The European Conference on Arts & Humanities 2016

The European Conference on Arts & Humanities 2016

 ECAH2016
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About the Event

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The Waterfront Hotel, Brighton, United Kingdom

Monday, July 11 – Thursday, July 14, 2016

Abstract Submission Deadline: March 15, 2016

Registration Deadline for Presenters: June 15, 2016

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Publish before a global audience. Present in a supportive environment. Network and create new relationships. Hear the latest research. Experience the UK. Join a global academic community.

This international and interdisciplinary conference will again bring together a range of academics and practitioners to discuss new directions of research and discovery in the Arts & Humanities. As with IAFOR’s other events, ECAH2016 will afford the opportunity for renewing old acquaintances, making new contacts, and networking across higher education and beyond.

For the third consecutive year, the European Conference on Arts & Humanities will be held alongside The European Conference Literature and Librarianship, The European Conference on Media, Communication and Film and The European Conference on Cultural Studies. Registration for any one of these conferences will allow participants to attend sessions in the others.


ECAH2016 Conference Theme: “Justice”

The arts are ideally suited to reflect on justice. The various symbolic definitions of justice from the Fasces of ancient Rome to the status of the lady blindfolded and holding a set of scales puts an abstract ideal into a concrete and publicly recognizable form.

The arts can also be an effective device for dealing with some of the other more sinister ideas and practices that relate to justice, crime and punishment. In the past, even in what are now modern open societies barbaric forms of punishment were meted out to those found guilty of violating the law. Dostoyevsky’s novel Crime and Punishment was an exercise of engagement in a painful discussion of the possible moral justification for committing a serious crime for a higher purpose, including ridding the world of a worthless or evil individual whose resources might be put to better use. However, the implication that those who see the greater good may be permitted to act above the law does not sit comfortably with many critics. The plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler, although it failed taking lives of the conspirators including the young German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945), has never been given a universal moral imprimatur by those who hold a more pacifist outlook. Similarly, literature and the arts can look into the depths in a way that philosophical discussion is restricted to the conceptual level and religious discourse is better suited to symbolic reflections.

Other fields in the humanities are similarly preoccupied with justice: the political act of writing, whether literature or history, involves shaping narratives and contentious issues of meaning, to see truth as justice.

To expand the theme to the media: some modern TV series look into justice issues from a legal point of view, but also probe the psychology of many types of people on both sides of the law. What do these contribute to the better understanding of the complexities of human nature and human emotion exposed in them?

Does justice have a dark side, or is this the outcome of it being manipulated? Questions like these have been with us throughout the ages. Do they exist as boundaries for reflection rather than questions to be answered?

http://iafor.org/conferences/ecah2016/

National LGBTQ Task Force 2016 Creating Change Conference RFP -DUE 10/06/15

https://www.creatingchange.org/rfp/cc16_RFP_guidelines_b.pdf

Creating Change 2016

The 2016 Creating Change Conference is the nation’s preeminent political, leadership and skills-building conference for the LGBTQ movement. For 28 years, Creating Change has been the place where thousands of committed and passionate people have developed and honed their skills, celebrated victories, built community, and been inspired by visionaries of our and other movements for justice and equality. Creating Change builds our movement’s power from the ground up.

http://www.creatingchange.org/

2016 SAN FRANCISCO WRITERS CONFERENCE

2016 SAN FRANCISCO WRITERS CONFERENCE

A Celebration of Craft, Commerce and Community 
 
Thursday, February 11th through Sunday, February 14th, 2016
CLICK HERE to save your seat at the early rate.
 
