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SESSION 1: THURSDAY, 13 SEPTEMBER 2007, 11-12 · 1 SESSION 1: THURSDAY, 13 SEPTEMBER 2007, 11-12.45 1-1 After 9/11: Living in a World Risk Society Approaches to International Relations

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    SESSION 1: THURSDAY, 13 SEPTEMBER 2007, 11-12.45 1-1 After 9/11: Living in a World Risk Society Approaches to International Relations in an Age of Terror: Places, Spaces and Risks I ROSINE Chair: Yee-Kuang Heng (University of St Andrews) Paper 1: Living in dangerous times – fear, human rights and social policy post

    9/11 David Denney (Royal Holloway, University of London)

    Paper 2: The practice of war and the discourse of risk Mikkel Vedby Rasmussen (Danish Institute for Military Studies)

    Paper 3: Security co-operation in the risk society Michael Williams (Royal United Services Institute) Discussant: Christopher Coker, LSE 1-2 State, Sovereignty and Territory Central Concepts in IR: a meta-theoretical conversation IV ROSINE Chair: Jens Bartelson (University of Copenhagen) Paper 1: ´Sovereign subjectivity´. Discipline and governmentality in the new

    world order Tanja E. Aalberts (Leiden University)

    Paper 2: The fictional quality of sovereignty Mechthild Exo (Magdeburg University)

    Paper 3: The stuff of International Relations? Process philosophy as meta-theoretical reflection on security, territory and authority

    Johannes Stripple (Lund University) Paper 4: 50 ways to change a concept: current arguments on state and

    sovereignty Jörg Meyer (University of Magdeburg)

    Discussant: Jens Bartelson (University of Copenhagen) 1-3 Integration and conflict transformation – towards a theoretical framework Conflict Transformation – European Experience(s) 2 GIOLITTI Chair: Thomas Diez (University of Birmingham) Paper 1: Conflict transformation theory and European practice Hugh Miall (University of Kent) Paper 2: Is ethno-nationalism a paper tiger? Rodolfo Ragioneri (University of Sassari) Paper 3: The perspective of European integration as a means of conflict

    transformation: The case of Bosnia and Hercegovina Thorsten Gromes (University of Marburg) Paper 4: The impact of Europeanisation on community conflicts: a mapping

    exercise

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    Elise Feron (Institute d’études politiques de Lille) Discussant: AJR Groom (University of Kent) 1-4 Round Table on Critical Approaches to Security in Europe Critical Approaches to Security in Europe B PLANA Chair: Jef Huysmans (The Open University)

    Critical approaches to security in Europe: A network manifesto Stephan Davidshofer (Sciences Po, France), Francesco Ragazzi (Sciences Po, France / Northwestern University), Claudia Aradau (The Open University), Rens van Munster (University of Southern Denmark)

    Discussants: Rob Walker (University of Victoria) Mick Dillon (University of Lancaster) Mark Salter (University of Ottawa)

    1-5 Globalization and Cultural Plurality in IR Cultural Plurality in IR Theory and IR Practice 6 GIOLITTI Chair: Zuzana Lehmannová, (University of Economics, Prague) Paper 1: Imbalance of globalization as a cultural problem Zuzana Lehmannová (University of Economics, Prague) Paper 2: Reconciling identities in a human rights framework Vincent Depaigne (School of Oriental and African Studies) Paper 3: Visual culture and the question of difference in a pluralist world Frank Möller (Tampere Peace Research Institute) Paper 4: Tradition as a modern strategy: Indigenous knowledge and local

    governance in Nigeria Geoffrey Nwaka (Abia State University)

    Paper 5: The struggle for ‘global opinion’ in the international media Tiina Seppälä (University of Lapland)

    Discussant: Brian Hurn (Diplomatic Academy of London, University of Westminster and University of Surrey)

    1-6 The ‘Rule of Law’ under Security Democratic Legitimacy Upheld? On the Politicisation of the Law and the Legalisation of International Politics 4 GIOLITTI Chair: Nicole Deittelhoff (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt Paper 1: Friend or enemy? Rethinking Schmitt's understanding of the

    relationship between ethics, law and the use of force in International Relations

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    David Chandler (University of Westminister) Paper 2: Commercial law, legal pluralism, and the privatization of governance

    in the global political economy Edward S. Cohen (Westminster College) Paper 3: Between Thompson and Schmitt: Engaging with the rule of law in

    (global) political economy Christopher May (Lancester University) Discussant: Ignacio De La Rasilla del Moral (University Pablo Olavide of Seville) 1-7 Theorising global governance I Global governance, a critical encounter: depolitisation/repolitisation in theory and practice 1 GIOLITTI Chair: Elisabeth De Zutter (University of Maastricht) Paper 1: Hegemonic governance Cornelia Beyer (University of Tübingen) Paper 2: Empire and governance: the question of legitimacy

    Jacobus Delwaide (Katholieke Universiteit Brussel) and Jörg Kustermans (Katholieke Universiteit Brussel)

    Paper 3: International civil society within the theory of international relations Lidia Lo Schiavo (University of Messina) Discussant: Elisabeth De Zutter (University of Maastricht) 1-8 Framing Global Health Global Health Challenges in/for International Relations 8 GIOLITTI Chair: Carmen Huckel (University of Tübingen) Paper 1: Shaping global health? The accumulative nature of the US health

    complex Rodney Loeppky (York University)

    Paper 2: The international political economy of regenerative medicine: Challenges for / from emerging economies Amanda Dickens (University of East Anglia, UK) .

    Paper 3: The political economy of global health research Sandra MacLean & David MacLean (Simon Fraser University)

    Discussant: Ritu Vij (University of Aberdeen) 1-9 Governing the service economy: International standards from a political economy: introduction Governing the service economy: International standards from a political economy perspective 5 GIOLITTI Chair: Andreas Nölke (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) and Jean-Christophe

    Graz (Université de Lausanne)

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    Paper 1: The Emerging power of services standards in the global political economy Jean-Christophe Graz (Université de Lausanne) and Eva Hartmann, Marcel Heires, Nafy Niang, Alexandre Sutlian (IEPI, University of Lausanne)

    Paper 2: Service standards: an institutional and regulationist political economy overview

    Christian du Tertre (Université Paris Diderot) Paper 3: The importance of ignorance: standards, UNcertainty and the problem

    of non-knowledge Oliver Kessler (University of Bielefeld) Paper 4: Governance and standards in the service economy: a survey of the

    knowledge sector James Perry (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) Discussant: Rodney Bruce Hall (Oxford University) 1-10 Development and the Third World Theoretical Insights IPE, Developing Countries, and Development 9 GIOLITTI Chair: Jørgen Dige Pedersen (University of Aarhus) Paper 1: The global/local nexus in local development strategies in developing

    countries Dansero Egidio (University of Turin), Scarpocchi Cristina (Università Autonoma della Valle d'Aosta), and Elisa Bignante (University of Turin)

    Paper 2: Do the globalization theorists rephrase and reword the central concepts of the Dependency School? Development discourse of the Globalists and Dependency theorists Dhammika Herath (Göteborg University),

    Paper 3: Transformation or preservation? The nature of capitalism in post-Apartheid Southern Africa Stefan Andreasson (Queen's University Belfast),

    Paper 4: International development and the politics of well-being J. Allister McGregor (University of Bath)

    Discussant: Jørgen Dige Pedersen (University of Aarhus) 1-11 Regime Type and International Conflict Liberalism and Peace F PLANA Chair: Erik Gartzke (Columbia University) Paper 1: Disputes, democracies, and dependencies,

    Michael Ward / Randolph Siverson (UC Davis), Paper 2: The applicability of the Democratic Peace to territorial changes?

    Jaroslav Tir (University of Georgia) and Douglas Gibler (University of Alabama)

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    Paper 3: Take your time, take your space: Liberalism, democracy, and peace Andrea Ruggeri (University of Essex), Discussant: Erik Gartzke (Columbia University) 1-12 The European Union and Transatlantic Relations Post-Modern Foreign and Security Policy in the Enlarged Europe A PLANA Chair: Michael Smith (Loughborough University) Paper 1: Who securitized what, when, and how? A comparative analysis of eight

    EU member states in the Iraq crisis Bernhard Stahl (Prota Mateja Nenadovic College)

    Paper 2: European and American approaches to security and development Sergio Fabbrini and Daniela Sicurelli (University of Trento)

    Paper 3: The European Union and the United States: an exceptional experiment contends with American exceptionalism Andrew Ross (University of New Mexico)

    Paper 4: Rivalry among institutions. EU-NATO relations revisited Rafael Biermann (US Naval Postgraduate School)

    Discussant: Kristin M. Haugevik (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs). 1-13 Pragmatism and the Discipline Pragmatism and International Relations 7 GIOLITTI Chair: Patrick Thaddeus Jackson (American University) Paper 1: Autoethnographic IR: exploring the self as a source of research

    Roland Bleiker and Morgan Brigg (University of Queensland) Paper 2: On acting and knowing

    Jörg Friedrichs and Friedrich Kratochwil (European University Institute)

    Paper 3: A pragmatist approach to theory choice and scientific explanation in IR. Graham Allison’s account of the Cuban Missile Crisis reconsidered

    Rogier De Langhe, Erik Weber and Jeroen Van Bouwel (University of Gent)

    Paper 4: International Relations as a rhetorical discipline: towards (re)newing horizons

    Markus Kornprobst (University of Oxford) Discussant: Patrick Thaddeus Jackson (American University) 1-14 Soft power and international relations theory Religion, soft power and international relations L PLANA Chair: Jeff Haynes (London Metropolitan University) Paper 1: Religion, soft power and international relations

