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Deadline Extended to February 15!

Cultural Studies Association (CSA) Conference
Villanova University, Villanova, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
June 2-5, 2016

Policing Crises Now<http://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/conference>   SUBMIT TODAY!<http://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/submissions16>

  *   February 15, 2016: Submissions Due
  *   March 15, 2016: Notifications Sent Out
  *   April 15, 2016: Early Registration Ends and Late Registration Begins (Registration fees increase by $50 for all categories.)
  *   May 1, 2016: Last day to register to participate in the conference – your name will be dropped from the program if you do not register by this date.

The Cultural Studies Association (CSA) invites proposals from its current and future members<http://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/assoc_subscribe.asp> for participation in its fourteenth annual meeting. Proposals on all topics of relevance to cultural studies are welcome, with priority given to proposals that critically and creatively engage this year's highlighted theme.

The theme, Policing Crises Now, is prompted by and departs from the rich and diverse innovations and provocations of Policing the Crisis (1978), a groundbreaking work generated by a collective of scholars, including and facilitated by Stuart Hall. Those innovations and provocations include the collective nature of the research, the conjunctural/structural mode of analysis, the attention given to race, gender and sexuality in political-economic dynamics, as well as the analysis of intertwined statistical representations, media representations, legal proceedings and, of course, policing by police, as a response to a “crisis of hegemony.”

Taking up Policing Crises Now, in the current conjuncture, requires fresh theorization both of policing, in light, especially, of the potential elasticity of the metaphor, and of crisis in light of its diverse deployments in critical analysis, dominant political-economic practice, and popular culture. By pluralizing crises, we aim to open the scope of inquiry at this conference to include the full range of social, cultural, natural, political, and economic phenomena to which the term crisis has been attached. We also aim, under this rubric, to develop conversations engaged during our last conference about the structure of university work and employment, the ways knowledge production is constrained and enabled by austerity politics, neoliberal entrepreneurialism, the prominence of debt and risk, and the university as a site of policing of thought and political activism. It is our hope that this conference both builds from and enables collective knowledge production and research practices.

See full CFP and submission information: http://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/conference