CFP: Kinship as Exclusion AAA Panel DUE March 21st

2014 AAA Panel Call for Papers

Kinship as Exclusion

Deadline: March 21st 2014

Organizers:

Geoffrey Hughes (gfhughs@umich.edu)

Sandhya K. Narayanan (sandkn@umich.edu)

Discussants:

Janet Carsten

Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology

University of Edinburgh

Susan McKinnon

Professor and Chair of Anthropology

University of Virginia

           Discussions of kinship and family, both in popular culture and more scholarly accounts, tend to turn on themes of love, connection and the formation of new social bonds and support networks. This is reflected in anthropological definitions of kinship that emphasize “mutuality of being” or “shared substance.” However, kinship and family also have a darker side: violence, disconnection and the breaking of bonds. Take, for instance, the biblical account of kinship in which the first family (Adam and Eve) produces the first murder (Cain and Abel). What is lost in accounts of kinship when its inclusionary aspects become divorced from its exclusionary aspects? Clearly, it will not suffice to replace the tendency to view kinship as positive with a tendency to view it as negative, but how can research on kinship productively engage with its ambivalence as a social institution? How can we enrich ethnographic accounts of kinship by paying attention to the fact that, when kinship determines the distribution of labor, property and other resources, people may be forced to confront a zero-sum proposition? The provision of care to some people means less care for others; the provision of a share of inheritance may diminish the amount available to others; offers of mutual defense to some could mean the denial of that offer of mutual defense for others. In these situations, what are the factors that help or coerce people to make such divisive decisions? Who is excluded and what exactly are the categories of kin that emerge through kinship’s inclusionary and exclusionary dynamics?  This panel aims to answer these questions by borrowing heavily from both classical anthropological theorizations of kinship as well as new kinship studies, with its useful problematizing of categories like nature, the self and self-interest. We welcome submissions from scholars working across the globe on projects embracing a broad range of classical and contemporary theoretical commitments.

Please send an abstract of 250-300 words to Geoffrey (gfhugh@umich.edu) and Sandhya (sandkn@umich.edu) by March 21st 2014. We will respond to everyone by the 25th.

 

Workshop series: Epistemology, methods, and history of the sciences of childhood

Dear Colleagues,

The « Sciences de l’enfance, enfants des sciences » group is pleased to invite you to the Ateliers Campus Condorcet, a series of workshops on “Epistemology, methods, and history of the sciences of childhood.”

The first two workshops will be held on March 27 (“Feelings and Emotions“) and April 7 (“Kinship and Parenthood“) from 14h to 17h, at the bâtiment Le France, 190 av de France 75013 Paris, 638 room.

Registration is required (sciencenfance@gmail.com)

Please see the attched program, and kindly disseminate it in your networks.

We are looking forward to meet you there.

Best,

the organizing committee,

Giuseppe Bolotta (U. de Milan Bicocca) giuseppeitaly@hotmail.it

Damien Boone (U. Lille 2/Ceraps) damien.boone@yahoo.fr

Gladys Chicharro (U. Paris 8, EXPERICE) gladys.chicharro-saito@univ-paris8.fr

Natacha Collomb (CNRS, CASE) natacha.collomb@cnrs.fr

Dorothée Dussy (CNRS, Centre Norbert Elias) ddussy@ehess.fr

Alice-Sophie Sarcinelli (EHESS/Iris) sarcinel@ehess.fr

« Sciences de l’enfance, enfants des sciences »,

vous invite à trois demi-journées de l’ateliers

« Epistémologie, méthodes et histoire des sciences de l’enfance »

 qui seront suivis par une journée d’étude conclusive

 

à l’EHESS

Bâtiment Le France

190 avenue de France, Paris 13ème

Salle 638

 

Le 27 mars 2014, de 14h à 17h

« Sentiments et émotions »

 

Marie Campigotto (Institut des Sciences Humaines et Sociales, Université de Liège)

« Explorer des mondes religieux enfantins ? Une ethnographie auprès d’enfants entre 6 et 9 ans à Liège (Belgique) ».

