Welcome to WordPress @ STU Sites. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!
All posts by tobrien
Using Social Biography to Study 18th-century World Historical Processes in William Booth’s World
Dr. Bonnie Huskins is currently working on a monograph which profiles an 18th-century British Royal Engineer named William Booth.[i] Born in London in 1747, William Booth was commissioned as an ensign in the Corps of Engineers in 1771, and from there was posted to Gibraltar (1779-83), to Halifax Nova Scotia (August 1785-October 1786), to Shelburne Nova Scotia (1786-89), and to Jersey in the Channel Islands (1799-1800). Traditional biographies tend to focus on personal details and local particularities, but : Dr. Bonnie Huskins will be using the framework of “social biography,” a social history approach to world history which traces the connections between the “profoundly local and individual” and the “global and world historical.”
By viewing world developments through the eyes of individual human agents such as Booth, social biographies also have the potential to challenge accepted generalizations in world history, and thus help us to “better appreciate the limits as well as the power of world historical processes.”[ii] Moreover, this monograph situates itself squarely within the paradigm of the “new world history,” which presents “local histories in a global context and gives and overview of world events as seen through the eyes of ordinary people.”[iii] While William Booth was an ordinary person, he was also somewhat exceptional in the sense that he has left behind traces of himself in the form of military and genealogical records, correspondences and memos, paintings and sketches, and most notably two journals which he kept while posted to Shelburne and Jersey.
In 2008 the Shelburne County Archives and Genealogical Society published a transcribed and annotated version of Booth’s Shelburne journal.[iv] Anecdotes from this journal have appeared in histories of Shelburne and in accounts of the American Revolutionary War loyalists’ experiences in Nova Scotia.[v] There is also a three-page biographical overview of Booth written by archivist Barry Cahill for the published version of the journal. However, there is currently no book-length work on Booth’s life or career.
In order to highlight the world historical processes embedded within William Booth’s life and career, I propose breaking this social biography into four sections: war, the slave trade, mercantile trade, and social support networks. .
[i] The corps were not gazetted as “Royal” until 1787.
[ii] Edmund Burke III, “How to Write a Social Biography,” http://cwh.ucsc.edu/Writing.Social.Biogs.pdf
[iii] Mary Jo Maynes and Ann Waltner, The Family: A World History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), viii.
[iv] Eleanor Robertson Smith ed., Remarks and Rough Memorandums: Captain William Booth, Corps of Royal Engineers, Shelburne, Nova Scotia, 1787, 1789 (Shelburne: Shelburne County Archives & Genealogical Society, 2008).
[v] See Marion Robertson, King’s Bounty: A History of Early Shelburne Nova Scotia (Halifax: Nova Scotia Museum, 1983); Neil MacKinnon, This Unfriendly Soil: The Loyalist Experience in Nova Scotia, 1783-1791 (Kingston & Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1986); Stephen Kimber, Loyalists and Layabouts: The Rapid Rise and Faster Fall of Shelburne, Nova Scotia, 1783-1792 (Toronto: Doubleday Canada, 2008).
Symbols and Humor as Works of Justice and Citizenship in the Gezi Protests of Instanbul
This grant enabled Dr. Gül Çalışkan to interview specific individuals in Istanbul and Ankara, during July and August 2014.
Summary of project:
The protests, which took place during the summer of 2013 in Turkey, made use of artistic symbols and humor as expressions of popular culture, and as acts of participatory citizenship. Protest music, performance art, or street and digital art have become increasingly integral to everyday activism, whether in the form of individual claims or as part of larger public causes. The Gezi Park protests in Istanbul and the Ankara student protests produced some of the most vibrant examples of symbols and humor used as significant artistic expressions of contemporary culture. With the help of social media, such symbols and humor found a vast, interactive audience in both the global and local domains during the summer of 2013.
As the world followed these protests, people grew familiar with a series of iconic figures, including the Woman in Red, Reading Man, the Pots & Pans Orchestra, Guitar Hero, Standing Man, Woman in Black, Vedat the Drummer, Dancing Man, and Aunt Vildan, just to name few. The humor and artistic drama these figures conveyed crossed cultural boundaries, demonstrating a new kind of “global-local nexus,” and a “glocal” culture. Such “glocal” expressions erupted simultaneously across cities and national boundaries. By “glocality,” we refer to “[t]he myriad forms of connectivity and flows linking the local (and national) to the global – as well as the West to the East, and the North to the South” (Steger, 2013 p. 2).