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    Jeff Haynes (London Metropolitan University) Paper 2: How soft power when it embodies peaceful, spiritual, cultural values

    takes precedence over hard power on a long-term basis for the prospect of peace Helene Cristini (International University of Monaco)

    Paper 3: Political survival and domestic religious influence Todd Kent (Texas A&M University-Qatar)

    Paper 4: Towards a de-secularised transnational civil society? Transnational religious actors and international political theory’ Giorgio Shani (Ritsumeikan University)

    Discussant: Mohammad Nafissi (London Metropolitan University) 1-15 Contemporary (in)securities: circulation, proliferation, and dissent Security, Politics, Critique C PLANA Chair: Kyle Grayson (Newcastle University) Paper 1: Biopolitics of security in the 21st century Michael Dillon (Lancaster University) Paper 2: "Safe as houses”: representation of the family as international security Matt Davies (Newcastle University) Paper 3: Models for homeland defence? The policing of anti-globalisation

    protests and the ambiguities of resistance John Gibson (Newcastle University) Discussant: Kyle Grayson (Newcastle University) 1-16 Small States and the Concept of Power Small States in International Affairs 10 GIOLITTI Chairs: Nicola Smith and Donna Lee Paper 1: Introduction: resetting the agenda for theorising small states

    Nicola Smith and Donna Lee (University of Birmingham) Paper 2: Pros and cons with small state analysis - Swedish international

    environmental engagement illustrating the use of a small state Matilda Broman (Lund University)

    Paper 3: The foreign policy potential of small state information strategies Alan Chong (National University of Singapore)

    Paper 4: The military and small states: the role of hard power in Singapore’s domestic and foreign policy Bilveer Singh (National University of Singapore)

    1-17 Indefensible or Indispensable? Normative debates around Sovereignty (1) Sovereignty and Agency N PLANA Chair: James Heartfield (University of Westminster)

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    Paper 1: Sovereignty as responsibility: a critique Philip Cunliffe (King’s College London) Paper 2: Sovereignty and territoriality: The plight of presentism in

    contemporary Social Science Sylvia Lechner (University of Wales, Aberystwyth) Paper 3: Nuff SAID - the anarchist critique Alex Pritchard (Loughborough University) Paper 4: Resurrecting the Leviathan: ultimate authority and political theory in

    the constitutional conflicts of the European polity Cormac Mac Amhlaigh (European University Institute) Discussant: James Heartfield (University of Westminster) 1-18 Alternative conceptions of state strength The role of state capacity for development and peace E PLANA Chair: Kristian Gleditsch (University of Essex) Paper 1: UN peacekeeping and local governance

    Han Dorussen (University of Essex) & Ismene Gizelis (University of Kent)

    Paper 2: Space-time analysis of violent events in insurgency and civil war David Meyer and Arthur Stein (University of California, San Diego) Paper 3: Crisis Stability and Capacity for Coercion Branislav Slantchev (University of California, San Diego) Paper 4: Theorizing the success and failure of the modern state: constitutive and

    infrastructural capacities Claudiu Craciun (National Political Studies and Administration) Discussant: Håvard Hegre (PRIO / University of Oslo) 1-19 Critical Reflections on the Theoretical Foundations of IR Theory and Area Studies The contribution of Regional and Area Studies to IR Theory II ROSINE Chair: Jürgen Haacke (London School of Economics) Paper 1: Regions, areas, and exceptions: IR and the Hermeneutics of context

    Felix Ciută (UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies) Paper 2: Sociolinguistic competence, discourse analysis and Area Studies

    Dirk Nabers (German Institute for Global and Area Studies) Paper 3: No way out into the real world? IR, Area Studies and the constructivist

    turn Stefanie Ortmann (London School of Economics)

    Paper 4: Taking universalism seriously: the Middle East as a bonanza for rational choice

    Martin Beck (German Institute for Middle East Studies, German Institute of Global and Area Studies)

    Discussant: Julie Gilson (University of Birmingham)

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    1-20 Historical Perspective on International Security The English School Approach to International Relations III ROSINE Chair: Yale Ferguson (Rutgers) Paper 1 The Spanish School as the forerunner to the English School Nicolas Lewkowicz (Nottingham University) Paper 2: Epochal change, historical demarcation, and the quest for world order

    Sasson Sofer (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Paper 3: A Central-Eastern European international society Peter Marton (Corvinus University of Budapest) Discussant: Richard Little (University of Bristol) 1-21 International Peacemaking and Peacekeeping Experiences: What Relevance for the Middle East? The Place of the Middle East in International Relations: Making Sense of Global Interconnection and Local Dynamics in Middle East Politics G PLANA Chair: Raffaella A. Del Sarto (European University Institute, Florence) Paper 1: The EU, the US and the Middle East: the ‘uneasy triangle’ and peace

    making Federica Bicchi (London School of Economics) Paper 2: International intervention as a tool for conflict management in the

    Israeli-Palestinian conflict Joel Peters (Virigina Tech and Ben Gurion University) Paper 3: The Palestinian-Israeli conflict and future scenarios for Palestine state

    and society Rami Nasrallah (International Peace and Cooperation Centre

    Jerusalem) Paper 4: A more active EU in the Middle East Sven Biscop (Royal Institute for International Relations Brussels) Discussant: Christopher Hill (University of Cambridge) 1-22 UN and World Security The UN is the globalized international system 3 GIOLITTI Chair: Dimitris Bourantonis (Athens University of Economics and Business) Paper 1: The reform and efficiency of the UN Security Council: a veto players

    analysis Aris Alexopoulos (University of Crete) and Dimitris Bourantonis (University of Athens)

    Paper 2: The Security Council and the use of military force: an examination of five basic criteria of legitimacy John Lango (Hunter College)

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    Paper 3: "Security, Development and Human Rights": an integrated approach at the UN ? Corrado Scognamillo (Political Institute of Lyon)

    Discussant: Christopher Jones (Brigham Young University) 1-23 Cooperation and Conflict in Transatlantic Relations Towards a post-western west? H PLANA Chair: Christopher Browning (Keele University) Paper 1: NATO and the changing nature of the transatlantic security community Bjorn Olav Knutsen (Norwegian Defence Research Establishment) Paper 2: The evolution of NATO’s partnership strategy – democratic peace or

    clash of civilizations? Holger Molder (University of Tartu/ Ministry of Defence, Estonia) Discussant: Rainer Bauman (University of Bremen) 1-24 What is Historical Sociology and What is it to IR? Historical Sociology P PLANA Chair: Jennifer Sterling-Folker (Connecticut) Paper 1: The fourth wave in Historical Sociology – lessons from and for IR John Hobson (Sheffield) and George Lawson (Goldsmiths) Paper 2: Historical Sociology should not become a subfield in IR Martin Hall (Lund) Paper 3: Historical Sociology of International Relations Daniel Nexon (Georgetown) Discussant: Jennifer Sterling-Folker (Connecticut) 1-25 Conceptual Reflections on 'Post-Westphalian' Order Violence beyond the State M PLANA Chair: Fabio Armao (University of Turin) Paper 1: Transnational politics and civil conflict Jeff Checkel (University of Oslo) Paper 2: Violence after the state? The collapse of the Westphalian order and

    Carl Schmitt’s notion of a “global civil war” Louiza Odysseos (University of Sussex) Paper 3: Asymmetrical warfare or post-Wesphalian warfare: War beyond the

    state Stefano Ruzza (Centro di Ricerca e Documentazione Luigi Einaudi) Discussant: Francesco Tuccari (University of Turin)

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    SESSION 2: THURSDAY, 13 SEPTEMBER 2007, 13.45-15.30 2-1 ‘Fighting words’: Discourses of war and terror after 9/11 Approaches to International Relations in an Age of Terror: Places, Spaces and Risks I ROSINE Chair: Alex Danchev (University of Nottingham) Paper 1: ‘In search of monsters to destroy’ – power, knowledge &

    understanding in US foreign policy after 9/11 Ken McDonagh (Trinity College Dublin) Paper 2: The rhetoric of war – Russian and American discourse in the war on

    terrorism Greg Simons (Crismart) Paper 3: Identity and policy in the US war in Iraq: a constructivist analysis Karl Schonberg (St Lawrence University) Discussant: Alex Danchev (University of Nottingham) 2-2 Politics, Power and Social Action Central Concepts in IR: a meta-theoretical conversation IV ROSINE Chair: Nicholas Onuf (Florida International University) Paper 1: Unity in diversity? ´Power´ in world politics Felix Berenkoetter (LSE) Paper 2: The three contexts of power Analysis in IR Stefano Guzzini (Uppsala University) Paper 3: The international, the humanitarian and the political Paulo Esteves (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Minas gerais) Paper 4: Power, norms and social sanction: identifying ‘practical norms’ in

    global politics David Ambrosetti (Centre d'études et de recherches internationales de

    l'Université de Montréal) Discussant: Nicholas Onuf (Florida International University) 2-3 The framing of conflict and intervention Conflict Transformation – European Experience(s) 2 GIOLITTI Chair: Marta Martinelli (Université Libre Bruxelles) Paper 1: The transformation of military force and the Italian “Peace Support”

    political rhetoric and the protection of means and personnel Fabrizio Coticchia (Lucca Institute for Advanced Studies) Paper 2: Power beyond conditionality Jakob Skovgaard (European University Institute) Paper 3: Framing law and order in Kosovo: peace operations and the role of

    discursive framing in conflict transformation Till Blume (University of Konstanz)

