CfP: 3rd Annual Forum on Human Rights – “(En)Gendering Human Rights”

Call for Proposals from Undergraduate and Graduate Student Researchers

3rd Annual College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences Forum on Human Rights
“(En)Gendering Human Rights”

February 28, 2014
Virginia Tech

The 3rd Annual College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences Research Forum on Human Rights, “(En)Gendering Human Rights,” will take place on the campus of Virginia Tech located in Blacksburg Virginia. All the papers and creative works will be presented on Friday, February 28, 2014. Pending funding, lodging may be provided for presenters travelling from other universities. The most promising papers and creative works will be considered for possible publication in Societies Without Borders: Human Rights and the Social Sciences and/or Philologia, the journal of undergraduate research published by the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences at Virginia Tech. Continue reading

CfP: Conference: The International Tracing Service Collections and Holocaust Scholarship

May 12-14, 2014

Washington, DC, USA

*Organizers*

Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, United States Holocaust Memorial
Museum

International Tracing Service, Bad Arolsen, Germany

*Call for Papers*

The Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, United States Holocaust Memorial
Museum and the International Tracing Service invite applications for an
international conference designed to illustrate the broad academic research
potential of the ITS collections. The conference will be held May 12-14,
2014 in Washington, D.C., at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Participants will present their papers in sessions open to the public and
will also have the opportunity for discussion among the presenters on their
experiences using the ITS archives. Continue reading

CfP: Human Rights and Drugs, Volume 3

Contact: info@hrdp.essex.ac.uk.
The International Centre on Human Rights and Drug Policy is currently seeking submissions for the third edition of its Journal Human Rights and Drugs. The Journal is the first and only international peer reviewed law journal focusing exclusively on human rights and drug policy issues.
For more info, see here.

CfP: Human Rights and Change

Kadir Has Üniversitesi, Istanbul
16 – 18 June 2014

A joint conference organized by:

Human Rights Section, International Studies Association
Human Rights Section, American Political Science Association
Human Rights Research Committee, International Political Science Association
Standing Group on Human Rights and Transition, European Consortium for Political Research

In association with:
Kadir Has Üniversitesi
Academic Council on the United Nations System

The human rights sections of the American Political Science Association, the European Consortium for Political Research, the International Political Science Association, and the International Studies Association, are pleased to announce the third joint international conference on human rights, on the theme “Human Rights and Change” to take place 16-18 June 2014 at Kadir Has Üniversitesi in Istanbul. The conference will take place immediately before the annual meeting of the Academic Council on the United Nations System (19 – 21 June), also in Istanbul (http://acuns.org/am2014/). Continue reading

Human Rights Gender fellowship at Colby College, USA

Colby College, under the Oak Institute for the Study of International Human Rights, invites applications for its human rights fellowship. Funding enables a prominent practitioner in international human rights to take sabbatical leave from front-line work to spend the fall semester in residence at Colby. The fellow’s responsibilities include regular meetings with students and assistance in shaping a lecture series or symposium on his or her human rights interests. This year, the fellowship focuses on human rights protection in situations relating to gender. This focus is not limited to activism involving women, but also includes the protection of sexual minorities and activism on men or masculinity.
Activists working on sexual and reproductive rights, gender empowerment and education, human and sexual trafficking, activism against gender-based violence, gender- and sexual-based asylum, or gender and environmental rights, are invited to apply. Eligibility is restricted to those whose work takes place primarily outside the US. The fellowship includes a US$32,000 stipend, as well as health benefits, housing, a campus meal plan and transportation. The fellow will also receive research support, including office space, secretarial support, computer and library facilities and a student assistant. A limited budget is allocated to help offset the cost of transportation, housing and meals for dependent family members who accompany the fellow. Following the period of the award, the fellow is expected to return to her or his human rights work.

Closing date: 06 Dec 13

http://web.colby.edu/oak/

CfP: Conference on Sexuality, Human Rights and Public Policy

3rd International Conference of the Transatlantic Research Group in collaboration with the Gender and Sexuality Resource Center and Women and Gender Studies Program, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
23-24 April 2014

Social and legal discourses around same-sex marriage, gay and transgender rights have seen vigorous debates globally in recent times. These issues are being debated in European societies including France where the Supreme Court is considering two cases that may have significant social implications. Some states in the United State and the District of Columbia have now legalized same-sex marriage. On the other hand, some counties in Africa and most recently, Russia, have passed legislations limiting gay rights. African churches in particular have taken a more conservative stance than their Western counterparts in these debates as public policy, religious, ethnic, and sexual minorities are often pitted against one another. Continue reading

Conference Registration Open: Social Practice of Human Rights

Registration is open for the Social Practice of Human Rights Conference, at the University of Dayton, USA. Friday will feature 18 panels of original research in the field of human rights, and Saturday will host three plenary panels comprised of speakers from major NGOs, philanthropic foundations, and academia to engage in critical issues confronting the human rights community.