There has been a growing body of work in the field of globalized movements for justice (Amoore, 2005; Benhabib, 2011; Kurasawa, 2009; Robinson and Tormey, 2009), including investigations of performance arts as forms of resistance, rehumanization and reconciliation (Cohen, Varea, and Walker, 2011). However, more research is needed on the role of symbols and humor in the creation of an emerging global civil society.
Through narrative analysis of the symbols and humor created during the Gezi protests, Dr. Gül Çalışkan want to explore the challenges this movement brought to modern notions of citizenship, activism, and social justice. I propose to analyze the Gezi Park protests in Istanbul and the Ankara student protests that took place during the summer of 2013 in Turkey. Dr. Gül Çalışkan will examine the symbols and humor used in these events to discern their significance as expressions of popular culture and as acts of citizenship.
To do this, Dr. Gül Çalışkan intends to meet and interview the individuals who created these artistic expressions, during July and August 2014. Istanbul and Ankara will be the locations/site of the study. In her analysis, Dr. Gül Çalışkan will be drawing on a diverse body of evidence collected through online research and my interviews with the individuals who shaped the protests with their art.
The following research questions will addressed: What hybrid forms of resistance have these expressions created? What are the implications they bring for the way we understand solidarity? How fleeting or long lasting are their effects on society? How do these expressions combine the logic of collective and personal action? What kind of citizenship has been articulated?
Gül Çalışkan
The Crisis of Regional Leadership and Legitimacy in the Asia Pacific- Dr. Shaun Narine
The Crisis of Regional Leadership and Legitimacy in the Asia Pacific
This project asks the question: what constitutes legitimate leadership in the emerging Asia Pacific region? The key hypotheses are that the United States and China are both losing “hard” and “soft” power in the Asia Pacific. Therefore, the legitimacy of both countries as regional leaders is in question.
It is possible that other powers and maybe even the smaller states of the region may step into this emerging vacuum. If this is the case, then theories of international society must be developed and modified to account for these developments.
This project will develop the concept of “legitimate leadership” as it applies to the Asia Pacific region. The major objective of the study is to examine the proposition that the traditional concept of legitimate leadership in international society, as established during the Cold War era, no longer applies in the Asia Pacific. (Masciulli, Molchanov and Knight, 2009; Brezinski, 2012) The study argues that the dominant powers of the Asia Pacific, the United States and China, have each seriously undermined their ability to exercise legitimate leadership in the region.
As a result, the door has opened for emerging powers and the smaller states of the region to play more important roles in defining the normative and political structures and rules of regional conduct. If this is the case, it indicates the need to radically reform IR theories of international society, which tend to focus on the roles of the most powerful states in shaping the global system. A second, less theoretically oriented objective is to understand the evolving political, strategic and economic environments of the AP as more powers become active and influential in the regional dynamic.
Call for Applications for Global and International Studies Initiative Visiting Scholar Program ($3000)
This is a call for applications to the GISI Visiting Scholar program. The Global and International Studies Program is a three-year, SSHRC-funded St. Thomas University initiative which is designed to promote global and international studies at STU through a program of major research grants, conference travel support, and the promotion of visiting scholars. Last year, the Visiting Scholarship program was initiated with the visit of Dr. Swaran Singh from Jawaharlal Nehru University in India. Dr. Singh’s visit was highly successful. It involved him giving a public lecture to the university, as well as speaking to numerous classes and visiting other universities in the region to give guest lectures. Through the initiative, St. Thomas was able to build a lasting relationship with Nehru University.
The GISI is issuing a call for applications for Visiting Scholars for the 2013 calendar year (February-December). The GISI offers $3000 to support a visiting scholar.