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    Paper 4: Reconciling the irreconcilable? Considering the role of identity construction in Turkey’s position towards the Cyprus issue

    Özlem Demirta-Bagdonas (Fatih University) Discussant: Marta Martinelli (Université Libre Bruxelles) 2-4 Contemporary insecurites and the politics of exception Critical Approaches to Security in Europe B PLANA Chair: Vivienne Jabri (King’s College London) Paper 1: Forget equality: the dilemma of security and liberty in the “war on

    terror” Claudia Aradau (The Open University) Paper 2: The war on terror as liberal governance: the camp Andreas Behnke (University of Reading) Paper 3: Taking exception to the exception. Schmitt, Agamben and liberty-

    security debates Jef Huysmans (The Open University)

    Paper 4: Georgio Agamben and the politics of the exception Andrew Neal (King’s College London)

    Paper 5: We are all exiles: implications of the border as state of exception Mark Salter (University of Ottawa) Discussant: Vivienne Jabri (King’s College London) 2-5 Western IR Theories: Their Perception and Transformation in Other Cultures Cultural Plurality in IR Theory and IR Practice 6 GIOLITTI Chair: Marina Lebedeva (Moscow State Institute of International Relations) Paper 1: Russian ambiguity towards Western IR theories and IR approaches: the

    past and the future Marina Lebedeva (Moscow State Institute of International Relations) Paper 2: Reflection of Western IR Theories in Russia Oleg Barabanov (Moscow State Institute of International Relations) Paper 3: The Russian debate on the “Northern Dimension” concept Dmitri Lanko (St. Petersburg State University) Paper 4: Adapting Western IR theory: the case of Ukraine Volodymyr Dubovyk (Odessa National University) 2-6 Democracy and Peace Democratic Legitimacy Upheld? On the Politicisation of the Law and the Legalisation of International Politics 4 GIOLITTI Chair: Antje Wiener (University of Bath)

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    Paper 1: Democratic Peace Theory: an agenda for repressivity or a theory for political progression

    Omena Henry-A (University of Benin) Paper 2: Law versus politics Lucie Pospechova (Jan Masaryk Center of International Studies) Discussant: David Chandler (University of Westminster) 2-7 Theorising global governance II Global governance, a critical encounter: depolitisation/repolitisation in theory and practice 1 GIOLITTI Chair: Eero Palmujoki (University of Tampere) Paper 1: Beyond international relations and comparative politics Philip Cerny (Rutgers University-Newark) Paper 2: Identity and global governance Elisabeth De Zutter (University of Maastricht) Discussant: Eero Palmujoki (University of Tampere) 2-8 The Global Health Conundrum: Balancing Social Justice and Private Profit Global Health Challenges in/for International Relations 8 GIOLITTI Chair: Sonja Bartsch (GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies) Paper 1: The antibiotic resistance pandemic: finding ethical, sociocultural, and

    political economic frames to foster change Kitty Corbett (Simon Fraser University) Paper 2: Global intellectual property rights and global public health issues: the

    battle over the 2001-2005 WTO TRIPs amendment process Valbona Muzaka (University of Sheffield) Paper 3: Transnational norm-building in global health

    Wolfgang Hein and Lars Kohlmorgen (German Institute of Global and Area Studies)

    Discussant: Ted Schrecker (University of Ottawa) 2-9 Developing Countries and Globalisation: Issues and Challenges IPE, Developing Countries, and Development 5 GIOLITTI Chair: Eugenia Baroncelli (University of Bologna) Paper 1: Intellectual property rights and transitional economies: does IPR

    compliance improve economic development? Cynthia Horne (Western Washington University) Paper 2: Why did financial liberalization fail to deliver its promises in emerging

    markets? Ilke Civelekoglu (University of Virginia)

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    Paper 3: Analysis and perspectives of the Chinese influence in Africa: a way out of post-colonialism

    Valerie Paone (CCIP&Pantheon-Assas) Discussant: Eugenia Baroncelli (University of Bologna) 2-10 The European Union as an External Actor Post-Modern Foreign and Security Policy in the Enlarged Europe 9 GIOLITTI Chair: Brian White (Leicester University and University of Toulouse) Paper 1: Bilateral diplomacy in the European Union: towards post-modern

    patterns? Brian Hocking (Loughborough University) and Jozef Batora (Austrian Academy of Sciences)

    Paper 2: Effective multilateralism and the ‘European Union as an integrative power’: Strengthening the EU’s International Actorness through NATO-EU-UN inter-organisationalism? Joachim Koops (University of Kiel)

    Paper 3: The European Union and international organizations” Knud Erik Jørgensen (Aarhus University) and Sebastian Oberthur (Vrije Universiteit Brussels)

    Paper 4: What is the nature of the EU? Views from the neighbourhood Vit Benes (Institute of International Relations, Prague)

    Discussant: Sibylle Scheipers (Chatham House) 2-11 Democratic Processes and Foreign Policy Liberalism and Peace F PLANA Chair: Birger Heldt (Folke Bernadotte Academy Stockholm) Paper 1: Justifying the use of force in liberal democracies

    Anna Geis/Harald Müller/Niklas Schörnig (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt)

    Paper 2: From democratic to parliamentary peace: the European Parliaments and the Iraq War 2003

    Hartwig Hummel/Sandra Dieterich/Stefan Marschall (University of Düsseldorf),

    Paper 3: Is democratic peace strongest among left-liberals? Matthew Rendall (University of Nottingham), Discussant: Birger Heldt (Folke Bernadotte Academy Stockholm) 2-12 External Dimensions of the European Neighbourhood Policy Post-Modern Foreign and Security Policy in the Enlarged Europe G PLANA Chair: Magnus Ekengren (Swedish National Defence College)

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    Paper 1: The changing role of the Commission in foreign policy making towards the European neighbourhood Heidrun Maurer (Institute for Advanced Studies)

    Paper 2: A foreign policy analysis of the external dimension of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice Nicole Wichmann (University of Cambridge)

    Paper 3: The European Neighbourhood Policy: the EU's newest foreign policy instrument? Ecaterina McDonagh (University of Dublin)

    Paper 4: The EU foreign policy dilemma in the neighbourhood: bilateral or regional approach Emel Oktay (Clingendael Institute)

    Paper 5: Looking for discursive (in)coherence in the European Union’s enlargement debate

    Anna Herranz (Autonomous University of Barcelona) Discussant: Eiki Berg (University of Tartu) 2-13 ‘Relativism’ Revisited - Method(s), Knowledge(s) and Truth(s) Pragmatism and International Relations 7 GIOLITTI Chair: Markus Kornprobst (University of Oxford) Paper 1: Habituality of the Finnish political imaginary on Russia Anni Kangas (University of Tampere) Paper 2: International Relations as “a collection of practical solutions” – a

    Pragmatist interpretation for the self-image of the discipline Juha Käpylä and Harri Mikkola (University of Tampere) Paper 3: Legitimacy as a transdisciplinary counterfactual in global affairs: does

    law + ethics + politics = a just Pragmatism or mere politics? James O´Connor (University of Helsinki) Paper 4: Practices, experiments and change in world politics: a Peircean

    perspective Ruben Zaiotti (University of Toronto) Discussant: Markus Kornprobst (University of Oxford) 2-14 Clash of civilisations? Religion, soft power and international relations L PLANA Chair: Sara Silvestri (City University and University of Cambridge) Paper 1: Countering the ‘Clash of Civilizations’: intercultural dialogue and

    faith-based diplomacy versus extremism and security threats Sara Silvestri (City University and Cambridge University) Paper 2: Hardboiled soft power: is there a nation of Islam in Burundian politics? Geert Castryck (Flemish Peace Institute) Paper 3: Civil Islam and its impact on international relations Reza Simbar (Guilan University) Discussant: Claudia Baumgart (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt)

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    2-15 Power, knowledge, and human (in)security Security, Politics, Critique C PLANA Chair: Anita Lacey (University of Auckland) Paper 1: Epistemic security regimes Thomas Moore (University of Edinburgh) Paper 2: The danger of human security narratives Annick T.R. Wibben (University of San Franscisco Paper 3: The life and times of human security Kyle Grayson (Newcastle University) Discussant: Anita Lacey (University of Auckland) 2-16 Small States in the International System Small States in International Affairs 10 GIOLITTI Chair: Donna Lee (University of Birmingham) Paper 1: Taming Gulliver’s power: small states’ strategies to punch above their

    weight in a post-Westphalian world Filip Ejdus (Centre for Civil-Military Relations, Serbia) Paper 2: Small states’ solidarism” in the international society Annika Bergman-Rosamond (University of Leicester) Paper 3: Small states as a threat to international order: the first great debate and

    beyond Ee Loong Toh (LSE) Paper 4: Small states as agenda-setters and law-makers: Belgian and Norwegian

    roles in developing new norms of warfare Margarita Petrova (European University Institute) 2-17 Playing Games? Sovereignty and European Unity Sovereignty and Agency N PLANA Chair: Chris Bickerton (University of Oxford) Paper 1: Simulating sovereignty: when member states opt out of the EU Rebecca Adler-Nissen (University of Copenhagen) Paper 2: Danger of dilution? EU integration, multi-level governance and the

    concept of sovereignty Kathrin Birkel (Radboud University, Nijmegen) Paper 3: Sharing sovereignty: Turkey’s sovereignty culture and the EU

    accession Ali Tekin (Bilkent University) Paper 4: Sovereign states and their autonomy: French and German decision-

    making concerning the agricultural chapter of the Uruguay Round of GATT negotiations

