Call for Papers
18th Annual World Convention of the
Association for the Study of Nationalities (ASN)
International Affairs Building,
Columbia University, NY
Sponsored by the Harriman Institute
18-20 April 2013
www.nationalities.org<http://www.nationalities.org>
***Proposal deadline: 17 October 2012***
[Please note that the deadline is earlier than in previous years]
Contact information:
proposals must be submitted to:
darel@uottawa.ca<mailto:darel@uottawa.ca> and
darelasn2013@gmail.com<mailto:darelasn2013@gmail.com>
Over 140 PANELS on the Balkans, Central Europe and the Baltics, Russia, Ukraine, Belarus,
Moldova, Central Asia and Eurasia, the Caucasus, Turkey, China,
and Nationalism Studies
SPECIAL SECTIONS on
History, Politics, and Memory
Ethnicity and Violence
Migration and Globalization
THEMATIC Panels on
Islam and Politics, Genocide and Mass Killing, Language Politics, Post-Conflict
Reconstruction, Autonomy, Gender and Identity, EU Integration, Migration, Borders and
Diasporas, War Crimes and International Tribunals, Political Economy, Nation-Building, and
many more…
SCREENING of New Documentaries
SPECIAL ROUNDTABLES on New Books
AWARDS for Best Doctoral Student Papers,
the ASN Harriman Joseph Rothschild Book Prize
the ASN Audience Award for Best Documentary
The Nationalities Papers Opening Reception
The ASN Convention, the most attended international and inter-disciplinary scholarly
gathering of its kind, welcomes proposals on a wide range of topics related to
nationalism, ethnicity, ethnic conflict and national identity in Central Europe, the
Balkans, the former Soviet Union, and Central Eurasia (including Central Asia, the
Caucasus, Turkey, China, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, and Iraq).
Prospective applicants can get a sense of the large thematic scope of ASN Convention
papers by looking at the 2012 Final Program, which can be accessed at
http://nationalities.org/convention/pdfs/ASN-2012-final-program.pdf
The Convention also invites proposals devoted to comparative perspectives on
nationalism-related issues in other regions of the world, as well as theoretical
approaches that need not be grounded in any particular geographic region. Disciplines
represented include political science, history, anthropology, sociology, international
studies, security studies, geopolitics, area studies, economics, geography,
sociolinguistics, literature, psychology, and related fields.
The Convention is also inviting paper, panel, roundtable, or special presentation
proposals related to three special themes:
•“History, Politics and Memory,” on the construction and contestation of the memory of
historical events in particular sites, political discourse and historical research;
•“Ethnicity and Violence,”on the conditions, mechanism, construction, implications and
global perspective of violence perpetrated against “ethnic” or culturally-defined
groups;
•“Migration and Globalization”, on the social and political challenges related to the
causes of migration, border dynamics, and the integration of immigrant communities in
modern societies.
Papers presented at the Convention will be made available for $10 on a CD to Convention
attendees, but will neither be posted on the ASN website, nor be sold to Convention
non-attendees.
Nationalities Papers, the ASN flagship journal, will hold a Nationalities Debate, a high
profile discussion on the state of the art, as well as the consistently popular roundtable
“How To Get Your Article Published”, which features the editors of some of the leading
journals in the field. Nationalities Papers will also sponsor the opening reception.
For several years, the ASN Convention has acknowledged excellence in graduate studies
research by offering Awards for Best Doctoral Student Papers. The ASN 2012 Eighth Annual
ASN Doctoral Student Awards were given to Yuval Feinstein (Sociology, UCLA, US –
Nationalism Section), Evgeny Finkel (U of Wisconsin, US – Ukraine/Russia/Caucasus
Section), Maj Grasten (Political Science, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark – Balkans
Section), Christopher Molnar (History, Indiana University, US – Central Europe Section),
and Alp Eren Topal (History, Bilkent University, Turkey –Eurasia/Turkey Section). Doctoral
student applicants whose proposals are accepted for the 2013 Convention, who will not have
defended their dissertation by 1 November 2012, and whose papers are delivered by the
deadline, will automatically be considered for the awards. Each award comes with a
certificate and a $500 cash prize.