You are welcome to attend for either one or two days. A preliminary program is posted on the website. Please follow the site’s navigation for online registration and travel information.

NYC Event: Estelle Freedman: Redefining Rape – Sexual Violence in the Era of Suffrage and Segregation

In Redefining Rape, Professor Estelle Freedman of Stanford University explores not only the ways in which rape has defined citizenship throughout American history but also how aspiring citizens have tried, repeatedly, to redefine rape. Long before second-wave feminists adopted an anti-rape platform, generations of women’s rights and racial-justice advocates rejected the narrow understanding of rape as a brutal attack on a chaste, unmarried, white woman by a stranger, often depicted as a black man.
Freedman shows how these critiques exposed the ways that white men’s freedom to be sexually coercive or violent lay at the heart of their political power. The modern civil rights and feminist movements, she points out, continue to grapple with both the insights and the dilemmas of these first campaigns to redefine rape in American law and culture.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013 at 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm
Wollman Hall (B500), Eugene Lang College
65 West 11th Street, New York, NY
Email: langeducationstudies@newschool.edu
Event website.

“Human Rights Review Gary Herbert Award” Recipient

Human Rights Review Editor-in-Chief Steven D. Roper is pleased to announce
the first recipient of the “Human Rights Review Gary Herbert Award” for
the best article published in the preceding year (2012).

William H. Meyer, Professor of Political Science and International
Relations at the University of Delaware, was chosen by the Award Committee
based on the topic, scholarship and contribution to the field of human
rights for his article “Indigenous Rights, Global Governance, and State
Sovereignty” published in Volume 13, Issue 4. The commendation noted that
the article “nicely links disparate developments regarding indigenous
rights to the broader notion of global governance. Meyer analyzes such
matters as the 2007 UN General Assembly Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples, certain cases in the OAS Inter-American Court of Human
Rights and activities by the Inuit Circumpolar Council. From these and
other developments he concludes that ‘sovereign’ states can be made to pay
attention to indigenous human rights and the other claims based on these
fundamental entitlements. The structure of the article is very clear, with
details adding up to a general overview about the international management
of ‘the problem’ of indigenous peoples who now find themselves inside
territorial states within the context of the global state system. The
research is broad; the writing is clear, and the subject matter is
important. The views presented are worth reading and reflection.”

The Award Committee was composed of David P. Forsythe, Charles J. Mach
Distinguished Professor at the University of Nebraska (Chair), Patrick
Hayden, Professor of Political Theory and International Relations at the
University of St Andrews and Lilian Barria, Professor of Political Science
at Eastern Illinois University.

This Award is named after Gary Herbert, who served as the journal’s
Editor-in-Chief from 2003 to 2011. This Award was made possible with the
generous support of Springer and Neil Olivier, who serves as Senior
Publishing Editor.

For more information about Human Rights Review, please visit
http://www.springer.com/law/journal/12142

CfP: Dissent! Histories and Meanings of Opposition from 1968 to the Present

International Conference, January 16-17, 2014

Dissent!

Histories and Meanings of Opposition from 1968 to the Present

An Activity of the Research Group in International Studies, Aalborg
University

Globalization, post-9/11 politics and the post-2008 financial crisis have
all birthed modes and histories of opposition and dissent, be they dissent
from global political-economic systems or opposition to ranges of
international authoritarian regimes. Contemporary dissent, however,
oft-draws from forms and imaginations of earlier modes of protest, be they
student protests from the late ‘60s onward, the peace movement in the same
period, the anti-nukes movement of the 1980s or the anti-Apartheid movement
spanning the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s. Still, dissent takes other historical
forms: individual critiques of “actually existing” socialist systems, be
they civil rights based critique from individual figures such as Sakharov
or Rostropovich (or Solzhenitsyn’s nationalist-culturalism), media-driven
dissent, such as the political magazine Mladina’s criticisms of the
Yugoslav regime in the late 1980s and early 1990s or the voices of
“everyday” social actors, such as the Damas de Blanco in Cuba. In a
historical period encapsulating the last decades of the Cold War and an
unfolding twenty-first century, dissent and social opposition undergo and
have undergone redefinition within the confines of modern and contemporary
culture. Continue reading