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    Gerry van der Kamp-Alons (Radboud University Nijmegen) Discussant: Chris Bickerton (University of Oxford) 2-18 Development and state capacity The role of state capacity for development and peace E PLANA Chair: Nils Petter Gleditsch (NTNU / CSCW, PRIO) Paper 1: Budgeting for peace? Hanne Fjelde & Indra de Soysa (NTNU) Paper 2: State capacity, development, and gender equality Margit Bussmann (University of Konstanz) Paper 3: The role of donors in fighting corruption Christoph Seidler (FU Berlin) Paper 4: Armed conflict over international rivers: the onset and militarization of

    river claims Paul R. Hensel (Florida State University) and Marit Brochmann

    (University of Oslo and PRIO) Paper 5: Analytical perspectives on conflict and cooperation Kyle Beardsley (Emory University) Discussant: Tobias Hofmann (FU Berlin) 2-19 cancelled. 2-20 International Society, Norms and Global Governance The English School Approach to International Relations III ROSINE Chair: John Williams (Durham) Paper 1: From international society to world information society Rex Hughes (Cambridge University) Paper 2: International society and exclusion: the idea of outlaw states outside

    the US Tytti Erasto (University of Tampere) Paper 3: International society and global governance: neo-liberalism and the

    problem of global governance Steven Slaughter (Deakin University) Discussant: Christian Bundegaard (Graduate Institute of International Studies,

    Geneva) 2-21 Studying religion and in/security in the Middle East The Place of the Middle East in International Relations: Making Sense of Global Interconnection and Local Dynamics in Middle East Politics A PLANA

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    Chair: Peter Burgess (PRIO) Paper 1: Religion, security and Turkey Pinar Bilgin (Bilkent University) Paper 2: World conflict over religion: secularism as flawed solution Ole Wæver (University of Copenhagen) Paper 3: Post-Orientalism, Islam and securitization in exceptional times Mustapha Kamal Pasha (University of Aberdeen) Paper 4: The EU’s approach of the religious factor in its Near Abroad: Turkey

    and the Arab Mediterranean countries Eduard Soler i Lecha (CIDOB Foundation) - Discussant: Peter Burgess (PRIO) 2-22 UN Charter and Security Council Reform The UN is the globalized international system 3 GIOLITTI Chair: Mario Alessi (Italian UN Association) Paper 1: Democracy and legitimacy in Security Council reform

    Danilo Souza (Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro) Paper 2: When states sound the alarm – alerting the UN Security Council to

    international crisis Aletta Mondré (University of Bremen)

    Paper 3: The United Nations: mediating between global social forces Filippo Artoni (University of London)

    Discussant: Radim Srsen (University of Economics, Prague) 2-23 Problematising Western Democracy Promotion Towards a Post-Western West? H PLANA Chair: Marko Lehti (Tampere Peace Research Institute) Paper 1: European and American democracy promotion as an element of foreign

    policy – the unexpected divergence Cristina Barrios (LSE) Paper 2: Incompatible ‘Wests’? US and European conceptions of global order Rainer Bauman (University of Bremen) Paper 3: The transatlantic trade wars and the future of the West Lisa Aronsson (LSE) Discussant: Pertti Joenniemi (Danish Institute for International Studies) 2-24 The ‘Science’ of Historical Sociology Historical Sociology P PLANA Chair: Justin Rosenberg (Sussex) Paper 1: Historical Sociology in IR: where's the science? What role for science?

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    Simon Curtis and Marjo Koivisto (LSE) Paper 2: Extending the longue dureé: Manuel De Landa and a thousand years of

    nonlinear history Colin Wight (Exeter)

    Paper 3: Is a global identity possible? The relevance of big history to self-other relations Heikki Patomäki (Helsinki)

    Discussant: Justin Rosenberg (Sussex) 2-25 Uncivil Society: Non-State Armed Groups and Violence Violence beyond the State M PLANA Chair: Anna Caffarena (University of Turin) Paper 1: The strategic logic of violence in post-conflict states Michael Boyle (University of St. Andrews) Paper 2: A civil war? Political violence and non-violence in a democratic

    movement Nick Henry (Victoria University of Wellington) Paper 3: Understanding armed groups and their transformations from war to

    politics: a collection of insider perspectives Veronique Dudouet (Berghof Research Center for Constructive

    Conflict Management) Discussant: Umberto Gentiloni (University of Teramo)

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    SESSION 3: THURSDAY, 13 SEPTEMBER 2007, 16.00-17.45 3-1 Terrorism, the Internet & International Relations Approaches to International Relations in an Age of Terror: Places, Spaces and Risks I ROSINE Chair: Francesco Cavatorta (Dublin City University) Paper 1: Broadcast yourself: terrorism, reality TV, and the Youtube Generation Maura Conway (Dublin City University) Paper 2: Approaching terrorism and counter-terrorism: networks and the Web

    Michael Stohl (University of California, Santa Barbara), Cynthia Stohl, (University of California, Santa Barbara)

    Paper 3: Islamic radicalisation and the role of the Internet: the case of Bosnia-Herzegovina Uros Svete (University of Ljubljana)

    Discussant: Giampiero Giacomello (Universitá di Bologna) 3-2 International System, International Society and World Order Central Concepts in IR: a meta-theoretical conversation IV ROSINE Chair: R.B.J. Walker (University of Victoria/Keele University) Paper 1: Pivotal middle powers and world order: toward a new understanding of

    international politics? Mehmet Ozkan (University of Johannesburg)

    Paper 2: The concept of world order Fabio Fossati (University of Trieste)

    Paper 3: The missing structure in structural theories of hegemony, and the contemporary international system Marco Clementi (University of Pavia)

    Paper 4: The Four Dilemmas of world politics Rodolfo Ragionieri (University of Sassari)

    Discussant: R.B.J. Walker (University of Victoria/Keele University) 3-3: The European Union and conflict transformation Conflict Transformation – European Experience(s) 2 GIOLITTI Chair: Till Blume (University of Konstanz) Paper 1: A stable procedural framework for imposing pecuniary sanctions on

    states: the EC and beyond Stine Andersen (European University Institute) Paper 3: Normative power Europe and conflict transformation Michelle Pace and Thomas Diez (University of Birmingham) Paper 4: Causes of conflict in Europe and the EU’s capacity to respond Emel Akcali (Sorbonne) Discussant: Hugh Miall (University of Kent)

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    3-4 The ethics and politics of risk and uncertainty Critical approaches to security in Europe B PLANA Chair: Mick Dillon (University of Lancaster) Paper 1: The ethical transformation of risk J. Peter Burgess (PRIO) Paper 2: The changing personality of western security and risk management.

    Vanessa Pupavac (University of Nottingham) Paper 3: Making liberal security: the ‘evidence-based underwriting’ of life

    assurance Luis Lobo-Guerrero (Lancaster University) Paper 4: Risk, uncertainty, and the security paradox. Oliver Kessler (University of Bielefeld) Discussant: Mick Dillon (University of Lancaster) 3-5 Ethnic and Cultural Diversity: Roots of Conflicts and Prevention Cultural Plurality in IR Theory and IR Practice 6 GIOLITTI Chair: Maria Hadjipavlou (University of Cyprus) Paper 1: The Cyprus conflict: root causes and future possibilities for

    peacebuilding Maria Hadjipavlou (University of Cyprus) Paper 2: “Ethnic interest groups” as actors in international relations: a look at

    the differing impact of ethnic interest groups on U.S. foreign policy. Henriette Rytz (German Institute for International and Security Affairs) Paper 3: Culture, dignity and empowerment Milena Beric (Serbia) Discussant: Geofry Nwaka (Abia State University) 3-6 Order vs. Justice Democratic Legitimacy Upheld? On the Politicisation of the Law and the Legalisation of International Politics 4 GIOLITTI Chair: Ignacio de la Rasilla del Moral (University Pablo Olavide of Seville) Paper 1: Creating a more ‘just’ order – the ICC and the politics of judicial

    intervention Andrea Birdsall (University of Edinburgh) Paper 2: Reclaiming sovereignty: the right to self-determination confronted to

    the political Noe Cornago (University of the Basque Country) and Josu de Miguel

    (University of the Basque Country) Paper 3: An inquiry into contemporary international legal democratisation Ignacio de la Rasilla del Moral (University Pablo Olavide of Seville)

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    Paper 4: The scientization of politics and politicization of science in the implementation of international environmental agreements

    Mireira Tarradell (FU Berlin) Discussant: Sybille Scheipers (Chatham House) 3-7 Spatializing security and securitizing actors Critical approaches to security in Europe 1 GIOLITTI Chair: Claudia Aradau (Open University) Paper 1: Space, security, strategy: spatial technology and external spaces Tugba Basaran (University of Cambridge) Paper 2: Geo-coding and risk management: spatializing in security studies Georgios Kolliarakis (Ludwig-Maximilians University) Paper 3: The social construction of the exception: creating transnational space Holger Stritzel (LSE) Paper 4: The concept of security and the EU domestic politics – political actors

    on stage and how to dissect the plot Xymena Kurowska (European University Institute) Discussant: Claudia Aradau (Open University) 3-8 Global Health Governance: National-Global Dimensions Global Health Challenges in/for International Relations 8 GIOLITTI Chair: Marc Froese (York University) Paper 1: Global rationalities and local disasters: reconsidering the role of the

    state in global public health Craig Janes (Simon Fraser University) Paper 2 : The limits of global social policy: health care in post-recessionary

