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CFP: 2023 IKSU-K-UNIFICATION FRIENDS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE FOR YOUNG SCHOLARS




Tracing the Steps Toward Korean Unification: Learning from the Past to Prepare for the Future,

2023 IKSU International Young Scholars Conference


The International Institute of Korean Studies (IKSU) at the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) is pleased to announce the 2-day 2023 IKSU International Young Scholars Conference. The conference aims to give junior scholars in the field of Korean studies and unification studies an opportunity to present their research, strengthen ties with other young scholars, and raise awareness of the unification issue in the Korean peninsula among the youth.

The conference aims to facilitate informed, interdisciplinary discussions on the potential benefits and challenges of Korean Unification by looking into how we can learn from the past toward preparing for the future. We are inviting young scholars aged between 19-34 including early career researchers who obtained their PhD degree in the recent five years and PhD candidates who are near to completion of their PhD programmes doing their research in relation to the theme of the forum.
  • Submission Details: Abstract Submission Deadline (max. 500 words): 15 October 2023
  • Acceptance Notice: 31 October 2023
  • Full Paper Submission Deadline (min. 4,000 words including references): 20 November 2023
  • Conference Dates: 1-2 December 2023.
Presenters will receive an honorarium of KRW 400,000 upon successful submission of a policy brief following the conference. Participants are expected to summarize their research into a 1-2 page-long policy brief that will be published through the Northern England Policy Centre for the Asia Pacific (NEPCAP) website.

CFP: "NIGHT WORK" INTERNATIONAL LABOR AND WORKING-CLASS HISTORY JOURNAL

Night Work Across Time & Place” Special Issue of



The International Labor and Working-Class History Journal (ILWCH) invites contributions for a special thematic issue that will examine histories of night work, broadly speaking. Shiftwork and overnight “graveyard shifts” have proliferated since the 19th century, particularly with the rise of industrial manufacturing and the service industry. This special issue will historicize such night work and explore both its antecedents and aftermaths. In particular, we encourage submissions that examine the gendered, racial, or class contexts of night work as well as its social, psychological, and physical effects. We welcome contributions from any geographical or chronological field.
  • Possible themes to consider:Home or piecemeal work (and its gendered history);
  • Janitorial or other forms of ‘unseen’ work done at night and/or in the dark;
  • Activism and labor organizing around shift or night work;
  • Health and medical work, including nighttime child care and nursing;
  • The legal history of work hours, night shifts, and their regulation;
  • Health implications of night shiftwork on the body;
  • The night-time, or nightlife, economy and its evolution;
  • Nocturnal mobility and geographies.
The co-editors are actively looking to represent a wide range of historical periods and places, and thus encourage manuscripts focusing on worker communities in Africa, Asia, Latin America, Canada, the Caribbean, the United States, and Europe. Along with conventional 6,000-8,000-word manuscript submissions (including footnotes), this issue will also consider shorter photoessays, transcribed interviews with workers and/or employers, and notes from the field.

Prospective authors should send an abstract of 500-1,000 words, along with their email and institutional or work affiliation, to the co-editors by October 15, 2023. If invited to submit a piece, the deadline for a completed manuscript for peer review will be December 1, 2023.

All queries and submissions should indicate that they are for the “Night Work” special issue and sent to:


Lori A. Flores, Stony Brook University (lori.flores@stonybrook.edu)


Contact Information

Allyson Brantley, abrantley@laverne.edu

Lori A. Flores, lori.flores@stonybrook.edu

CFP: "M32 - CITIES AND THE ENVIRONMENT UNDER TWENTIETH CENTURY AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES", EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION FOR URBAN HISTORY (EAUH) CONFERENCE




“M32 - Cities and the Environment under Twentieth Century Authoritarian Regimes”, 



Short abstract

This panel focuses on the environmental history of cities with particular focus on authoritarian regimes across the globe. The panel aims to incorporate papers analyzing the history of cities and the environment on both the political left and right starting from the Russian Revolutions until the collapse of the Soviet Union.


