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Dear Colleagues, 

 

Apologies for cross-posting. Please see below and attached a reminder for
the call for papers for a postgraduate conference on 'Masculinities,
Violence and (Post-)Conflict, on 14 January 2016 in Belfast, Northern
Ireland. Deadline for submissions (abstracts of 250 words) is 15 November
2015. 

 

Reminder: CALL FOR PAPERS 

Postgraduate Conference: Masculinities, Violence and (Post-)Conflict 

Date: Thursday, 14 January 2016, 09:00 - 17:00 

Venue: Ulster University, York St. Campus (Belfast, Northern Ireland) 

The Transitional Justice Institute (TJI) and the International Conflict
Research Institute (INCORE) at Ulster University invite proposals for a
one-day postgraduate conference on "Masculinities, Violence and
(Post-)Conflict" on Thursday, 14 January 2016. This student-led event will
offer academic presentations, peer discussion, networking opportunities and
expert feedback in a supportive environment. The conference will be followed
by an international high-level workshop on Masculinities and Violence on
Friday, 15 January 2016, organized by International Alert (IA), Saferworld
and Conciliation Resources (CR), providing a forum for both practitioners
and international academics to engage on the topic. 

The conference will bring together postgraduate students working on the
interface between social constructions of masculinities as well as violence
and (post-)conflict. Specifically, the conference will focus on the
relationship between these areas, assessing how socially constructed notions
of masculinities - in their varying forms, including hegemonic and
subordinate conceptions - theoretically and conceptually can, and
empirically do (or do not), fuel violence or impact the advancement of
women's rights. At the same time, we aim to explore how situations of
violence and victimisation influence and (re-)shape notions and dynamics of
masculinities (both combatant and civilian identities), in itself and in
relation to femininities and gender-hierarchies. The conference will
therefore move beyond simplified conceptualisations of gender identities and
critically explore the largely ambivalent role of masculinities. We thus aim
to approach masculinities as both potentially contributing to violence and
at the same time as potentially (and factually) vulnerable. Questions to be
explored thus include, but are not limited to: 

- How, conceptually and empirically, can masculinities be linked to
violence, including sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) and violence
against women (VAW)? 

- Conceptually and empirically, what are the relationships between
masculinities and femininities, gender equality as well as women's rights
within (post-) conflict contexts? 

- How do situations of violence and (post-)conflict shape masculinities, and
how are masculinities (re-)shaped and influenced during conflict and
post-conflict lived realities? 

- How and to what extent do post-conflict peace-building and transitional
justice processes consider and address masculinities? 

We invite paper proposals from postgraduate students across various
disciplines that utilize a gendered lens while exploring the dynamics of,
and/or relationships between masculinities, violence and (post-)conflict
either conceptually or empirically in different geographical contexts and
across time. In-depth case study analyses alongside theoretical explorations
and empirically-grounded papers, including feminist theoretical and
methodological approaches, are welcome. Speakers and discussants at the
conference include, inter alia, Prof. Fionnuala Ni Aolain, Prof. Brandon
Hamber (both Ulster University) and Dr. Henri Myrttinen (International
Alert). 

If you would like to propose a paper, please submit an abstract of max. 250
words and a short one-paragraph academic bio by 15 November 2015 to Philipp
Schulz ([log in to unmask]) and Seamus Campbell
([log in to unmask]). 

Papers will be grouped thematically and distributed among three main panels.
Each panel will have a designated commentator, an established academic or
other expert in the field. Commentators will offer expert feedback as well
as complement and stimulate peer-discussion. We are seeking the possibility
of a publication of contributions (from conference and workshop), for which
selected postgraduate papers might also be considered. 

Participation and attendance at the conference are free of charge. We regret
that we are unable to offer travel bursaries or other assistance with costs.
The conference is supported by the TJI and INCORE, International Alert,
Saferworld and Conciliation Resources (CR), as well as by the Political
Settlements Research Programme. 

 


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