There is no formal application form. Submitted applications should include the following:
- A covering letter that explains when the proposed Visiting Scholar will visit and how his/her visit would benefit St. Thomas University. This should include plans for the VS’s public speaking engagements and guest lectures. Note that every effort should be made to extend the VS’s presence beyond the Department making the application. For example, this could include the indication that the organizers of the visit will arrange meetings with other scholars on campus who deal with issues related to the VS’s expertise. If possible, the VS should also attend functions/activities that raise St. Thomas’s regional profile. The application should also indicate how the sponsoring Department intends to use the VS’s visit as an opportunity to build stronger, long-term links between STU and the scholar’s institution/home country.
- Detailed information on the proposed scholar. This should include a CV, one or two examples of work, and an assessment of how the VS’s expertise will complement or initiate scholarly work at St. Thomas.
- A detailed budget. If the funds provided by the GISI Visiting Scholar program are not sufficient to cover all of the VS’s costs, the application should indicate where supplementary funds will be found.
Please note that the GISI does not object to paying an honorarium to the VS, but the program is primarily directed towards paying for the VS’s transportation and accommodation costs. The Visiting Scholar’s stay at St. Thomas should be at least one academic week (Monday-Friday, or the equivalent of 5 regular class days). Stays can be longer than this, but not shorter, except in very exceptional circumstances.
For the 2013 calendar year, the deadline for submission of applications is Monday, January 14, 2013. Please send hard copies of applications to: Shaun Narine, Acting Director of GISI, Political Science Department, Holy Cross House.
UACES conference Exchanging Ideas- Dr. Mikhail Molchanov
UACES conference Exchanging Ideas on Europe 2012-Dr. Mikhail Molchanov
On September 2-5, Dr. Molchanov took part in the UACES conference Exchanging Ideas on Europe 2012; Old Borders – New Frontiers. The conference took place in the University of Passau, Germany. The University Association for Contemporary European Studies (UACES) provides an independent forum for informed debate and discussion of European affairs. It is directly involved in promoting research and teaching in European Studies as well as bringing together academics with practitioners active in European affairs. Its annual conference is a showcase event brining in leading experts in European Union studies from the EU and abroad.
Dr. Molchanov presented a paper entitled ” Eurasian Regionalisms and Russian Foreign Policy”. The paper presented a study of regional integration projects in the postcommunist Eurasia, defined as the former Soviet space plus China, and the impact that the Russian foreign policy has on these projects. The role that major powers, both indigenous (Russia) and external to the post-Soviet region (China, USA) play in, alternatively, encouraging or dampening the development of the competing regionalist projects remains under explored.
The paper endeavoured to close this gap by looking at new regionalism in Eurasia in the context of a parallel exploration of Russia’s foreign policy. Dr. Molchanov addressed Eurasian regionalist projects as a subset of the new regionalism (NR) developments that had emerged in response to neoliberal globalization and represent an adaptive reaction to it. The foreign policy emphasis in a study of evolving regionalisms sought to refocus attention on regionalizing agency and its role in shaping regional institutions and structures. Such a refocusing, in my view, allows building a bridge from a study of new regionalism to a study of domestic determinants of foreign policy. Both areas of research are crucially important for the better understanding of politics of development and international relations that connect emerging economies to each other.
Presentation was met with interest and contributed to a wider debate at the panel on ‘Awkward’ States in Regional Integration. The panel addressed such questions, as: What drives some states to join regional organizations while frequently appearing ill at ease with their choice? How are these states managed by their partners? What constitutes
“awkwardness” in regional integration processes?
Prorogation as Partisan Political Tool: The Australian Experience- Dr. Gerard Horgan
Dr. Horgan’s current project on the ‘political’ use of prorogation has three goals: first, to identify Australian precedents analogous to a recent Canadian case; second, to identify the factors that conduce to the use of prorogation as a partisan political tool; third, to examine the Crown representatives’ actions in these cases, the rationales for those actions, and the reaction of the UK Colonial/Dominions Office to the representatives’ actions, in order to better establish the extent of representatives’ discretion regarding the reserve power to deny advice to prorogue a parliament.
The initial work on the state of New South Wales is largely complete, the results having appeared as: Prorogation as Partisan Political Tool: The New South Wales Experience; Journal of Parliamentary and Political Law 6 (1) 2012: 161-94. The search for further cases in other Australian states has proceeded over the past eight months. Several of these have been identified and the details investigated, while for others the latter continues. Some initial comment on these cases was presented at the CPSA Annual Conference 2012 in June, when Dr. Horgan was invited to take part in the Roundtable entitled The Prerogative Powers of First Ministers. Two further papers resulting from the research project have been submitted for presentation at the APPSA Annual Conference 2012, to be held at St. Thomas University in September.