    Japan Ritu Vij (University of Aberdeen) Paper 3: Globalization and health: the G8 and prospects for a global health ethic Ted Schrecker (University of Ottawa) Discussant: Rodney Loeppky (York University) 3-9 Governing private military companies Governing the service economy: International standards from a political economy perspective 5 GIOLITTI Chair: Anna Leander Paper 1: The political economy of international standards in the field of security

    services Anna Leander (Copenhagen Business School)

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    Paper 2: American PMCs: towards institutionalization? Kriztian Varga (ELTE University Budapest) Paper 3: National and regional regulations of PMCs in Europe

    Elke Krahmann (University of Bristol) Paper 4: Standardizing coercion: towards a global commodity? Christian Olsson (Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris) Discussant : Yusuke Dan (Tokai University) 3-10 Europe’s Normative Power Post-Modern Foreign and Security Policy in the Enlarged Europe A PLANA Chair: Christopher Hill (Cambridge University) Paper 1: Normative Power Europe and the 'case for Goliath': the EU, the US and

    the pursuit of the 'good world' Michael Smith (Loughborough University)

    Paper 2: Normative Power Europe – how effective is it? EU–African Union relations in the fields of environmental protection and human rights Sibylle Scheipers (Chatham House) and Daniela Sicurelli (University of Trento)

    Paper 3: Market imperative meets normative power: human rights and European arms transfer policy Jennifer Erickson (Cornell University)

    Discussant: Christian Kaunert (University of Salford) 3-11 Democracy and Arms Control Liberalism and Peace F PLANA Chair: Harald Müller (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) Paper 1: Roles, identities and nuclear weapons - opening the black box of

    democratic arms control policy Una Becker/ Harald Muller/Tabea Seidler (Peace Research Institute

    Frankfurt) Paper 2: Kantian dynamics of the liberal peace Wade Huntley (University of British Columbia) Paper 3: Democracy and nuclear arms control: the Indian experience Pal Sighu, (Geneva Centre for Security Policy) Discussant: Keith Krause (Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva) 3-12 New Modes of Foreign and Security Governance Post-Modern Foreign and Security Policy in the Enlarged Europe 9 GIOLITTI Chair: Knud Erik Jørgensen (Aarhus University) Paper 1: Europeanisation and European foreign policy: the 'third dimension'

    Brian White (Leicester University and University of Toulouse)

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    Paper 2: Security re-divided: ESDP and JHA are distinct Moritz Weiss and Simon Dalferth (International University Bremen)

    Paper 3: Towards a postmodern European Security and Defence Policy? Pernille Rieker (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs)

    Discussant: Kjell Engelbrekt (Swedish National Defence College) 3-13 Foreign Policy without Sovereignty? The EU in International Politics Sovereignty and Agency 7 GIOLITTI Chair: Giovanna Bono (Institute for European Studies, VUB) Paper 1: Federalism, confederalism and sovereignty: understanding the

    democracy game in the EU Andrew Glencross (European University Institute) Paper 2: Europe, Russia and the 'non-historic peoples' James Heartfield (University of Westminster) Paper 3: Legitimacy, identity and interest in EU foreign policy Chris Bickerton (University of Oxford) Paper 4: The EU and the post September 11 Security agency: the EU's policies

    towards Africa Gorm Rye Olsen (University of Roskilde) Discussant: Giovanna Bono (Institute for European Studies, VUB) 3-14 Citizenship in the Middle East between local diversity and international trends The Place of the Middle East in International Relations: Making Sense of Global Interconnection and Local Dynamics in Middle East Politics L PLANA Chair: Arturo Marzano (University of Pisa) Paper 1: Citizenship in Israel: borders, land, and ethnicity Arturo Marzano (University of Pisa) - Paper 2: Demarcating political coalitions: understanding the longevity of

    Turkey’s minority policy through the interplay of global and local dynamics of change v. status quo

    Dilek Kurban (Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation) Paper 3: Citizenship and political reform in Egypt: which role for women? Erika Conti (IMT Alti Studi Lucca) Paper 4: Citizenship in the new Iraqi constitution Muhammad Almusbeh (Scuola Superiori Sant’ Anna) Discussant: Raffaella A. Del Sarto (European University Institute,

    Florence)

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    3-15 Beyond perception: memory, modulation, and metaphor in the construction of threat Security, Politics, Critique C PLANA Chair: John Gibson (Newcastle University) Paper 1: The logic and constituents of security ideas: emotion, memory, and

    ideology Thierry Balzacq (Catholic University of Louvain/University of Namur) Paper 2: Audiences and insecurity: how British citizens modulate national and

    global threats Ben O’Laughlin (Royal Holloway University of London) Paper 3: The tabloid terrorist in the metaphorical making

    Rainer Huelsse and Alexander Spencer (Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich)

    Discussant: John Gibson (Newcastle University) 3-16 The Political Economy of Small States Small States in International Affairs 10 GIOLITTI Chair: Alan Chong (National University of Singapore) Paper 1: Is small beautiful? On the optimal size of (small) nations in an era of

    globalisation Pierre Berthaud (LEPII (University of Grenoble II))and Michaela Bohn-Berhaud (IEP de Grenoble)

    Paper 2: Seeing like the IMF: institutional change in small open economies Andre Broome (The Australian National University) and Leonard Seabrooke

    Paper 3: Small states and global trade: comparing the foreign trade policies of Austria, New Zealand, Singapore and Switzerland in the WTO Doha Round

    Stefan Fritsch (University of Salzburg) Paper 4: FAI flows in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Georgia and Moldova

    Martine Zerbinato and Gabriele De Nard Luca Martignago (IUIES - Isig, Trieste Unibùversity)

    3-17 Indefensible or Indispensable? Normative debates around Sovereignty (2) Sovereignty and Agency N PLANA Chair: Philip Cunliffe (King’s College London) Paper 1: Contested sovereignty: a critical reading of R2P and the current debates

    on failed states Sascha Werthes (University of Duisburg/Essen) Paper 2: Internationalism: bringing the state back into progressive international

    politics Henry Radice (LSE)

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    Paper 3: Slicing up the cake: divisible sovereignty in the pre and post-Westphalian order

    Rolf Schwarz and Oliver Jütersonke (Graduate Institute of International Studies)

    Paper 4: Sovereignty for a New American Century Jean-Francois Drolet (University of Oxford) Discussant: Philip Cunliffe (King’s College London) 3-18 Geography, environment, and state capacity The role of state capacity for development and peace E PLANA Chair: Indra de Soysa (NTNU) Paper 1: The political economy of state extractive capacity in Sub-Saharan

    Africa Cameron Thies (University of Missouri-Columbia) Paper 2: Geographical factors in post-conflict reconciliation: a panel study of Macedonia 2003-2005

    Halvard Buhaug, Albert Simkus, Kristen Ringdal, and Ola Listhaug (NTNU / CSCW, PRIO)

    Paper 3: Natural disasters and the risk of violent civil conflict Marjolein Righarts & Philip Nel (University of Otago) Paper 4: Russia between transition and globalization Olga Garanina (University Pierre Mendes France, Grenoble) Discussant: Hanne Fjelde (NTNU) 3-19 The African Challenge to IR The contribution of Regional and Area Studies to IR Theory II ROSINE Chair: Anja Jetschke (University of Freiburg) Paper 1: Regions, power, and hegemony – South Africa’s role in Southern

    Africa and the world (Prys, Miriam, University of Oxford) Paper 2: Looking to the periphery: the value-added of “non-core” perspectives Smith, Karen (University of Stellenbosch) Paper 3: Rethinking hegemonic stability theory: some reflections from the

    regional integration experience in the developing world Petropoulos, Sotiris (Harokopio University) Discussant: Paul D. Williams (George Washington University) 3-20 English School Theory The English School Approach to International Relations III ROSINE Chair: Charles Jones (University of Cambridge)

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    Paper 1: Children’s games and sovereign states. Charles Manning’s constructivism avant-la-lettre

    Tanja E. Aalberts (Leiden University) Paper 2: Dichotomies in ‘Bull’s Work’ Ipek Zeynep Ruacan (Bilkent University) Paper 3: Turbulent society: enmity in international politics Huss Banai (Brown University) Discussant: Peter Wilson (London School of Economics and Political Science) 3-21 Western Democracy Promotion towards the Middle East: External Initiatives and Internal Reactions The Place of the Middle East in International Relations: Making Sense of Global Interconnection and Local Dynamics in Middle East Politics G PLANA Chair: Martin Beck (GIGA Institute of Middle East Studies Hamburg) Paper 1: Chances and problems of external democracy promotion in the Middle

    East Martin Beck (GIGA Institute of Middle East Studies Hamburg) Paper 2: The case of Syria: resistance to efforts at democracy promotion? Muriel Asseburg (Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik) Paper 3: Strategies of adaptation in the Magrib: Tunisia and Algeria compared Melanie Morisse-Schilbach (University of Dresden) Discussant: Andrea Teti (University of Aberdeen) 3-22 UN and Threats to Peace, Terrorism, Responsibility to Protect The UN is the globalized international system 3 GIOLITTI Chair: Omar Hernández (Andres Bello Catholic University – Guayana,

    Venezuela) Paper 1: Terrorism from the perspective of human rights: a challenge for the

    United Nations Omar Hernández (Andres Bello Catholic University – Guayana, Venezuela)

    Paper 2: Responding to terrorism as an act of self-defence: UN’s contribution to the normative development of the unilateral use of force Muge Kinacioglu (London School of Economics)

    Paper 3: Smart sanctions and the UN Francesco Giumelli (University of Florence) Discussant: Vit Benes (Institute of International Relations, Prague)