The ASN Convention inaugurated in 2010 an annual ASN Harriman Book Prize—the Joseph
Rothschild Prize in Nationalism and Ethnic Studies. In 2012, the Third Annual Harriman ASN
Book Prize went to Roger Petersen for Western Intervention in the Balkans: The Strategic
Use of Emotion in Conflict (Cambridge University Press, 2011). An honorable mention was
given to Theodora Dragostinova for Better Two Motherlands: Nationality and Emigration
among the Greeks of Bulgaria, 1900-1949 (Cornell University Press, 2011). The award comes
with a certificate and a $500 cash prize. For information on how to have a book considered
for the 2012 Book Prize, please contact Dmitry Gorenburg at
asnbookprize@gmail.com<mailto:asnbookprize@gmail.com>, or go to
http://www.nationalities.org/convention/rothschild.asp.
The 2013 Convention is also inviting submissions for documentaries made within the past
few years and available in DVD format (either NTSC or PAL). The documentaries selected for
the Convention will be screened during regular panel slots and, in several cases, will be
followed by a discussion moderated by an expert on the topic area. Films on the 2011
Program included My Perestroika (US, 2010), Putin’s Kiss (Denmark, 2011), Khodorkovsky
(Germany, 2011), Who Killed Natasha? (France, 2011) and Brother Numer One (New Zealand,
2011). The full 2012 film lineup can be accessed at
http://nationalities.org/convention/films-2012.asp. In 2012, the Convention inaugurated an
ASN Documentary Audience Award. The award went to the French film Qui a tué Natacha? (Who
Killed Natasha?), from director Mylène Sauloy, a wrenching investigation on the murder of
human rights activist Natasha Estemirova in Chechnya. A runner-up, also the most attended
film of the Convention, was My Perestroika, from US director Robin Hessman. The award
comes with a certificate and a $500 cash prize.
The 2013 Award Guidelines can be accessed at
http://nationalities.org/prizes/asn_best_doc.asp.
The full composition of the Program Committee, responsible for the selection of proposals
and films, the construction of the program, and the awards selection for doctoral papers
and books, will be announced shortly on the ASN website,
http://nationalities.org.<http://nationalities.org./>
Proposal Information
The 2013 Convention invites proposals for individual papers or panels. A panel includes a
chair, three or four presentations based on written papers, and a discussant. The
Convention is also welcoming offers to serve as discussant on a panel to be created by the
Program Committee from individual paper proposals. The application to be considered as
discussant can be self-standing, or accompanied by an individual paper proposal.
In order to send proposals to the Convention, the three mandatory items indicated below
(contact information, abstract, biographical statement) must be included in a single Word
document (PDF documents will not be accepted) attached to an email message.
Each applicant – single or multiple authors in individual proposals, all members of a
panel proposal – must also fill out a Fact Sheet online that can be accessed at
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/ASN2013_FactSheet.
IMPORTANT: Applicants can only send one paper proposal -- whether as an individual
proposal, or as a paper part of a panel proposal. At the Convention, each panelist can
only appear on a maximum of TWO panels, only one of which can be in the capacity of a
paper presenter. For example, a panelist can chair a panel and present a paper on another,
or chair a panel and be discussant or another, and so forth. This rule applies to
co-authored papers, thus a co-authored paper presentation counts as one appearance.
Individual paper proposals must include four items:
*Contact information: the name, email, postal address and academic affiliation of the
applicant.
*A 300- to 500-word abstract (shorter abstracts will not be considered) that includes the
title of the paper.
*A 100-word biographical statement, in narrative form (a text with the length of one
paragraph). Statements in standard CV format will be rejected.
Individual proposals featuring more than one author (joint proposal) must include the
contact information and biographical statement of all authors and specify whether all
co-authors intend to attend the Convention. Only joint presenters attending the Convention
will have their names in the official program.
*A Fact Sheet, to be filled out online (see above). In the case of co-authors, only those
intending to attend the Convention must send a Fact Sheet. The Word document proposal must
indicate that the Fact Sheet has been filled out online.
Panel proposals must include four items:
*Contact information (see above) of all proposed panelists.
*The title of the panel and a 200- to 300-word abstract of each paper.
*A 100-word biographical statement (see above) for each proposed panelist. Statements in
standard CV format will be rejected. The rules on joint proposals are the same as with
individual proposals (see above).