Session content

When historians of technology or the environment have investigated the environmental consequences of authoritarian regimes, they have frequently argued that authoritarian regimes have been unable to produce positive environmental results or adjust successfully to global structural change, if they have shown any concern for the environment at all. Put another way, the scholarly consensus holds that authoritarian regimes on both the left and the right generally have demonstrated an anti-environmentalist bias, and when opposed by environmentalist social movements, have succeeded in silencing those voices.

In contrast, this panel takes as its points of departure that authoritarian societies have developed environmentalist policies of their own, that environmentalism is a protean ideology, and that the sets of structures and priorities prevailing in the West represent only some of many possibilities.

The present panel aims to investigate the above described theory on the environmental history of cities with particular focus on authoritarian regimes across the globe. This panel aims to incorporate papers analyzing the history of cities and the environment on both the political left and right starting from the Russian Revolutions until the collapse of the Soviet Union. Although the panel's chronology is linked to the existence of the USSR, its focus is not confined solely to socialist cities, rather it aims to facilitate discussion between scholars working with rightwing and leftwing authoritarian regimes across the globe from Latin America, Asia and the Pacific, Africa and Europe.

Suggested themes for individual papers include:
  • Politics and the environment in authoritarian regimes
  • Urban planning under authoritarian regimes (construction/destruction, new concepts) and its environmental dimension
  • Authoritarian regimes, cities and economic growth (impact of industry, commerce and networks)
  • Water and the city (Urban water bodies, Municipal and industrial water and wastewater)
  • Consumption and waste; waste management in authoritarian regimes
  • Urban space, environmental disasters and their solutions in authoritarian regimes
  • War, war preparation and the urban environment
  • Air quality: heating, transport, industry
  • Animals in the city
  • Leisure and green spaces
  • Suburbanization, motorization,
  • City and its surroundings: urban metabolism
Any other theme that fits the proposed methodological and chronological frame of the panel is welcome!

Please submit your proposals by September 30, 2023.

Kindly see the submittal guidelines.


Contact Email

cesh@osu.cz

CFP: "AFRICA-ASIA AND THE WORLD" INTERNATIONAL AND INTER-TRANS-DISCIPLINARY OFFLINE AND ONLINE CONFERENCE


“Africa-Asia and the World”

International and Inter-Trans-Disciplinary Offline and Online Conference


AFRICA-ASIA AND THE WORLD: WHAT RELATIONS FOR GLOBAL PEACE, JUSTICE, PROSPERITY AND SUSTAINABILITY? 

International and Inter-Trans-Disciplinary Offline and Online Conference of:
  • Inauguration of African-Asian and International Studies Institute AFRASI;
  • Commemoration of the 65th Anniversary of the 1958 Accra All-African People’s Conference Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, December 13-15, 2023 

Abstracts to be submitted online up to September 30, 2023 at here.

Contact: secretariat-afrasi@e-group.bandungspirit.org


INTRODUCTION

At the beginning of the new millennium, Africa remains a place where economic, geopolitical, and cultural interests from all over the world converge. Diverse summits with Africa have been organized regularly to shape the exchanges of the continent with global players (China-Africa/FOCAC, Japan-Africa/TICAD, India-Africa, Korea-Africa, Turkiye-Africa, Iran-Africa, Indonesia-Africa, Regular Commemorative Conferences of the Asian-African Conference, USA-Africa, EU-Africa, etc.). Another proof of the continent's importance on the world stage is the increasing presence of Asian countries such as China, India and Japan, or the return of historically relevant players such as Russia, not to mention the attempts of former colonizing powers to maintain their influence. Thus, the suspicious views of relations between Africa and Asia (especially China) and Eurasia (especially Russia) presented in the Western mainstream media do not do justice to the historical ties between Africa and Asia/Eurasia since at least the Bandung Conference (April 1955) characterized by their common struggles against colonialism and for independence.