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    3-23 Russia and The ‘West’ Toward a Post-Western West H PLANA Chair: Marko Lethi (TAPRI) Paper 1: EU and Russia: developing common values or projecting Western

    values onto Russia Natalia Zaslavskaya (Saint Petersburg State University) Paper 2: From engagement to pragmatic confrontation: the political elite’s

    approach towards the West under Putin Cristian Collina (University of Turin) Paper 3: The present role of Russian regions in international cooperation

    between Russia and Western countries Tamara Gella (Oryol State University) Discussant: Holger Molder (University of Tartu/ Ministry of Defence, Estonia) 3-24 Historical Sociology and the Postcolonial Challenge Historical Sociology P PLANA Chair: Ann Tickner (University of Southern California) Paper 1: The nation-state as globalization: postcolonial theory and the critique

    of the nation-state Sanjay Seth (Goldsmiths) Paper 2: ‘The half that has never been told’: can lived experiences be treated as

    International Historical Sociologies? Robbie Shilliam (Oxford) Paper 4: 911: The re-emergence of colonial governmentality Michael Dutton (Goldsmiths) Discussant: Ann Tickner (University of Southern California) 3-25 Private Actors and the Construction of Identity and Violence Violence beyond the State M PLANA Chair: Ted Hopf (Harvard University) Paper 1: Why killing their own neighbours and family? An anthropology of

    violent “ethnic conflicts” in contemporary Balkans Adrienn Lilla Juhasz (Corvinus University of Budapest) Paper 2: The institutionalisation of violence beyond the state: the case of Angola Mathieu Petithomme (Institute for Political Studies, Paris) Paper 3: The top-down privatisation of violence in Nigerian oil sector Nils Duquet (Flemish Peace Institute) Discussant: Tom Biersteker (Brown University)

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    SESSION 4: FRIDAY, 14 SEPTEMBER 2007, 8.45 – 10.30 4-1 Media, Power and the War on Terror Approaches to International Relations in an Age of Terror: Places, Spaces and Risks M PLANA Chair: Francesco Cavatorta (Dublin City University) Paper 1: Mass media, ‘aesthetic’ religion and new empowerments in the post-

    global world: religion, politics and new ideological technologies Andrea Duranti (University of Cagliari) Paper 2: Is Knowledge (Soft) Power? Intelligence in the making of EU soft

    power Giampiero Giacomello (Universitá di Bologna) and Johan Eriksson

    (Soderton University College) Paper 3: Terrorizing the global civil society: As-Sahaab and the Islamic counter-

    reformation Alex Ingersoll (University of Colorado) Discussant: Maura Conway (Dublin City University) 4-2 Peace and International Security Central Concepts in IR: a meta-theoretical conversation IV ROSINE Chair: Javier Vadell (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Minas Gerais) Paper 1: Peace and international security: meta-theoretical conversations Natalie Tovmasyan Riegg (University of Saint Mary) Paper 2: Exporting democracy: the hegemon concern with peace or security?

    Maria Helena Castro Santos (University of Brasilia) Paper 3: The false promise of constructivist optimism Bernd Bucher (University of St. Gallen) Discussant: Oliver Kessler (University of Bielefeld) 4-3 EU policy-making and conflict transformation Conflict Transformation – European Experience(s) 2 GIOLITTI Chair: Stine Andersen (European University Institute) Paper 1 Kingdon goes transnational: multiple streams and discourse

    entrepreneurs in peace operations Julian Junk (University of Konstanz) and Joachim Blatter (Erasmus University of Rotterdam)

    Paper 2: European policy-making towards the Middle East peace process: comparing the foreign policies of France, the UK and Germany

    Patrick Mueller (Institute for Advanced Studies) Paper 3: New logics of integration in the EU Common Foreign and Security

    Policy: Transformation of conflict-resolution mechanisms in the intergovernmental decision-making process

    Cesar Garcia Perez de Leon (University of Geneva)

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    Discussant: Thorsten Gromes (University of Marburg) 4-4 Security and Risk Critical Approaches to Security in Europe B PLANA Chair: J. Peter Burgess (PRIO) Paper 1: Risk and the perils of proactive security policy Christopher Daase (University of Munich) Paper 2: Security and three concepts of risk Stephan Elbe (University of Sussex) Paper 3: Risk markets: the commodification of security and risk Elke Krahmann (University of Bristol) Paper 4: Drug trafficking: threat or risk? A comparative analysis of drug

    policies in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran Janet Kursawe (GIGA Institut of Middle East Studies) Discussant: J. Peter Burgess (PRIO) 4-5 Concepts of Multiculturalism in International Relations Cultural Plurality in IR Theory and IR Practice 6 GIOLITTI Chair: Radka Neumannová (Multicultural Center, Prague) Paper 1: Multiculturalism and cultural diversity in modern nation-state Radka Neumannová (Multicultural Center, Prague) Paper 2: Multiculturalism and caring ethics. Beyond paternalist care – towards a

    critical and caring multiculturalism Sarah Scuzzarello (University of Lund) Paper 3: Dialogue as synthesis to cross-cultural mutualism: an Afro-European

    Mediterranean cultural discourse Omena Henry-A and Cyril Ekuaze (University of Benin)

    Paper 4: How far could the phenomena of Euroregions evolve Andi Coha (istituto di Sociologia Internazionale di Gorizia)

    4-6 Law vs. Politics: A Focus on Norms Democratic Legitimacy Upheld? On the Politicisation of the Law and the Legalisation of International Politics 1 GIOLITTI Chair: Christopher May (Lancaster University) Paper 1: Interfaces of law and politics: on the discursive construction of legal

    norms and institutions Nicole Deittelhoff (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) Paper 2: What is the „better argument“? Towards a non-consent based criterion

    for legitimacy Alexander Heppt (Ludwig-Maximilians Universität) Paper 3: Legalisation and the missing link to constitutionalisation

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    Tanja Hitzel-Cassagnes (Leibnitz University) and Nadja Meisterhans (Leibnitz University Hannover)

    Paper 4: Politics vs. law in the international realm. a critical discussion based on the German International Law Criminal Code

    Antje Wiener (University of Bath) and Wolfgang Kaleck (Die Firma Berlin)

    Discussant: Christopher May (Lancaster University) 4-7 Theorising global governance III Global governance, a critical encounter: depolitisation/repolitisation in theory and practice 4 GIOLITTI Chair: Carlos R. S. Milani (Universidade Federal de Bahia, Brazil) Paper 1: How global and why governance? Ambivalences, blind spots, and

    challenges for a critical global governance literature Philipp Pattberg (University of Amsterdam) and Klaus Dingwerth

    (University of Bremen) Paper 2: Liberal norms and global environmental governance Eero Palmujoki (University of Tampere) Paper 3: How to study the influence of business actors in environmental

    governance? The limits of International Relations and International Political Economy approaches

    Amandine Bled (Institute of Political Studies, France) Discussant: Carlos R. S. Milani (Universidade Federal de Bahia, Brazil) 4-8 Public-Private Partnerships in Global Health Governance Global Health Challenges in/for International Relations 8 GIOLITTI Chair: Amanda Dickens (University of East Anglia) Paper 1: Global public-private partnerships for pharmaceuticals access: ethical

    and operational features, challenges, and prospects Sherri Brown (Simon Fraser University) Paper 2: Global public health as a unique issue-area with high levels of

    innovative forms of governance Carmen Huckel (University of Tuebingen) Paper 3: Partnerships in global health: opportunities and challenges Sonja Bartsch (GIGA) Paper 4: Entrepreneurial capitalism and policy entrepreneurship Michael Moran (University of Melbourne) Discussant: Wolfgang Hein (GIGA) 4-9 Transnationalisation of public services Governing the service economy: International standards from a political economy perspective 5 GIOLITTI

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    Chair: Brigitte Young (University of Münster) Paper 1: The new public service transnationals and the challenge of

    transnational regulation Judith Clifton (European University Institute and Universidad de

    Oviedo) and Daniel Díaz-Fuentes (European University Institute and Universidad de Cantabria)

    Paper 2: International standards and the re-regulation of higher education in Chile and South Africa

    Barbara Dickhaus (University of Kassel) Paper 3: The interdependency between supranational und international

    arrangements setting standards for an emerging global knowledge-based economy

    Eva Hartmann (IEPI, University of Lausanne) Paper 4: International standards for the university: protecting environments for

    epistemic communities within the knowledge based economies Piers Revell (University of Plymouth) Discussant: Daniel Díaz-Fuentes (Universidad de Cantabria) 4-10 Dreaming with BRICs? India, Brazil, and South Africa in Comparative Perspective IPE, Developing Countries, and Development 9 GIOLITTI Chair: Lawrence Saez (London School of Economics) Paper 1: Economic development and the global south: what role for IBSA

    Dialogue Forum? Mehmet Ozkan (Linkoping University) Paper 2: The transformation of Indian business: from passive resisters to active

    promoters of globalization Jørgen Dige Pedersen (University of Aarhus) Paper 3: Understanding the world trade regime: an analysis from a Brazilian

    perspective Ivan Tiago Machado Oliveira (Universidade Federal da Bahia, UFBA) Paper 4: The transnationalization of post-Apartheid South Africa Stephen Hurt (Oxford Brookes University) Discussant: Lawrence Saez (London School of Economics) 4-11 Systemic Dimensions of the Democratic Peace Liberalism and Peace F PLANA Chair: Ewan Harrison (Colgate University) Paper 1: Might makes right or right makes might? Two systemic democratic

    peace tales Ewan Harrison (Colgate University) and Sara McLaughlin Mitchell

    (University of Iowa) Paper 2: Simulating the evolution of global democracy levels