Axelle Neyrinck (Ehess, Centre d’Études Interdisciplinaires des Faits Religieux)

« Le médiéviste et l’enfance. Réflexions autour de la figure des saints Innocents »

Thomas Stodulka (Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Freie Universität Berlin)

« The Researcher’s Affects and Emotional Economies on the Streets of Java – towards a radical empirical anthropology »

 

Discutants :  Dorothée Dussy et Giuseppe Bolotta

 

Le 7 avril 2014, de 14h à 17h

« Parentés et parentalités »

Aurélie Fillod-Chabaud (Institut Universitaire Européen)  

« Enfance et séparation conjugales. La question des parents non gardiens et de leurs enfants. »

Yann Favier (Université Rennes 2)

« Réflexions sur le dualisme parenté/parentalité et sa traduction juridique. »

Francesca Nicola (Università di Milano Bicocca)

« Politics of parenting in a post-welfare era. The case of parents of kids with ADHD in the USA. »

 

Discutants : Natacha Collomb et Gladys Chicharro

 

Les autres séances :

–       « Politiques » date à préciser

–       Journée d’étude conclusive, septembre 2014

 

COMITÉ D’ORGANISATION :

Giuseppe Bolotta (U. de Milan Bicocca) giuseppeitaly@hotmail.it

Damien Boone (U. Lille 2/Ceraps) damien.boone@yahoo.fr

Gladys Chicharro (U. Paris 8, EXPERICE) gladys.chicharro-saito@univ-paris8.fr

Natacha Collomb (CNRS, CASE) natacha.collomb@cnrs.fr

Dorothée Dussy (CNRS, Centre Norbert Elias) ddussy@ehess.fr

Alice-Sophie Sarcinelli (EHESS/Iris) sarcinel@ehess.fr

 

Inscription souhaitée auprès de sciencenfance@gmail.com

CFP: The Emotions of Migration

*International Workshop Series: The Emotions of Migration*

*Workshop 2*
Young People's Migration Within and Throughout Asia: Managing Emotions,
Identities and Relationships

Date: 19 August 2014 to 20 August 2014

Venue: York Centre for Asian Research and the Children' s Studies Program
(Department of Humanities) York University, Toronto Canada

*Call for papers*: Workshop 2 calls for empirical research papers --
historical and contemporary -- on children and young people's
emotional experiences of migration within and throughout Asia.
Papers should focus on mixed feelings of (but not limited to)
elation, loneliness, hope, frustration, confusion, relief, fear,
freedom and disappointment in the migration process.

There is a preference for participant-centred research in
South and Southeast Asia prioritizing the following themes:

1. Migration for work and marriage in a historical context
(especially in plantations and estates)
2. Contemporary experiences of moving for work, marriage and
school --  managing mixed feelings
3. Left Behind -- adjusting to absence and creating and maintaining
relationships

*Submission and Funding: Please submit contact details and paper
abstract (maximum of 300 words) by April 4th 2014 to:
Dr. Kabita Chakrabortry kabitac@yorku.ca <
mailto:kabitac@yorku.ca>.

Successful applicants will be notified by late-April and are required
to send in a complete draft paper (6000 - 8000 words) by July 8, 2014.
Partial or full funding will be granted to successful applicants.
Participants are encouraged to seek alternate funds for travel from
their home institutions

*Webpage*:
http://ycar.apps01.yorku.ca/research/programmes-projects/emotions-migration-asia/

Reminder/Extended CFP: The War On Boys?

We are extending the deadline of a special issue of Thymos: Journal of Boyhood Studies themed “TheWar On Boys?” to May 1, 2014. The full call for papers is at http://www.mensstudies.info/call-for-papers-the-war-on-boys/ . Guest editors are Máirtín Mac an Ghaill (Newman University, UK), Chris Haywood (Newcastle University, UK) and Jonathan A. Allan (Brandon University, Canada). APA-styled manuscripts and queries should be sent to AllanJ@brandonu.ca .

More on Thymos: http://bit.ly/REKA2m

Best wishes,

Diederik F. Janssen, MD (Editor: CS&M, Thymos)

CFP: Young People’s Migration Within and Throughout Asia: Managing Emotions, Identities and Relationships

*International Workshop Series: The Emotions of Migration*

*Workshop 2*
Young People’s Migration Within and Throughout Asia: Managing Emotions,
Identities and Relationships

Date: 19 August 2014 to 20 August 2014

Venue: York Centre for Asian Research and the Children’ s Studies Program
(Department of Humanities) York University, Toronto Canada

*Call for papers*: Workshop 2 calls for empirical research papers —
historical and contemporary — on children and young people’s
emotional experiences of migration within and throughout Asia.
Papers should focus on mixed feelings of (but not limited to)
elation, loneliness, hope, frustration, confusion, relief, fear,
freedom and disappointment in the migration process.

There is a preference for participant-centred research in
South and Southeast Asia prioritizing the following themes:

1. Migration for work and marriage in a historical context
(especially in plantations and estates)
2. Contemporary experiences of moving for work, marriage and
school —  managing mixed feelings
3. Left Behind — adjusting to absence and creating and maintaining
relationships

*Submission and Funding: Please submit contact details and paper
abstract (maximum of 300 words) by April 4th 2014 to:
Dr. Kabita Chakrabortry kabitac@yorku.ca <mailto:kabitac@yorku.ca
<mailto:kabitac@yorku.ca> >.

