editorial policy should always be addressed to the Editor on e-mail: nmiladi@cammro.com.

  • Call for Papers: Canada and the African Diasporic Literary Imaginary

    Deadline: 30 September 2010

    Call for Papers
    Canada and the African Diasporic Literary Imaginary
    42nd Annual Convention, Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
    April 7-10, 2011
    New Brunswick, NJ – Hyatt New Brunswick
    Host Institution: Rutgers University

    This panel invites scholars to investigate the presence of Canada in an African Diasporic literary imaginary, focusing on writers who examine black subjects and subjectivities within Canadian landscapes (both urban and rural), but also attending to representations of African Canadians and the idea of Canada in literature from across the diaspora.

    Canada occupies a unique space in the black literary imagination. The critical success of Canadian writers such as Dionne Brand, Austin Clarke and Lawrence Hill belies the complex relationships between African Canadian writers and the nation, between black bodies and Canadian landscapes. Canadian history often obscures or ignores the history of blacks in Canada; and in visual and popular cultures, black people are often conspicuously absent from Canadian settings. Similarly, ‘African Canada’ is often elided from conceptions of the African Diaspora. And yet the history of Canada within the African Diaspora is rich and diverse. For American slaves, Canada was literally a place of freedom, as reflected in the writings of Frederick Douglass and Benjamin Drew, author of ‘The Refugee: Narratives of Fugitive Slaves in Canada Related by Themselves (1856)’. In later texts such as Ishmael Reed’s ‘Flight to Canada’, Canada continued to be figured as a counterpoint to the virulent racism of the United States. Much could be said about the sharp contrast between these African American utopian ideas and the reality of the black experience in Canada.

    In the 1960s and 70s, Canada continued to be a place where multifarious diasporic identities, politics and experiences could be imagined and articulated. Increased immigration from the Caribbean attracted visits from prominent intellectuals including Walter Rodney and C.L.R. James who brought with them radical discourses on black nationalism, revolution, and decolonization.

    Yet, these African American ideas often stood in sharp contrast to Canadian reality. A number of questions arise from the problem of Canada in the black literary imagination. How has the erasure of the history of slavery and the black presence in Canada affected African Canadian writers? What does the literal space of Canada mean for African Canadian writers? What does Canada mean for African American writers and writers in other parts of the black diaspora? These questions are linked to pressing issues of geography, citizenship and nationalism.

    Please send 300-500 word abstracts and brief biographical statements to Kristin Moriah at kmoriah@gc.cuny.edu.

    Deadline: September 30, 2010*

    Please include with your abstract:

    Name and Affiliation
    Email address
    Postal address
    Telephone number

    The 42nd Annual Convention will feature approximately 360 sessions, as well as pre-conference workshops, dynamic speakers and cultural events. Details and the complete Call for Papers for the 2011 Convention will be posted in June: www.nemla.org.

    Interested participants may submit abstracts to more than one NeMLA session; however panelists can only present one paper (panel or seminar). Convention participants may present a paper at a panel and also present at a creative session or participate in a roundtable. Do not accept a slot if you may cancel to present on another session.

  • Call for Papers on Kwame Nkrumah for African Philosophy

    Deadline: 31 January 2011

    A call for a special issue on Kwame Nkrumah. The issue will be edited by Mogobe Ramose.

    Deadline for submission is January 31, 2011.

    The rising sun of 2009 marked the hundredth anniversary of the birth of the shining black star, Kwame Nkrumah. His native Ghana celebrated the anniversary in many ways. The stature and meaning of Nkrumah for Ghana, Africa and the rest of the world warrants a special celebration by scholars, activists, politicians and everyone around the globe to reflect upon the humanity and the complexity of one of the great sons of Africa, Kwame Nkrumah.

    Accordingly, we make a call for papers – not more than six thousand words in length - focused on the meaning and impact of the philosophy and action of Nkrumah upon Ghana, Africa and the rest of the world. The papers should reach us by 31 January, 2011.

    The just ended FIFA world cup in South Africa witnessed the heroic performance of the team of Ghana holding out the promise of greater things for Africa. It is a timely reminder of Nkrumah’s philosophy of sports underling the importance of a healthy body and mind and, proclaiming sports as the site of learning that “all Africans are brothers with a common destiny”. The FIFA world cup on the soil of Africa is perhaps an inadvertent endorsement of this philosophy extending it to all human beings in this our planet Earth.

