Thursday, March 13, 2008

CONF.- ASN 2008 Preliminary Program Now Online!

Distrib. by: Central-Eurasia-L - Announcement List for Central Eurasian Studies


CONF.- ASN 2008 Preliminary Program Now Online!

Posted by: Dominique Arel <darel@uottawa.ca>

113 Panels, More Than 350 Papers on the Balkans, Central Europe,
Russia, Ukraine, the Caucasus, Eurasia, Turkey, China, and Nationalism Studies

The preliminary program of the ASN 2008 World Convention can now be
downloaded at www.nationalities.org. The Convention, sponsored by the
Harriman Institute, will be held at Columbia University, New York,
April 10-12, 2008.

Those interested in attending the convention are invited to register
in advance by accessing a registration form www.nationalities.org and
sending it to Convention Assistant Director Justin Gilstrap by
attachment (jlg2160@columbia.edu) or by postal mail at Harriman
Institute, Columbia University, 420 W 118th St., New York, NY 10027,
United States (tel. 212 854 8487). Only registration with payment will
be accepted.

The program features 113 panels, not yet including a dozen film
screenings to be announced later. As usual, the Convention boasts the
most international lineup of panelists of North American-based
conventions, with more than half of the 333 scholars, from more than
40 countries, who will be delivering papers currently based outside of
the United States. More than 700 panelists and participants are
expected at the convention.

The Convention will be hosting a record twelve special panels
featuring new major books by Will Kymlicka (Multicultural Odysseys,
Oxford 2007), Ben Kiernan (Blood and Soil: A World History of Genocide
and Extermination from Sparta to Darfur, Yale 2007), Jacques Sémelin
(Purify and Destroy: The Political Uses of Massacre and Genocide,
Columbia 2007), Omer Bartov (Erased: Vanishing Traces of Jewish Life
in Present-Day Galicia, Princeton 2007), Anthony Oberschall (Conflict
and Peace Building in Divided Societies, Routledge 2007), Pieter
Judson (Guardians of the Nation: Activists on the Language Frontiers
of Imperial Austria, Harvard 2007), Charles King (The Ghost of
Freedom: A History of the Caucasus, Oxford 2008), Jessica
Allina-Pisano (The Post-Soviet Potemkin Village, Cambridge 2007),
Adeeb Khalid (Islam after Communism: Religion and Politics in Central
Asia, California 2007), Juliette Cadiot (Le laboratoire impérial, CNRS
2007) and Evangelia Adamou (Le patrimoine plurilingue de la Grèce,
Peeters 2008).

Several of these book panels are part of the section "Theories of
Nationalism," now in its fifth year at the ASN Convention, which
offers a platform for the latest trends in nationalism studies
worldwide. Twelve more panels appear in the Nationalism section, such
as "Warfare and Violence," "The Dynamics and Institutional Effects of
Separatist Violence," and "Multiculturalism, Rights, and the Theory of
Justice".

As always, the Convention offers a strong lineup of panels in all
regions of the former Communist world and Eurasia: Russia, the
Caucasus, Central Asia/Turkey/China, the Balkans, Ukraine and Central
Europe. Every year, the Program Committee has to be more selective in
devising the lineup, due to the increasing number of proposals. The
Balkans lead the way with 20 panels, followed by Central Europe­19,
Eurasia and Turkey­with a combined 16 panels, Ukraine and Belarus­14,
and Russia and the Caucasus­11. Eleven panels appear in the "Thematic"
section. Special roundtables on the new international status of
Kosovo, the International Criminal Tribunal on the former Yugoslavia
(ICTY), the fate of the Orange Revolution, a dialogue between Armenian
and Azeri scholars over Nagorno-Karabakh, political scientists and
ethnography, as well as panels on the geopolitics of energy, EU
enlargement, and migration among the highlights of the program.

The Convention will also feature a film lineup, which will be announced later.

Since 2005, the ASN Convention is acknowledging excellence in graduate
studies research by offering Awards for Best Doctoral Papers in five
sections: Russia/Ukraine/Caucasus, Central Asia/Eurasia, Central
Europe, Balkans, and Nationalism Studies. The winners at the 2007
Convention were Connie Robinson (New School U, Sociology, Balkans) for
"Constructing Allies: The National Discourse of the Yugoslav
Committee", Zsuzsanna Magdo (U of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, History,
Central Europe) for "In Search of the True Hungarian", Judith Beyer
(Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Anthropology, Eurasia)
for "Imagining the State: How Perceptions of the State Influence
Customary Law in the Kyrgyz the Kyrgyz Aksakal Courts", Tammy Lynch
(Boston U, History, Ukraine) for "Building a Revolution: Elite Choice
and Opposition Tactics in Pre-Orange Ukraine" and Wendy Pearlman
(Harvard U, Political Science, Nationalism) for "The Nation in
Fragments: Internal Unity and Nationalist Conflict in Three
Palestinian Uprisings".

For practical information regarding the convention, please contact
Gordon Bardos (gnb12@columbia.edu, 212 854 8487). For information on
panels, please contact Dominique Arel (darel@uottawa.ca).

We look forward to seeing you at the convention!

Cordially,
Dominique Arel, ASN President
Gordon N Bardos, Convention Executive Director
Sherrill Stroschein, Program Chair
on behalf of the ASN Convention Organizing Committee


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