*A Fact Sheet, to be filled out online (see above), for each panelist attached to the
proposal. The Word document proposal must indicate that all panelists have filled out
their Fact Sheet online.
Proposals can also be sent for roundtables and book panels. Roundtables include a chair,
four presenters, but no discussant, since the presentations, unlike regular panels, are
not based on written papers. Roundtable proposals include the same four items as a panel
proposal, except that the 200- to 300-word abstracts are presentation abstracts, rather
than paper abstracts.
The Convention is also inviting proposals for Book Panels, based on books published
between January 2012 and February 2013. The proposal must include the Chair, three
discussants, as well as the author. A Book Panel proposal must include the same four items
as a panel proposal, except that the abstract is limited to a 200- to 300-word abstract of
the book. The discussants need not submit an abstract.
Proposals for documentaries must include four items:
*Contact information (see above)
*A 300- to 500-word abstract of the documentary
*A 100-word biographical statement (see above). CVs will be rejected.
*A Fact Sheet filled out online (see above).
Two copies of the documentary on DVD (in NTSC or PAL format) will also need to be sent to
the Convention. More information will be provided upon receipt of the film proposal.
Proposals for a roundtable following the screening of a film are most welcome. In these
cases, the requirements of a panel proposal apply, in addition to the 300- to 500-word
abstract of the film.
Proposals to serve as a discussant must include four items:
*Contact information (see above)
*A 100-word statement about your areas of expertise
*A 100-word biographical statement (see above). CVs will be rejected.
*A Fact Sheet filled out online (see above)
Proposals for applicants already included in an individual paper or panel proposal need
only include the 100-word statement on areas of expertise.
IMPORTANT: All proposals must be sent in a single email message, with an attached proposal
in a Word document (PDFs will not be accepted) containing contact information, an
abstract, a biographical statement, as well as a confirmation that the Fact Sheet has been
filled out online (or multiple Fact Sheets, in the case of co-authors and/or panel
proposals). Proposals including contact information, the abstract and the bio statement in
separate attachments, or over several email messages will not be considered. The proposals
must be sent to darel@uottawa.ca<mailto:darel@uottawa.ca> AND
darelasn2013@gmail.com<mailto:darelasn2013@gmail.com>.
The receipt of all proposals will be promptly acknowledged electronically, with some delay
during deadline week, due to the high volume of proposals.
IMPORTANT: Participants are responsible for covering all travel and accommodation costs.
Unfortunately, ASN has no funding available for panelists.
An international Program Committee will be entrusted with the selection of proposals.
Applicants will be notified by January 2013. Information regarding registration costs and
other logistical questions will be communicated afterwards.
The full list of panels from last year’s convention can be accessed at
http://nationalities.org/convention/pdfs/ASN-2012-final-program.pdf
The programs from past conventions, going back to 2001, are also online at
http://nationalities.org/convention/past.asp
Several dozen publishers and companies have had exhibits and/or advertised in the
Convention Program in past years. Due to considerations of space, advertisers and
exhibitors are encouraged to place their order early. For information, please contact
Convention Executive Director Lydia C. Hamilton
(lch2111@columbia.edu<mailto:lch2111@columbia.edu>).
The ASN Facebook page will post regular updates on the ASN 2013 Convention. To become a
follower of ASN on Facebook, go to
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Association-for-the-Study-of-Nationalities/11…
and click on the “Like” option.
We very much look forward to hearing from you and receiving your proposal!
The Convention Organizing Committee:
Dominique Arel, ASN President
Lydia C. Hamilton, Executive Director
Sherrill Stroschein, Program Chair
Florian Bieber, Zsuzsa Csergo, Julie George, Dmitry Gorenburg, Lisa Koriouchkina, and
Harris Mylonas, ASN Executive Committee
Deadline for proposals: 17 October 2012 (to be sent to both
darel@uottawa.ca<mailto:darel@uottawa.ca> AND
darelasn2013@gmail.com<mailto:darelasn2013@gmail.com>)
The ASN Convention’s headquarters are located at the:
Harriman Institute
Columbia University
1211 IAB
420 W. 118th St.
New York, NY 10027
212 854 6239<tel:212%20854%206239> tel
212 666 3481<tel:212%20666%203481> fax
lch2111@columbia.edu<mailto:lch2111@columbia.edu>