Who will be at the 2016 at the SFWC?   Already signed on are Annie Barrows (Ivy and Bean series for children and The Truth According to Us), Jane Friedman (Publishing 101), Ann Packer (The Dive from Clausen’s Pier and The Children’s Crusade), and literary agents Katharine Sands (Making the Prefect Pitch) and Kristyn Keene (ICM Partners)…and there will be many more joining us. In fact, the San Francisco Writers Conference is proud to welcome over 100 outstanding presenters each year.  You will learn from bestselling authors, literary agents, editors and publishers from major publishing houses. With more than 24 respected literary agents looking for new clients at the SFWC, you may find the perfect agent for you and your book. You will connect with leaders in self-publishing and traditional publishing. There will be experts on book promotion, platform building, social media, and author websites. All of our presenters are in person at the event and eager to share their expertise and love of writing. As presenters are confirmed, they are posted with links to their websites.  Oh, we hope YOU will be there, too. Plan to join us NEXT Presidents’ Day Weekend. 
What will be happening at the SFWC? The event spans four days and it is packed with 80+ sessions featuring major presenters, agents and editors. There is copious networking with the people who can advance your writing career; a glorious opening gala and lots of social interaction with other writers; and evening Open Mic readings, poetry happenings, and pitch sessions.
Our signature SPEED DATING WITH AGENTS is $60 and only available to main conference attendees.
Whether you are working on your book, getting ready to publish it, or looking for ways to promote an already published book, this is the event  you need to attend.
  While we are busy planning next year’s event, here is broad outline of how it runs. The San Francisco Writers Conference starts on Thursday with an introductory pre-conference session with Michael Larsen and several optional Open Enrollment sessions in the evening. Then the conference runs through Sunday with an afternoon closing session.  If you can stay longer, there is a no-host dinner where you can keep the networking going with SFWC presenters, staff, and volunteers. On Monday there will be several post-event Open Enrollment sessions, too.  That’s the entire Presidents’ Day weekend..and then some!

Elegant keynote luncheons and networking breakfasts are included in the registration fee as is a Welcome Gala on Friday night. (It was sponsored by Blurb, Inc. for 2015.)  All attendees get a commemorative bag filled with writing goodies!

Book signings, exhibit booths with new services and advice for writers, and social gatherings with other writers add to the excitement of the event. No other writing conference offers so much social and one-on-one networking time with other writers and industry professionals. After-hours hosted open mics, poetry happenings, and pitch contests? You bet. Don’t want to eat dinner alone? There is a no-host dinner every night from Wednesday to Sunday at a different San Francisco restaurant. Our attendees tell us this friendly yet professional atmosphere is what makes SFWC the conference they choose to attend.

From start to finish, the San Francisco Writers Conference is designed to help you become a better, more professional writer.  Please join us for this world-class event.  

CLICK HERE to save your seat at the 2016 San Francisco Writers Conference.

Can’t believe the SFWC is really this good?  Check out Carla King’s PBS MediaShift articles about what you will learn and the self-publishing leaders you will meet the San Francisco Writers Conference! 2015 article  2013 article and 2012 article

Top Ten Reasons for Writers to Attend the 2016 San Francisco Writers Conference

      • Launch your writing career–or take it to a more professional level–with direction from bestselling authors and publishing experts.
      • Choose from a schedule of workshops, panels and sessions that fit your specific writing needs and goals.
      • Get your questions answered at the Ask-a-Pro session featuring New York and California editors…included in your registration fee.
      • Go to Speed Dating for Agents – Pitch your book ideas one-on-one in a room full of literary agents ($60 option for registered attendees only)
      • Receive free feedback on your work from freelance book editors.
      • Build your personal writing community at the Cafe Ferlinghetti with writers from all over the country…and foreign countries, too.
      • Talk with exhibitors and find out what’s new for writers.
      • Browse our onsite bookstore (produced by BookShop West Portal) and you can get the books you purchase autographed by the presenters.
      • Jump into pitch contests, “Open Mic” readings, and socialize at our Gala Welcome party. This is just a sampling of SFWC’s over-the-top networking opportunities during the event.
      • Stay awhile longer with our optional in-depth Pre Conference classes on Thursday, February 11th and Post Conference classes on Monday, February 15th to increase the value of the conference even more.

The MAIN CONFERENCE registration fee includes four days of sessions including Ask-A-Pro & keynotes, two breakfasts/two lunches, a Welcome Gala on Friday evening, Presenter Book Signing event on Saturday, unlimited networking, and more! Speed Dating with Agents is optional ($60). Transportation, accommodations, and incidentals are not included.

Optional Pre & Post Event In-Depth Writing Classes on Thursday, February 11th in the evening and all day Monday, February 15th taught by some of our favorite presenters. Classes will be announced first in the SFWC Newsletter.

Get your free SFWC Newsletter subscription by using the opt-in box at the top of the column on the right on the website….

Mid-America American Studies Association 2016 Conference

2016 Conference – Call for papers/sessions

Battleground Midwest
Defining Who and What Matters in the U.S. and Beyond

Mid-America American Studies Association 2016 Conference
March 4-5, 2016

Please submit paper abstracts and proposed panel, roundtable, poster and other sessions by November 1, 2015 using the form at the following link   https://americanstudies.ku.edu/2016-conference.