    Submit Your Paper Online for the Special Issue for African Philosophy:

  • Call for Applicants: ASAUK Writing Workshop for African Scholars (venue: Nigeria)

    Deadline: 15 March 2011
    Contact: d.kerr@bham.ac.uk

    Call for Applications: ASAUK Writing Workshop for African Scholars

    26-28 April 2011 in Nigeria

    The African Studies Association of the UK (ASAUK) is currently organising a writing workshop in Nigeria to assist young scholars to prepare material for publication in international journals. The ASAUK is committed to enhancing academic links between British and African institutions and to increasing representation in British journals of work by scholars based in Africa. Previous ASAUK workshops in the UK and in other parts of Africa have been extremely well received and there has been a strong demand for places. The workshop will bring the editors of three UK-based Africanist journals, namely Africa, Journal of Modern African Studies (JMAS) and Review of African Political Economy (ROAPE) to Nigeria in order to support doctoral and recently post-doctoral students as well as junior staff based in Nigerian universities in submitting articles for publication in international Africanist journals. The participating journals have asked prospective participants of the workshop to submit articles which address the journal themes outlined below. A second aim of the workshop is to bring together Nigerian and UK-based journal
    editors to discuss shared interests and problems, and to explore possibilities for future co-operation.

    The workshop is planned to take place in Nigeria on 26-28 April 2011, and it will be organised in collaboration with the Osun State University (UNIOSUN) at Osogbo, a peaceful city famous for its artistic community roughly 120 miles northeast of Lagos. The workshop organisers will provide accommodation and food for the duration of the workshop. Applicants may also be eligible for the reimbursement of travel costs.

    The African Studies Association of the UK looks forward to hearing from you.

    For more information, please see the Applicant details below or contact Mr David Kerr (d.kerr@bham.ac.uk).

    Applicant Details

    Eligibility: Scholars of all nationalities who have spent the past 3 years at a Nigerian university.

    Deadline for receipt of applications: 15 March 2011.

    In order to qualify for the workshop, scholars are invited to send in the following documents: A short CV including their name, gender, academic career and position at their current institution. A completed, full-length article (5,500-7,000 words) based on original research. Please indicate clearly whether you are addressing a theme and which journal you are targeting. If you would like to stay for the second part of the workshop, please give information about the journal you wish to represent. If you wish to apply for a reimbursement of travel costs, you must also submit an estimate of expenses (least expensive option, by road only).

    Selection criteria: The primary selection criterion is the quality of the article submitted. The organisers also aim to attract scholars from institutions in the different geographical regions/ zones of Nigeria. Senior scholar are invited to apply if they feel this workshop would benefit them, but once the above criteria have been addressed, preference will be given to junior scholars.

    Please send applications electronically to Mr David Kerr and Dr Insa Nolte at the University of Birmingham, email addresses: d.kerr@bham.ac.uk and m.i.nolte@bham.ac.uk.

    Journal themes

    Africa

    Africa encourages an interdisciplinary approach, involving humanities, social sciences, and environmental sciences. The journal aims to give increased attention to African production of knowledge, highlighting the work of local African thinkers and writers, emerging social and cultural trends ‘on the ground', and links between local and national levels of society. At the same time, it maintains its commitment to the theoretically informed analysis of the realities of Africa's own cultural categories. For this workshop, we would be particularly interested in papers that focus on some aspect of local intellectual or cultural production – e.g. community newspapers, local histories, posters, pamphlets, oral genres or private video entrepreneurs. For more information, please see http://www.internationalafricaninstitute.org/journal.html

    JMAS

    The Journal of Modern African Studies places a very high emphasis on original research studies, usually derived from fieldwork in Africa, which at the same time help to illuminate issues currently affecting Africa. We do not publish general overviews, literature reviews, purely theoretical articles, or polemics. We do whatever we can to encourage African authors, and especially scholars based in Africa and carrying out research there. The journal is however internationally refereed, and accepted papers have to meet the standards required.We range broadly across the social sciences, though with a concentration in political science, sociology, gender, economics and international relations, while insisting that papers must be sufficiently non-technical to be read with interest and understood by Africanists working in other disciplines. We do not normally publish papers that fall into the fields of history, linguistics or literary studies, unless these illuminate issues of broader current concern. We do not publish studies on the African diaspora, but would be very interested in research into the impact of the diaspora on developments within Africa. For more information, please see http://assets.cambridge.org/MOA/MOA_ifc.pdf

    ROAPE

    Since 1974, ROAPE has provided radical analysis of trends, issues and social processes in Africa. It pays particular attention to the political economy of inequality, exploitation and oppression, whether driven by global forces or local ones such as class, race, ethnicity and gender), and to broadly materialist interpretations of change. It sustains a critical analysis of the nature of power and the state in Africa in the context of capitalist globalisation. For more information, please see http://www.roape.org/

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