Dear colleagues,
We invite paper proposals for the International Political Science Association (IPSA) 23rd World Congress (to be held in Montréal, Canada, July 19-24th 2014) on the following subject: « Cultural policies in Latin America: trends and challenges in a time of crisis ».
A 1500 characters (aprox. 250 words) abstract in English should be sent by October 7th, 2013 to Marco Antonio Chávez-Aguayo ([log in to unmask]) and Elodie M. Bordat ([log in to unmask]).
Submissions must be also through IPSA website. This panel is part of the session “RC30-Comparative public policy”. Please refer to this session when submitting online.
Authors of accepted paper proposals will receive further instructions to submit the complete paper and for registration.
More information about the Congress is available here.
Regards,
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Marco Antonio Chávez-Aguayo, PhD
Postdoc Fellow at the University of Guadalajara (Mexico)
LinkedIn / Academia / ConnectCP
Elodie M. Bordat
Doctorante en science politique, Sciences Po.Aix CHERPA / CERSA
http://www.connectcp.org/profiles/profile.php?profileid=2609&lang=fr
« Cultural policies in Latin America: trends and challenges in a time of crisis »
How can we study the processes of policymaking, implementation and change of cultural policies in Latin America in a context crisis? To what extent are cultural policies in Latin America the product of research looking to address the specific needs of each context? Do decision-makers consider these countries’ diversity and specificities or do they rather import alien policies, institutions and discourses originated in Europe and Anglo Saxon countries? The aim of this panel is to focus on the way in which cultural policies in Latin America are made, on the actors who think and implement them and on the evolution of those policies in the context of economic, institutional and political crisis. We encourage proposals that address the following questions: What are the consequences of institutional and economical crisis in the budgets, cognitive frameworks and objectives of those policies? Are cultural public policies originated in consultations or imposed by an elite? What are the role of private actors and interest groups in the policy implementation? The goal of this panel is to bring together different analysis of cultural institutions, public decisions, programs, projects and discourses in Latin America to encourage comparative analysis and foster the exchange of ideas in a region that shares many characteristics, but has a tendency to look outwards and seldom inwards.
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