MAASAhandbill

35th Annual AIS Conference-CFP’s

Colleagues,

I would like to invite you to visit the website for the 35th Annual AIS Conference, which is now live and operational for the purpose of submitting proposals for presentations for the conference that will be at Miami University in November. You will find the website at http://www.miamioh.edu/aisconference2013.  Note that the deadline for submissions is March 30. We are looking forward to reviewing your ideas. Information on keynote speakers, registration, & accommodations will be added in the coming weeks.

Best wishes from Oxford, Ohio,

Nik Money

Western Program Director

Miami University

The Third Annual Center for Race, Gender and Social Justice Conference

Registration is now open for the Third Annual Center for Race, Gender and Social Justice Conference at the University of Cincinnati. Note that the keynote speaker is former Scholar-in-Residence Dr. Patricia Hill Collins. Students who are not in the Cincinnati area or are unable to attend may be able to get the proceedings of the conference.

More information here

Social Justice Feminism
October 25-27, 2012

(Registration Open)

Social justice feminism is about moving from theory to practice, bridging divides, and making a difference. Join advocates, activists, and scholars in this two-day conversation about women’s movements, building community, and advocating for social justice.

Conference Information

Visit the conference page for information about agenda, panels, and speakers.

Registration Fees

  • Professional Income > 100K=$250
  • Professional Income < 100K = $175
  • Student Registration Fee = $50
  • UC students/faculting attending less than 3 sessions = $0.00
    (UC students/faculty planning to attend less than 3 sessions can register for FREE.
    *Please note: This registration does NOT include meals and UC ID will be required upon registration at conference.)
  • Keynote Speakers

    Patricia Hill Collins
    Distinguished University Professor, University of Maryland, Charles Phelps Taft Distinguished Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Cincinnati

    Anika Rahman
    President and CEO, Ms. Foundation

Learner Wins Award at NCBS conference

Congratulations to UI&U alum Itibari Zulu for his outstanding work as Senior Editor of The Journal of Pan African Studies!

The Journal of Pan African Studies (www.jpanafrican.com), a trans-disciplinary open-access peer reviewed on-line scholarly journal devoted to the intellectual synthesis of research, scholarship and critical thought on the African experience, established in 1987 was recently awarded the ‘Fannie Lou Hamer & Kwame Nkrumah Award’ for outstanding academic leadership and service in the African world by the National Council for Black Studies (www.ncbsonline.org) at its 35th annual conference, held in Cincinnati, Ohio, March 16-19, 2011. The National Council for Black Studies is the leading organization of Black Studies professionals in the world, established in 1975 by African American scholars. The journal is edited by Itibari M. Zulu, and headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. The editor recently won an award for the editing work, as Senior Editor of The Journal of Pan African Studies was also inducted as a life member of The National Council for Black Studies at the Cincinnati, Ohio meeting.

Call for Proposals – Conference: “Advancing Publicly Engaged Philosophy”

Call for Proposals – Conference:  “Advancing Publicly Engaged Philosophy”
October, 6-8 2011, Washington Plaza Hotel, Washington, D.C.
Hosted by the Public Philosophy Network

The Public Philosophy Network invites proposals for a Fall 2011 meeting on Advancing Publicly Engaged Philosophy. The conference will include a mix of formal and informal sessions on various issues in practical philosophy, including concrete projects and political problems as well as discussions of larger philosophical questions about how to engage in philosophical activity outside the academy.

Please submit formal proposals (350-500 words) or informal suggestions for any one of the following formats by April 30, 2011.

Workshops: These sessions will be held the first full day of the conference and will include a mix of presentations and discussion on either substantive policy issues (for example, climate change, gay marriage, housing policy, welfare, etc.) or practical matters and best practices in public philosophy (for example, tenure hurdles for publicly engaged work, collaborative work, outreach programs in prisons, sources and methods for funding, etc.). Proposals should explain the nature of the interest area of the participant and how it is of concern to philosophy or public life. Identification of community-based practitioners who might be interested and able to participate in particular workshops is welcomed.

Table Sessions: These more informal, round table sessions will occur over lunch during the conference and are intended for discussion of issues that are less developed.  To propose a table session that you would help organize or lead, send a succinct statement of the problem and some ways in which philosophers could engage it.  Again, suggestions for community-based practitioners who might be interested and able to participate in particular workshops are welcomed.  The organizers will select a range of these sessions and assign tables for the conference; participants will also have the option of organizing table discussions during the conference.