Dr. Horgan is currently (July-August 2012) on the research trip supported by the GISI research grant. The Colonial Office and Dominions Office collections of original correspondence with colonial/state Governors is being studied at the UK National Archives in London. The purpose is to determine these Offices’ reactions to decisions made by Governors regarding the prorogation of colonial/state parliaments, and thereby to gauge the extent of these Crown reprentatives’ discretion regarding such decisions. The initial results of this work will be incorporated in the presentations at the September APPSA Conference.
Global Agenda on Social Work and Social Development- Dr. John Coates
Summary of the event:
The Joint World Conference on Social Work and Social Development (July 8-12, 2012 in Stockholm) was a joint conference of the International Association of Schools of Social Work, International Federation of Social Workers and the International Council on Social Welfare. Over 2,000 participants attended with several plenaries and numerous concurrent sessions. I particularly valued the fact that many sessions and presentations focused on environmental social work eco-social work, and sustainability.
Abstract:
Facilitated by John Coates, Fred Besthorn, and Tiani Hetherington
This workshop is designed for social work practitioners and educators interested in incorporating environmental social work interventions into their everyday practice. Led by leading scholars on environmental social work, it will outline the core areas of environmental scholarship, education, and practice centred on key environmental issues using, as its base, a typology of micro, mezzo, and macro interventions developed by Gray, Coates, and Hetherington (forthcoming 2012). The workshop will also discuss some of the major challenges in environmental social work and the challenges that engagement with environmental issues raises for the profession. The typology includes engagement in environmental issues relating to inter alia mining and industrial damage; global warming and climate change; toxic materials production and waste disposal; air, soil, and water pollution; species extinction; sustainable development and food security; and natural disasters. The emphasis is on theoretical frameworks, practice examples, and case studies of what social workers are doing, or might do, in relation to environmental and educational initiatives. The challenges include overcoming the limitations of anthropocentric thinking and strategically changing the focus of the profession of social work with its ecosystems or person-in-environment approach to include the natural environment. Although social work has only recently engaged with the modern environmental movement, this workshop specifically seeks to extend scholarship in this area beyond claims as to what the profession ‘ought to be doing’ to address environmental concerns in practical ways so social workers can incorporate the natural environment in their direct practice with clients. Moreover, it aims to address what the social work profession can do in terms of macro, mezzo, and micro practice levels of intervention around the key environmental challenges facing our planet. We seek to engage in collaborative discussions around this key emerging area of social work practice and to discuss the potential for creating an international network of environmental social work practice and education interventions where we can share our collective practice and research wisdom.
The session I co-facilitated was a 90 minute workshop on Environmental Social Work attended by about 35 people. As outlined in the Abstract, the goal of the workshops was to discuss a Typology of Social Work Practice on Environmental Issues that will appear in a forthcoming book, Environmental Social Work (Routledge) co-edited by Mel Gray, John Coates and Tiani Hetherington. Discussion groups within our workshop were also facilitated by the organizers and included as well, Fred Besthorn (USA), Margaret Alston (Australia), Lena Dominelli (Britain) and Jej Peeters (Belgium). At the workshop we also started a network of scholars and researchers interested in environmental social work and are pleased that all in attendance signed up. I think this network will grow quickly and be useful for furthering international cooperation among social work scholars interested in environmental issues. I think the network will be of interest to Dr. Arielle Dylan and Professor Aamir Jamal who have both global and environmental interests. I expect to be a member though I am uncertain of the degree of my involvement.
The conference also provided the opportunity to meet several scholars whose work I have cited, or who have contributed chapters to my edited journals and books; it was good to strengthen these connections. I was particularly pleased to meet Aila-Leena Mathies and Kati Nari whose work I only recently came across and plan to become more familiar.
Inquisitio: A Global Survey of Sources for Inquisition History
This grant enabled Dr. Vose to travel to Chile and Spain in the Spring-Summer of 2012, as one of the phases in his five-year research project.