Several points of convergence make it fair to focus on the Africa-Asia tandem. From a historical point of view, these are the continents that, despite European colonial ambitions, have retained their demographic and cultural bases, unlike other areas such as America and Australia, where colonial conquest and occupation were accompanied by the genocide of indigenous peoples, the suppression of their cultures and the installation of European culture, and where the descendants of colonial rulers and European immigrants continue to rule the areas to the present day. Moreover Africa and Asia shared common painful experiences of being colonized by European imperial power and common struggles for their independence at the same historical period (19th-20th centuries). In a world marked by global and diverse crises, Africa, and Asia, being distinctive in term of civilization from Western-dominated ones, have the potential to offer alternatives for rethinking their relationship with the world, based on imaginations, cultures, and development models different from the Western-led globalization. Considering demographic growth, projections predict that 80% of the world's population will be in Africa and Asia by the end of this century; this could be seen as a problem but also as an opportunity to take advantage of a tremendous human capital for the development of Asia and Africa, and concomitantly of the world. In economic terms, Asia has become Africa's leading trading partner. The search for new economic and political partners, particularly in Africa, signals that both continents will strengthen existing ties and find new avenues for cooperation. Convergence between Asia and Africa is also clear since they are confronted with common challenges, which includes poverty eradication and creation of social justice, security issues, the management of ethnic and religious diversity, and exploitation of natural resources for sustainable development and prosperity of people.

The international and inter-trans-disciplinary conference "Africa-Asia and the World: What Relations for Global Peace, Justice, Prosperity and Sustainability?" aims to reflect on these relations between Africa and Asia, as well as those between the African-Asian tandem and the rest of the world. Based on the diversity of approaches and disciplines of the speakers, this conference will be an opportunity to better understand and recommend policies of political, economic, and cultural relations to be developed between Africa and Asia, and with the rest of the world, to build a common future, based on more peace, justice, prosperity and sustainability.


ISSUES

The followings are non-exhaustive issues expected to be raised in the conference:
  • Before and beyond hegemony of the West: what were and will be Africa-Asia relations?
  • Africa-Asia and Africa-Eurasia: what convergence and what divergence?
  • Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America: do they continue to be the peripheries of the West?
  • Africa-Asia Business Development: what challenges and what perspectives?
  • MSME (Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises) in Africa and Asia: what role in national economy and what mutual exchanges are possible?
  • BRICS summit in Africa: what impacts on Africa?
  • NAM, BRICS, Africa, Asia and Latin America: what synergy for a global restructuring?
  • The West and Asia in Africa: what interests and what risks for Africa?
  • The summits of China-Africa, India-Africa, Japan-Africa, Korea-Africa, Turkiye-Africa, Iran-Africa, Indonesia-Africa, EU-Africa, USA-Africa: what perspectives for Africa?
  • FESPACO and BIFF (Busan International Film Festival): what relations are mutually and globally beneficial?
  • African, Asian and American Tropical Forests: what challenges and perspectives for economy and ecology?
  • Black-lives-matter: racism against African and Asian in the West, does it continue?
  • Tradition, Culture and Religion: what role in patriarchy and gender issues?
  • Indigenous and Imported Religions: what challenges and what perspectives for a peaceful co-existence or fusion?
  • Languages and Nations: what place for former colonial languages in national independence and sovereignty?
  • The Afrodescendant in America, Asia, Australia, Europe, Pacific and Oceania: who are they and what do they become?
  • Demography, Migration, Urbanisation, Ruralisation: what planning and what mitigation?
  • The G20 and the 20 poorest countries in the world: what relations?
  • The G20 Summits: what impacts on Africa?
Other relevant issues will be welcome.