Paper Presentation: Proposals are welcome for presentations on any area of philosophy relevant to public policy, advocacy, or activism, presentations which document past and ongoing projects in publicly engaged philosophy, or take up more theoretical questions on how to do publicly engaged work.

Organized Panels: Panels may be proposed on any number of themes:  Book sessions, philosophical issues in public philosophy, or policy problems and how philosophers may engage them.  These sessions could include a traditional set of three papers followed by discussion or more informal brief panelist remarks followed by interactive discussion among panelists and the audience.  Proposals should include names and affiliations of proposed panelists, the proposed format, and an abstract of what will be addressed.

In addition to taking up pressing political problems, conference-wide sessions will address larger questions in public philosophy:  In what ways is philosophy, when engaged with various publics, transformative, i.e., how can or does philosophy improve public life?  In what ways is philosophy transformed when engaged with various publics, i.e., how can public engagement inform philosophical concepts and understanding or alter disciplinary boundaries?  And, if public philosophy is valuable—then how might we promote and sustain its practice?

To submit a proposal, go to: http://publicphilosophynetwork.ning.com/page/conference-submissionsThe deadline is April 30, 2011.

Also welcomed are informal suggestions for possible workshops and table sessions. Participants may submit proposals for participation in workshops as well as either paper or panel sessions.   Volunteers to chair sessions or serve as discussants are also welcome.  Please notify us if you require accommodation for disability.

Public Philosophy Network Executive Committee

Andrew Light, George Mason University, Program Co-Chair

Noelle McAfee, Emory University, Program Co-Chair

Sharon Meagher, University of Scranton

Paul Thompson, Michigan State University

Nancy Tuana, Pennsylvania State University

For information about the Public Philosophy Network, go to http://publicphilosophynetwork.org

The conference is co-sponsored by the American Philosophical Association, George Mason University’s Center for Philosophy and Public Policy, Michigan State University’s Kellogg Chair of Agricultural Ethics, and Pennsylvania State’s Rock Ethics Institute.

Questions?  Please e-mail us at publicpn@gmail.com

Midwestern Graduate Liberal Studies Conference

Saturday, April 2, 2011
10:00am – 4:00pm
Hosted by Indiana University Kokomo

The Graduate Liberal Studies programs of Indiana University invite you to participate in the first annual Midwestern Graduate Liberal Studies Conference.

The theme of this year’s conference is Communities and Beyond. “Community” can be defined in many ways as we all find ourselves citizens of many different communities throughout our lives. Many of us hope to have an impact on our communities and graduate liberal studies programs often provide a means for achieving that goal.

The conference is designed to allow both formal and informal interactions among students and faculty from graduate liberal studies program in the Midwest. Conference schedule will include:

10:00 – 10:30 Registration (light breakfast provided)
10:30 – 12:00 Student Presentation Sessions
12:00 – 1:00 Lunch
1:15 – 2:15 Keynote Speaker
2:15 – 2:30 Break (light snack)
2:30 – 4:00 Student Presentation Sessions

Students from graduate liberal studies programs in the Midwest region are invited to present their work at the MGLSC. All types of work will be considered: empirical research, literature reviews, case studies, works of fiction, multimedia works, etc. Work that reflects the theme of the conference, Communities and Beyond, is especially welcome.

Confluence, the journal of the Association for Graduate Liberal Studies Programs, is underwriting an award for the best student presentation. The award winner will receive $50 and the paper will be published in an edition of Confluence.

Submission Deadline: March 1, 2011

Please follow this link (http://ius.edu/mls/mglsc/) to submit a 250 word abstract.

Notification of abstract acceptance will be distributed via e-mail by March 15.

Registration Deadline: March 20, 2011

All presenters and attendees (other MLS/MALS students and faculty) must register for the conference. Registration fee of $25 and registration information can be submitted after March 1 at the link above.

Please contact one of the members of the MGLSC organizing committee if you have any questions:

Local Host: Eva White, IU Kokomo (evawhite@iuk.edu)

Joseph Chaney, IU South Bend (jchaney@iusb.edu)

Deborah Finkel, IU Southeast (dfinkel@ius.edu)

Michael Kauffman, IU/PU Ft. Wayne (kaufmann@ipfw.edu)

Robert Mucci, IU Northwest (rmucci@iun.edu)