Successful applicants will be notified by late-April and are required
to send in a complete draft paper (6000 – 8000 words) by July 8, 2014.
Partial or full funding will be granted to successful applicants.
Participants are encouraged to seek alternate funds for travel from
their home institutions

*Webpage*:
http://ycar.apps01.yorku.ca/research/programmes-projects/emotions-migration
-asia/

<http://ycar.apps01.yorku.ca/research/programmes-projects/emotions-migration
-asia/
>

FCD Young Scholars Program 2014

Call for Proposals

The FCD Young Scholars Program (YSP) supports policy- and practice-relevant research on the development and learning needs of the nation’s young children growing up under conditions of poverty and low-income.  FCD believes that early learning is a solid first step towards lifelong development and that promoting research in this area, conducted in a holistic and culturally sensitive manner, will help address the disparities in children’s outcomes.

YSP encourages applications from scholars who are:

  • From historically disadvantaged or underrepresented groups, e.g. first-generation college graduates, and those from low-income communities.
  • Scholars who represent a variety of disciplines and methods, given that mental, physical, health, social, economic, institutional, and community factors impact early learning and child development.

Eligibility

Eligible researchers will have received their doctoral degrees (e.g., Ph.D., J.D., Ed.D., Psy.D., M.D.) within seven years of application submission. Ten years for physician applicants.

To view additional eligibility criteria, research focus and for more information about applying to the YSP please visit the YSP Program page of the FCD Website.

Timeline

March 10, 2014: Visit FCD website for full YSP guidelines

Early April 2014 – Early May 2014: Submit Letters of Intent (check FCD website for dates)

Questions

Questions can be addressed to: ysp@fcd-us.org

Quick Links

FCD website: www.fcd-us.org

YSP Program: www.fcd-us.org/our-work/young-scholars-program

 

Like ACYIG on Facebook!

Hi All,
We’ve had an ACYIG Facebook page for quite some time, and the number of people who ‘like’ the page has climbed little by little. We’re now at 477 people who have accessed the posts and conversations there by ‘liking’ the page.
But I know there are far more people on this listserv, who could also benefit from the periodic posts and announcements on the Facebook page. Do you think we can get to 500 ‘likes’ by the end of the week??
Best,
Kristen Cheney, PhD.
Senior Lecturer, Children & Youth Studies
International Institute of Social Studies
The Hague, Netherlands

‘Parenting Culture Studies’ now published

‘Parenting Culture Studies’, a new book in Palgrave’s Family, Relationships and Personal Lifeseries, has just been published. Please find a discount order form  attached.

Contents:

Introduction; Ellie Lee
PART I: PARENTING CULTURE
1. Intensive Parenting and the Expansion of Parenting; Charlotte Faircloth
2. Experts and Parenting Culture; Ellie Lee
3. The Politics of Parenting; Jan Macvarish
4. Who Cares for Children? The Problem of Intergenerational Contact; Jennie Bristow
PART II: ESSAYS ON PARENTAL DETERMINISM
1. Policing Pregnancy: The Pregnant Woman who Drinks; Ellie Lee
2. The Problem of ‘Attachment’: The ‘Detached’ Parent; Charlotte Faircloth
3. Babies’ Brains and Parenting Policy: The ‘Insensitive’ Mother; Jan Macvarish
4. Intensive Fatherhood? The (Un)involved Dad; Charlotte Faircloth
5. The Double Bind of Parenting Culture: Helicopter Parents and Cotton Wool Kids; Jennie Bristow
Conclusion; Ellie Lee

What reviewers are saying about Parenting Culture Studies:


“These essays represent a sophisticated and courageous examination of parenting orthodoxies that have passed too easily into fact…. Sober, trenchant, witty and important.” – Zoe Williams, The Guardian 

“The authors of this timely collection are in the forefront of analyses of contemporary parenting. The discourses and practices of parenting are rarely held up for sustained critique. Readers of this book will be challenged to question the politics and rationales of parenting cultures in this provocative and cogently argued book.” – Deborah Lupton, University of Sydney, Australia

“This terrific collection of essays probes and destroys many of the reigning orthodoxies that have turned 21st century parenting into an activity marked by cultural and individual anxiety and the over-involvement of experts and policymakers. The scholars contributing to this volume together make a profound contribution to the study of parenting culture.” – Janet Golden, Rutgers University, USA

You can also watch the authors talk about the book in these films made by Faculti Media