Summary of project:
Inquisition tribunals were dedicated not only to rooting out religious beliefs and practices deemed “heretical’; they also generated massive quantities of written records and preserved invaluable testimony for all aspects of life in their host societies. Inquisitors were far more scrupulous than most contemporary observers in the intimate attention they paid to topics ranging from economic and social relationships to cultural practices and gender roles. Texts composed for internal purposes, too, shed light not just on the lives of interrogated subjects but also on the ideological and practical underpinnings of local power structures. A great many such records, preserved in a wide variety of formats, remain housed in archives and libraries around the world, yet few resources are available to help researchers grasp the scope of this documentation. As a result scholarship to date has tended to focus on a relatively narrow set of records, often relating to Spain or Italy alone, while neglecting other aspects of the inquisitorial legacy in diverse regions of the globe.
My project contributes both to the development of more global inquisition studies and to a range of other historical speciality areas by systematically surveying, categorizing and analyzing the contents of key inquisition archives worldwide. In phases 1 and 2 preliminary surveys were carried out in major US and Spanish collections such as the University of Notre Dame’s McDevitt Collection, the Lea Collection (University of Pennsylvania) and the Archivo Histórico Nacional in Madrid; a visit to Mexico’s Archivo General de la Nación is pending for the spring of 2012. GISI funding will permit me to embark on phase 3 of the project, expanding my research to cover the Peruvian Inquisition archives (now held at Santiago de Chile). This will require a two-week stay in situ at the Archivo Nacional Histórico, as well as a brief followup visit to Madrid to check my findings against the colonial files held there.
Since I have yet to see the holdings of the little-used Peruvian archives-in-exile, I cannot say what the results of my visit will bring. However I am confident that I will locate sources that correspond to some of the document types previously identified in the preliminary stages of my project as described on the project website <inquisition.library.nd.edu>. Trial records will undoubtedly be found, each with its own intriguing story to tell; I will examine not only their contents but also the layout and formatting of such transcripts in comparison to those produced by other tribunals. I am also eager to see what non-trial volumes and folios sueltos may reside in this collection, whether similar to those I have already identified in other settings (manuals, auto de fe accounts, etc.) or perhaps items which are entirely unique to the Peruvian Holy Office. Either way, I fully intend to have material to share with the Research Associates of the GISI upon my return, and I will also present my findings at the annual meeting of the Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies in 2013 or 2014.
In collaboration with other experts, and building on my own previous research, I will further disseminate the full results of my investigations (phases 1-8) over a five-year period through a series of articles on discrete documentary categories such as procedural literature, sermons read out at sentencing ceremonies, and internal historiographies. Collected together and expanded with further research, these focused studies will ultimately form the core of a new interactive website along with a published scholarly monograph designed to orient novice and seasoned scholars alike to the complexities, idiosyncrasies, and potential uses of inquisitorial sources.
After the Bauxite is Gone: A History of Land Rehabilitation in Transnational Perspective
The grant enabled Dr. Cross to perform research on-site in Australia and in Aboriginal County in the months of March and April of 2012. This research is part of a larger monograph/book project on aluminum in world history in a multi-national framework.
Title of project:
After the Bauxite is Gone: A History of Land Rehabilitation in Transnational Perspective (Australia, and the Yolngu and Yirrkala Aboriginal Countries)
Summary of project:
This project is one piece of a larger comparative and international history that examines some of the environmental and social experiences of people using, living on or living near former bauxite mines. Multinational aluminum companies extended a global reach to secure bauxite ore reserves in order to make an array of aluminum products. Bauxite-rich lands were frequently home to many host- society peoples whose territories subsequently became bauxite mines. Land rehabilitation schemes employed in Australia (and on Aboriginal Countries) in the late 20th Century provide windows on to the contested and re-made landscapes where processes of globalization met local circumstances. This work is not focused on the mining process itself, but rather examines the history of mined land.
Dr. Cross’ research question was: “What happened to the land subsequent to mining?” as part of a larger comparative multi-national (Canada, Jamaica, United States, France, Australia, Guyana, so far) study that seeks to situate the histories of the places where aluminium ore was extracted within a comparative framework.
Dr. Cross plans to integrate this research project as a case study with previous and continuing historical research.