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    Haavard Hegre and Joachim Carlsen (Peace Research Institute Oslo) Paper 3: How to think about the systemic dimensions of liberal peace John MacMillan (Brunel University) Paper 4: Under construction: development, difference, and democratic duplicity

    as determinants of the systemic liberal peace Erik Gartzke and Alex Weisiger (Columbia University) Discussant: Randolph Siverson (University of California Davis) 4-12 The ESDP Yesterday and Today Post-Modern Foreign and Security Policy in the Enlarged Europe A PLANA Chair: Brian Hocking (Loughborough University) Paper 1: New politics of intervention? Exploring the EU security and defence

    agenda Nina Graeger (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs)

    Paper 2: Beyond the external-internal security divide: implications for theory and EU policies of protection Magnus Ekengren (Swedish National Defence College)

    Paper 3: The transformative role of the European Security and Defence Policy – between refashioning on the world stage and creating the EU-domestic policy Xymena Kurowska (European University Institute)

    Paper 4: Explaining the emergence of the European Security and Defence Policy Tuomas Forsberg (University of Helsinki)

    Discussant: Andrew Ross (University of New Mexico) 4-13 Family Resemblances: European Social Theory and American Pragmatism Pragmatism and International Relations 7 GIOLITTI Chair: Gunther Hellmann (Goethe-University) Paper 1: Humanitarianism and solidarity: political mobilization of compassion

    in John Dewey's thought Mika Aaltola (University of Minnesota) Paper 2: Weber, James, and Dewey: a transatlantic conversation Patrick Thaddeus Jackson (American University) Paper 3: On the German reception of Peirce Richard Beth (Library of Congress) Paper 4: Pragmatics of systems theory? Contradictions and complementarity

    between Luhmann’s social theory and Pragmatism Hans-Martin Jäger (University of Central Florida)

    Discussant: Gunther Hellmann (Goethe-University) 4-14 Foreign policy and soft power (USA)

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    Religion, soft power and international relations L PLANA Chair: Sami Makki (EHESS-La Sorbonne) Paper 1: G. W. Bush’s faith-based initiative and the operational strategies to win

    the “hearts and minds” of civilians in the Global War on Terror Sami Makki (EHESS-La Sorbonne) Paper 2: The preacher and the state: radical religious preaching and hardline

    liberal foreign policy Amalendu Misra (Lancaster University) Paper 3: A strange friend: the role of Evangelical Christians in the making of

    United States foreign policy towards Africa Asteris Huliaras (Harokopion University of Athens) Discussant: Jeff Haynes (London Metropolitan University) 4-15 The theory/practice of contemporary security: emancipation, agency, and myth Security, Politics, Critique C PLANA Chair: Matt Davies (Newcastle University) Paper 1: In the quest for ‘moments of emancipation’: security as transformations Soumita Basu (University of Wales, Aberystwyth) Paper 2: The exercise of sovereignty by the neo-liberal post-modern state:

    extending the national security space through the internationalization of the domestic liberal subject

    Maria Fanis (Ohio University) Paper 3: The “fuzzy dream”: discourse, historical myths, and militarized

    (in)security - interrogating dangerous myths of Afghanistan and the ‘West’

    Lori Crowe (York University) Discussant: Matt Davies (Newcastle University) 4-16 Small States and Europe (1) Small States in International Affairs 10 GIOLITTI Chair: Anders Wivel (University of Copenhagen) Paper 1: Nordic influences in the EU: the importance of image in the

    environmental policy of the European Union Gunnhilder Lily Magnusdottir (University of Iceland) Paper 2: Europeanisation as a source of capability for small states’ foreign

    policy: a comparative approach of Cyprus and Malta Charalambos Tsardanidis (Institute of International Economic

    Relations, Greece) Paper 3: Europeanisation of foreign policy in the field of human rights from a

    small state’s perspective – an opportunity or a constraint? Stepanka Zemanova (University of Economics, Praha)

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    Paper 4: Analysis of the specific approach of Denmark to the processes of the European integration and possible parallels to the approaches of small EU members from Eastern Europe

    Radim Srsen (University of Economics, Praha) 4-17 Recasting Sovereignty in the Global South Sovereignty and Agency N PLANA Chair: Tara McCormack (University of Westminster) Paper 1: ASEAN and intervention in southeast Asia: the perils of projection Lee Jones (University of Oxford) Paper 2: UN-authorized intervention in Rwanda: problems of impartiality Emily Paddon (University of Oxford) Paper 3: Empowering Africa? Vulnerability, climate change and development David Chandler (University of Westminster) Paper 4: Sovereignty, intervention and environment in the global south Keith Stanski (University of Oxford) Discussant: Tara McCormack (University of Westminster) 4-18 Comparing the Middle East - Transitions and Non-Transitions The Place of the Middle East in International Relations: Making Sense of Global Interconnection and Local Dynamics in Middle East Politics E PLANA Chair: Cilja Harders (Free University Berlin) Paper 1: Comparing transitions in Muslim Countries in the Middle East and

    Asia Cilja Harders (Free University Berlin) Paper 2: Rentier states and International Relations Theory Rolf Schwarz (Graduate Institute of International Studies (HEI)) Paper 3: Domestic institutions versus changing modes of generating external

    rent: contending perspectives of authoritarian survival in the Middle East and North Africa

    Thomas Richter (University of Bremen) - Paper 4: The support to NGOs in the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership –

    investigating possible scenarios of power redistribution and political stability Irene Bono (Università di Torino)

    Discussant: Jonas Wolff (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF)) 4-19 The Asian Challenge to IR The contribution of Regional and Area Studies to IR Theory II ROSINE Chair: Martin Beck, GIGA Paper 1: Thinking about regional security culture

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    Jürgen Haacke (London School of Economics) and Paul D. Williams (George Washington University)

    Paper 2: Power and Asian cultures of cooperation Anja Jetschke and Jürgen Rüland (University of Freiburg) Paper 3: Identifying regional cultures of cooperation – the ASEAN logic of

    anarchy Stefan Rother (Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institute for Development

    Studies) Discussant: Amitav Acharya (Rajaretnam School of International Studies) 4-20 Functional Differentiation and sectors in international and world society The English School Approach to International Relations III ROSINE Chair: Mathias Albert (University of Bielefeld) Paper 1: Functional differentiation: the curious non-encounter between

    Sociology and International Relations Mathias Albert (University of Bielefeld) and Barry Buzan (LSE) Paper 2: Functional differentiation and rationalization in world society George Thomas (Arizona State University) Paper 3: The sociology in Burton and Bull: the influence of Parsonian thought

    on ES thinkers Jochen Walter (University of Bielefeld) Discussant: Ole Wæver (University of Copenhagen) 4-21 Identity and Foreign Policy: Turkey and the Middle East The Place of the Middle East in International Relations: Making Sense of Global Interconnection and Local Dynamics in Middle East Politics G PLANA Chair: Bahar Rumelili (Koc University Istanbul) Paper 1: Identity and foreign policy: Turkey and the Middle East Bahar Rumelili (Koc University Istanbul) Paper 2: Turkey and the Middle East: frontiers of the new geographic

    imagination Bulent Aras (Isik University Istanbul) Paper 3: The first modernization period and religion in Turkey (1839-1950) Suna Guezin Kahraman (University of Bielefeld) Paper 4: Questions of security and identity in the post-Cold War era: Turkey,

    Europe and the Middle East Sevgi Drorian (University of Reading) Discussant: Pinar Bilgin (Bilkent University) 4-22 UN in Peacekeeping The UN is the globalized international system 3 GIOLITTI

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    Chair: Zuzana Lehmannová (University of Economics, Prague) Paper 1: The role of the UN in the Middle East

    Yvona Sabackó (University of Economics, Prague) Paper 2: Providing UN peace operations as transnational public goods

    Alexander Kocks (Institute of International Studies, Bremen) Paper 3: Peacekeeping in the 21st century: a capabilities-expectations gap

    analysis Oldrich Bure (Palacky University)

    Discussant: Mario Alessi (Italian UN Association) 4-23 Remaking the West I Towards a Post-Western West? H PLANA Chair: Natalia Zaslavskaya (Saint Petersburg State University) Paper 1: Wild West versus civilized West: popular cultural reading of

    transatlantic relations Marko Lehti (Tampere Peace Research Institute) Paper 2: Westernization, Europeanization, and EU-ization: a twisty-turning flow

    of ideas Trine Flockhart (Danish Institute for International Studies) Paper 3: Whose West is it anyway? The core, margins, outsiders and the

    construction of a geopolitical subjectivity Christopher Browning (Keele University) Discussant: Pertti Joenniemi (Danish Institute for International Studies) 4-24 Feminism, Historical Sociology and IR Historical Sociology P PLANA Chair: Nicholas Onuf (Florida State) Paper 1: Journeying through International Relations: some feminist and

    postcolonial observations Ann Tickner (University of Southern California) Paper 2: Go (Rebecca) West? Black Lamb and Grey Falcon as a feminist IR

    classic Lene Hansen (University of Copenhagen) Paper 3 Rethinking global resistance: feminist activism and critical theorising

    in International Relations Catherine Eschle (Strathclyde) and Bice Maiguashca (Exeter) Discussant: Nicholas Onuf (Florida State) 4-25 Roundtable on the State of the Art in International Political Economy Independent Panels and Programme Chairs’ Roundtables I ROSINE Chair: Morten Bøås (Fafo - Institute for Applied International Studies)

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    Panellists: Helge Hveem (University of Oslo) Anna Leander (Copenhagen Business School) Sandra MacLean (Simon Fraser University) Discussant: Ronen Palan (University of Sussex)