OFFLINE AND ONLINE PARTICIPANTS

The conference encourages the participation of scholars from a wide range of scientific disciplines (area studies, cultural studies, ecology, economics, geography, history, humanities, languages, management, political and social sciences...) and practitioners from diverse professional fields (business, civil society, education, enterprise, government, management, parliament, public policy, social and solidarity movements...) as well as artists, writers, journalists and activists of social and solidarity movements, based in diverse geographical areas (North, South, East, West, Central AFRICA; North, Central, South AMERICA; the CARIBBEAN; AUSTRALIA; North, East, West, Central, South and Southeast ASIA; Central, Eastern, Southern, Northern, Western EUROPE; RUSSIA, PACIFIC, OCEANIA...).


GUIDELINES FOR PRESENTER CANDIDATES

The selection of presenters is based on the abstract and the basic personal data of the presenter candidates in respect to the following dates:

1) Deadline of abstract (200-300 words) submission: September 30, 2023
2) Deadline of full paper (2000-3000 words / 5-6 pages) submission: October 31, 2023
3) Notification for the selected presenters: progressively from July 2023. The earlier an abstract is submitted, the earlier its author will get notified, which is important for a travel planning.

The abstract is to be submitted online.


FINANCING

The organising committee does not provide travel grant to any participant. The presenters as well as simple participants of the conference are supposed to find the necessary fund for their own participation (visa, international and national transport, accommodation).


Contact Information

Darwis Khudori, Faculty of International Affairs, University Le Havre Normandy, France

Contact Email: secretariat-afrasi@e-group.bandungspirit.org

II CURSO "REFLEXIONES SOBRE LA CULTURA ASIÁTICA" UNIVERSIDAD CARLOS III DE MADRID


II Curso “Reflexiones sobre la cultura asiática”,

La cultura audiovisual en Asia, Cine, Anime, Videojuegos. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid


El Instituto Universitario del Cine Español (UC3M) con la ayuda financiera de la Fundación Eurasia celebra un curso cuyo objetivo principal es ofrecer a los estudiantes una amplia gama de conferencias sobre la cultura audiovisual asiática y sus diferentes contextos históricos, políticos, económicos y sociales.

El curso es una oportunidad única para proporcionar al alumnado un contacto de primera mano a la cultura audiovisual en Asia, impartida por parte de profesores expertos de un amplio reconocimiento internacional. Serán temas de principal interés el cine, anime, videojuegos, además de aproximaciones a las raíces culturales y al tejido industrial asiático.


Información:
  • Consejo de Dirección: Manuel Palacio, Farshad Zahedi y Sonia Dueñas
  • Idioma: Bilingüe. Necesario nivel de inglés (B2)
  • Modalidad: Presencial.
  • Precio: Gratuito
  • Duración: 34 horas
  • Fechas de impartición: Del 15 de septiembre al 15 de diciembre de 2023
  • Horario: Ocho sesiones: viernes de 16:00 a 18:00 horas. Cuatro sesiones: viernes de 16:00 a 20:00 horas.
  • Plazas: 40
  • Plazo de Admisión: Abierto hasta el 30 de septiembre de 2023
    • Rellena el formulario de admisión aquí.

Programa:

Modulo1: Culturas asiáticas
  • La comunidad asiática (inglés)
  • La memoria cultural (español)
  • El futuro de la región asiática (inglés)
Modulo 2: Japón
  • Historia del cine en Japón (español)
  • La industria de la animación en Japón (español e inglés)
  • La industria del videojuego en Japón (español)
Modulo 3: Corea del Sur
  • La industria cinematográfica de Corea del Sur (español)
  • Las series de televisión y el fandom surcoreano (inglés)
  • Las industrias culturales en Corea del Sur (inglés)
Modulo 4: Cine en la región asiática
  • El cine chino y hongkonés (inglés)
  • La industria cinematográfica de Filipinas (inglés)
  • El arte visual y la representación de género en el cine iraní (español e inglés)
  • La historia del cine en Bombay (India) (inglés)