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[Fwd: Call for Papers: Regional Studies/Global Processes]

by christopher chase-dunn

10 November 1999 20:46 UTC






Forwarded from H-mexcio, enrique

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CALL FOR PAPERS
"Interactions: Regional Studies, Global Processes, and Historical
Analysis."
Conference, Thursday, March 1 to Saturday, March 3, 2001, at the Library
of
Congress

Organized by the American Historical Association, the World History
Association,  the Middle East Studies Association, the African Studies
Association, the Latin American Studies Association, the Conference on
Latin
American History, the Association for Asian Studies,  the Community
College
Humanities Association, and the Library of Congress,  this conference
aims
to go beyond traditional area studies and to cross the usual national,
geographical, and cultural boundary lines of scholarship by taking
explicitly comparative, cross-cultural, systematic, global, or other
appropriate approaches.  A major purpose is to explore contemporary
globalization in historical context and the historical processes that
drive
globalization, as well as the way in which the current dialectic of
globalization and fragmentation affects the definition of areas and
regions.

Each of the three conference days will focus on a particular rubric.
Day
One:  movement of peoples, ideas, and goods;  material interactions and
their sites.  Day Two: Networks and connections beyond the nation-state.

Day Three:  Reconfigurations of "area" and "state,"  their
implications and interactions.  More specifically, but not exclusively,
papers might consider some of the following themes and their possible
combinations:

Politics:  Dominant forms, countervailing forces, the rise and fall of
power centers. Alternatives to national states as units of historical
analysis, changing historical definitions of regions and sub-regions and

their historically changing relationship to one another in different
world orders.  Variants of imperialism and the place that different
regions
have had in them.

Economics:  Regional and social division of labor, social change,
formation
of "world systems," uneven development.  Cross-cultural trade and its
effects:  sites of trade, mechanisms of trade such as brokers, trade
diasporas, conventions governing exchange.  Imperialism and
colonialism.  Environmental, ecological, biological exchanges.

Social organization:  Global hierarchies of class, gender, race and
their
historical variations including the effects of contemporary
globalization.
Migrations, diasporas, and a gendered analysis of these.  Civil society
and
human rights, the political valence of non-governmental
organizations.

Culture:  Universalism vs. multiculturalism:  hegemonic ideologies such
as
religion, nationalism, free market, and the resistance to these.
Technological transfers, cultural exchanges and syncretism as
expressions of
dominance, of subversion, and of convergence.  Ethnogenesis.
Postcolonial issues of representation and identity politics.

Paper proposals of one or two pages along with a brief curriculum vitae
of
no more than two pages, should be sent, preferably electronically to:
ddoyle@theaha.org.  Otherwise by mail to Debbie Doyle, American
Historical
Association,  400 A Street,  SE,   Washington, DC 20003-3889.  Deadline:

March 15, 2000.

Signed:
Renate Bridenthal, Brooklyn College, CUNY and Jerry Bentley, University
of
Hawaii, Co-Chairs.
Debbie Ann Doyle
Project/Administrative Assistant
The American Historical Association
400 A St., S. E.
Washington, DC  20003
(202)544-2422 x132
Fax: (202)544-8307
Hours: Monday 10-5, Wednesday 10-1


*********************


Enrique Gili
Editor: Hispanic-American Village
The Minorities' Job Bank

http://www.minorities-jb.com/hispanic.htm



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