Prorogation as Partisan Political Tool: The Australian Experience
The grant enabled Dr. Horgan to conduct a research trip, in 2012, to London for the purposes of consulting original documents and records held by the UK National Archives.
Summary of the project:
Prorogation is a device routinely used in Westminster-style parliamentary systems when the governing party/coalition has largely completed its legislative agenda, and wishes to set out a new legislative programme. However, governing parties sometimes attempt to use prorogation as a political tool, by taking advantage of one of its essential features: the suspension of all parliamentary activity. Such attempts raise a question as to whether the Crown’s representative should, or indeed can, act to prevent such use of the Crown prerogative. The current project has three goals: first, to identify Australian precedents analogous to a recent Canadian case; second, to identify the factors that conduce to the use of prorogation as a partisan political tool; third, to examine the Crown representatives’ actions in these cases, the rationales for those actions, and the reaction of the UK Colonial/Dominions Office to the representatives’ actions, in order to better establish the extent of representatives’ discretion regarding the reserve power to deny advice to prorogue a parliament.
Scholars, Captives and Slaves: The Intellectual Debate on Ransoming Prisoners in Muslim West Africa
This grant enabled Dr. Lofkrantz to travel to France, Mauritania, and Nigeria in April 2012. Dr. Lofkrantz visited local libraries and archives in these countries to access works and writings of 19th Century leaders.
Summary of project:
“Scholars, Captives, and Slaves: The Intellectual Debate on Ransoming Prisoners in Muslim West Africa” is a transnational intellectual and social history of the debate amongst West African Muslims, between the seventeenth and twentieth centuries, on the legality and use of the practice of ransoming. Ransoming, or the return of a captive otherwise slated for enslavement in exchange for payment, was a defining characteristic of captivity and slavery in West Africa. While many aspects of slavery have been studied, this project bridges social and intellectual history to highlight the connections and ramifications of the debate between religious and legal authorities and policy-makers on the institution of slavery and remedies for illegal enslavement, specifically ransoming. In particular this project will contribute to the understanding of slavery in Islamic and African systems, especially in relationship to the ties between intellectual discourse, the formation of policy and actual practices of enslavement and treatment of captives and slaves.
2011-2012: Visiting Scholar-Dr. Swaran Singh
As part of the Global and International Studies Initiative (GISI), Dr. Swaran Singh, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, spoke at St. Thomas University, discussing “India’s Relations with China.” The talk was co-sponsored by the GISI, the Department of Political Science at STU and the the Department of Political Science at UNBF.
The first GISI Visiting Fellow, Singh has worked for over 20 years on issues of arms control and disarmament, war and peace, security and nuclear affairs and East Asian studies, notably China’s foreign and security policies and India-China relations. Singh is the author of three books, eight monographs and has contributed 45 chapters to books. He has published 75 research articles in academic journals, 130 articles in other periodicals, and more than 150 articles in newspapers and websites. “India and China are the two most populous countries in the world. They are also neighbours and potential competitors for resources, influence and political space within Asia. The two countries have gone to war before; their relations could well determine the shape of global politics in the 21st century,” said Dr. Shaun Narine, Political Science Professor and Director of the GISI at St. Thomas University. “Dr. Singh’s talk will examine the areas of contention and possible cooperation between these two Asian giants and what this may mean for the world.”
Click here to visit Centre for International Politics, Organization and Disarmament (CIPOD)
The first GISI Visiting Fellow, Singh has worked for over 20 years on issues of arms control and disarmament, war and peace, security and nuclear affairs and East Asian studies, notably China’s foreign and security policies and India-China relations. Singh is the author of three books, eight monographs and has contributed 45 chapters to books. He has published 75 research articles in academic journals, 130 articles in other periodicals, and more than 150 articles in newspapers and websites. “India and China are the two most populous countries in the world. They are also neighbours and potential competitors for resources, influence and political space within Asia. The two countries have gone to war before; their relations could well determine the shape of global politics in the 21st century,” said Dr. Shaun Narine, Political Science Professor and Director of the GISI at St. Thomas University. “Dr. Singh’s talk will examine the areas of contention and possible cooperation between these two Asian giants and what this may mean for the world.”
Click here to visit Centre for International Politics, Organization and Disarmament (CIPOD)
Attached below is Dr. Singh’s professional/academic resume.