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Call for Papers

Confronting the Politics of Racialized Sexualities: On Regulating 
Minority Gender Relations and Sexualities


Call for papers for RC05/RC32 Joint Session at the 17th ISA World 
Congress of Sociology, 11-17 July 2010, Gothenburg, Sweden
RC05 (Racism, Nationalism and Ethnic Relations)/RC32 (Women in Society)

Session organizers:
Sirma Bilge, Université de Montréal, Canada, [log in to unmask]
Paul Scheibelhofer, Central European University, Hungary, 
[log in to unmask]

Submission deadline: October 1st 2009

Questions of gender and sexualities are essential to understand politics 
of race and nation at different levels of analysis, whether the local, 
the national, or the global. Drawing on what David Goldberg called the 
'liberal paradox', i.e. how the commitment of modernity to idealized 
principles of liberty and equality goes hand in hand with a 
multiplication of racialized identities and the sets of exclusions they 
prompt and rationalize, enable and sustain (Goldberg 1993), the proposed 
session will tackle the ways in which ethnocultural exclusion and 
racialization processes in western liberal democracies currently operate 
through the problematization of minority/migrant gender relations and 
sexualities. We are particularly interested in the current mobilizations 
of women's rights and gay rights to construe the 'civilized' space of 
western freedoms and their 'enemies'. Besides the critique of these 
exclusionary discourses and practices, we welcome contributions engaging 
with questions of resistance/emancipation and counter-hegemonic 
practices, and providing frameworks for developing knowledge that lessen 
domination.

Identified thematic areas for papers include but not limited to:
* Articulations of sexuality and nationalism: recent developments and 
historical legacies
* The 'war on terror' and 'progressive' politics of sexuality
* Regulatory controls over migrant gender norms, sexualities and bodies
* Discourses on sexual freedoms/gender equality and (cultural) racism
* Minority/Migrant challenges to regulatory practices and hegemonic 
discourses
* Representing and regulating minority/migrant masculinities and 
femininities
* The class politics of racializing sexualities
* Regulating controversial practices (hijab, arranged marriage, 
polygamy, 'honour' crimes, excision, etc.)
* [Discourses on]'Human trafficking' and the control of mobility
* [Discourses on] 'urban riots'; the 'war on drugs', the 'war on gangs'
* Conjunctions of racism and technologies of sex


Submitting your paper proposals:
We invite all submitters to make explicit in their proposals the 
following two points in order to facilitate the evaluation process:  How 
does the question to be discussed in the paper relate to the general 
theme of the Joint Session? In which theoretical and/or methodological 
debates is the paper situated?

** Paper proposals should be approximately 350 words.
** Please be sure to provide the full name, institutional affiliation, 
phone, fax, and email address for all authors.   

** Please submit your paper abstract by email directly to session 
organizers:
Sirma Bilge ([log in to unmask])
and to Paul Scheibelhofer ([log in to unmask]),
with a Cc of your submission to the conference program coordinators 
within RC32: Margaret Abraham ([log in to unmask])  and Esther 
Ngan-ling Chow ([log in to unmask]).

Submission deadline: October 1st 2009.*
*
For more information on submission procedures you can visit the website 
of the Congress at: 
http://www.isa-sociology.org/congress2010/how_to_present_a_paper.htm and 
the specific information given on the page of our host committee RC32: 
http://www.isa-sociology.org/congress2010/rc/rc32.htm.