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    SESSION 5: FRIDAY, 14 SEPTEMBER 2007, 11.00 – 12.45 5-1 Who is the enemy in the War on Terror? Framing Strategies & Identities Approaches to International Relations in an Age of Terror: Places, Spaces and Risks M PLANA Chair: Yee-Kuang Heng (University of St Andrews) Paper 1: The radical ‘other’: the return of ‘evil’ in the war on terror Anna Geis (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) Paper 2: Perception and construction of ‘otherness’ biased by fear Marianna Kosic and Daria Nordio (University of Trieste) Discussant: Ken McDonagh (Trinity College Dublin) 5-2 Normative International Relations Central Concepts in IR: a meta-theoretical conversation IV ROSINE Chair: Paulo Esteves (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Minas Gerais) Paper 1: Beyond cosmopolitanism and communitarism: world community as a

    singular universal Sergei Prozorov (Petrozavodsk State University) Paper 2: Revolutional principles of world citizenship as critique to natural law

    analogies of the old law of nations Risto Wallin (University of Helsinki) Paper 3: Politics against the political: re-reading classical realism as a challenge

    to Carl Schmitt Gergely Romsics (Collegium Budapest) Paper 4: Re-examining core concepts of classical realism May Amelia Heath (University of Newcastle Upon Tyne) Discussant: Paulo Esteves (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Minas Gerais) 5-3 Domestic identities, conflict and European integration Conflict Transformation – European Experience(s) 2 GIOLITTI Chair: Rodolfo Ragioneri (University of Sassari) Paper 1: Turning victor into offender: the relevance of collective memory for

    post-conflict cooperation Judith Renner and Michel-André Horelt (Ludwig-Maximilians University)

    Paper 2: Reconciliation with the past: Turkey’s Armenian problem Birsen Erdogan (Maastricht University) Paper 3: The influence of European integration in the Basque conflict: sharing

    sovereignty as a post-national solution? Igor Filibi (University of the Basque Country) Discussant: Rodolfo Ragioneri (University of Sassari)

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    5-4 Risk and Pre-emption Critical Approaches to Security in Europe B PLANA Chair: Rens van Munster (University of Southern Denmark) Paper 1: Failure as risk – governmentality of development as security Tanja Aalberts (Leiden University) Paper 2: The deferred decision. risk and the algorithmic wars on terror Louise Amoore (University of Durham) Paper 3: Risk, speculation and imagination: a genealogy of pre-emption Marieke de Goede (University of Amsterdam) Paper 4 Tracking people, "pixallising" borders Philippe Bonditti (Sciences-Po Paris) Discussant: Rens van Munster (University of Southern Denmark) 5-5 Crosscultural Negotiation in Diplomatic Studies and Practice Cultural Plurality in IR Theory and IR Practice 6 GIOLITTI Chair: Brian Hurn (University of Westminster) Paper 1: Cross-cultural learning in diplomatic studies

    Brian J. Hurn (University of Westminster) Paper 2: Diplomatic culture - discourse analysis Monika Sumberova (University of Ostrava) Paper 3: Role of EU funds in molding attitudes towards EU integration: the case

    of Turkey Elif Deniz Alakavuk and Asli Deniz Helvacioglu (Bogazici University)

    Paper 4 Sorry, I don’t understand what you mean: apologizing in international relations Cornut Jérémie (Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Bordeaux; Université du Québec à Montréal)

    Discussant: Radka Neumannová (University of Economics Prague) 5-6 The Practice of Humanitarian Intervention & Changes in International Law Democratic Legitimacy Upheld? On the Politicisation of the Law and the Legalisation of International Politics 4 GIOLITTI Chair: Antje Wiener (University of Bath) Paper 1: Cosmopolitan interventions and the ethics of international law Antonio Franceschet (University of Calgary) Paper 2: Humanitarian intervention: a map of the evolving post Cold War

    international system Maira Lazaridou (University of Macedonia) Discussant: Noe Cornego (University of the Basque Country)

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    5-7 Global civil society Global governance, a critical encounter: depolitisation/repolitisation in theory and practice 1 GIOLITTI Chair: Philip G. Cerny (Rutgers University Newark) Paper 1: Global democracy, private governance, and the ideology of global civil

    society Christian May (University of Bremen) Paper 2: Deconstructing multi-stakeholderism: the discourses and realities of

    global governance at the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS)

    Arne Hintz (University of Hamburg) Paper 3: Global governance, legitimacy and contestation: a methodological

    approach based on the analysis of transnational social movements Carlos R. S. Milani (Federal University of Bahia) Paper 4: Global governance and citizen political participation Ramón Ruiz Ruiz (Universidad de Jaén) Discussant: Philip G. Cerny (Rutgers University Newark) 5-8 Globalization, Health and the Gendered Body: Critical Feminist Perspectives Global Health Challenges in/for International Relations 8 GIOLITTI Chair: Kitty Corbett (Simon FraserUniversity) Paper 1: Global (bio)power, local poison: gender, sterility and rumour in the

    global south Amy Kaler (University of Alberta) Paper 2: Patents, policies and pricing affecting access to medicines for the

    marginalized in a global economy Shree Mulay (McGill University) Paper 3: Embodying inequalities: globalization, health and foreign domestic

    care workers Denise Spitzer (University of Ottawa) Paper 4: Gendering the ecology of the body: reading Simmel’s “The Stranger” Lise W. Isaksen (University of Bergen) Discussant: Colleen O’Manique (Trent University) 5-9 Governing financial standards Governing the service economy: International standards from a political economy perspective 5 GIOLITTI Chair: Charlie Dannreuther (University of Leeds) Paper 1: Servicing emerging markets? The regulation of global capital flows Jasper Blom (ASSR, University of Amsterdam) Paper 2: A return of Keynesianism? Liquidity illusions and global financial

    governance

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    Anastasia Nesvetailova (University of Sussex) Paper 3: The political economy of EU foreign policy: the impact of corporate

    integration on foreign policy integration in Europe since the 1980s Mehmet Tezcan (Free University of Brussels [VUB]) Discussant: Brigitte Young (University of Münster) 5-10 New Security Roles of the European Union Post-Modern Foreign and Security Policy in the Enlarged Europe 9 GIOLITTI Chair: Kjell Engelbrekt (Swedish National Defence College/Stockholm

    University). Paper 1: Local dimensions of a wider Europe: by-passing the modern foreign

    policy agendas Eiki Bergand and Kristian Nielsen (University of Tartu)

    Paper 2: EU civil protection and the new security role of the Union Niklas Bremberg Heijl (Stockholm University) and Malena Britz, (Swedish National Defence College)

    Paper 3: The construction of a European interest: homeland security and European foreign policy Christian Kaunert (University of Salford)

    Paper 4: Policing abroad? National police cultures and joint EU missions Carl-Einar Stålvant (Swedish National Defence College)

    Discussant: Nina Græger (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs) 5-11 Civil Conflict Liberalism and Peace F PLANA Chair: Håvard Hegre (Peace Research Institute Oslo) Paper 1: De-idealizing the democratic civil peace: on the political economy of

    democratic stabilization and pacification in South America Jonas Wolff (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) Paper 2: Ethnolinguistic fractionalization and economic freedom Indra de Soysa (ISS/NTNU) Paper 3: Peace by piece: multiple parties in civil war termination Desiree Nilsson (Uppsala University) Paper 4: Authoritarian regimes and the onset of civil war Hanne Fjelde (Uppsala University), Discussant: Halvard Buhaug (Peace Research Institute Oslo) 5-12 Defence Integration in the European Union Post-Modern Foreign and Security Policy in the Enlarged Europe A PLANA Chair: Tuomas Forsberg (University of Helsinki ) Paper 1: Drivers of defence integration within the European Union

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    Kari Mottola (Policy Planning and Research, Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland)

    Paper 2: Turkey and defence integration in the EU Hanna Ojanen (Finnish Institute of International Affairs)

    Paper 3: EU defence integration: support for a functionalist argument Arita Eriksson (Swedish National Defence College)

    Paper 4: Solidarity within the Common Foreign and Security Policy Laura Ferreira-Pereira (University of Minho) and A.J.R. Groom, University of Canterbury

    Discussant: Jennifer Erickson (Cornell University) 5-13 The Force of Speech and Structures of Collective Intentionality Pragmatism and International Relations 7 GIOLITTI Chair: Helena Rytövuori-Apunen (University of Tampere) Paper 1: State apologies and the transformation of the international legal system Azuolas Bagdonas (Central European University) Paper 2: Historical practices and the explanation of change: the transformation

    of European politics, 1700-1848 Kevin McMillan (University of Ottawa) Paper 3: Forum effects of talk Jennifer Mitzen (Ohio State University) Paper 4: International transport corridors at the conjunction of geography and

    politics in Russia Katri Pynnöniemi (Finnish Institute of International Affairs) Discussant: Richard W. Mansbach (Iowa State University) 5-14 Rebuilding Sovereigns? Sovereignty and state-building Sovereignty and Agency L PLANA Chair: David Chandler (University of Westminster) Paper 1: Turning Sarajevo into a 'European' capital? Trajectories of sovereignty

    in the reorganization of Bosnia and Herzegovina Giulio Venneri (University of Trento) Paper 2: Making plans for Liberia Morten Bøås (Fafo - Institute for Applied International Studies) Paper 3: Difficult political dimensions of the Cotonou Agreement Liisa Laakso (University of Jyväskylä) Paper 4: New forms of state-building practices: the case of security sector

    reform and the role of Europe Giovanna Bono (Institute for European Studies, VUB) Discussant: David Chandler (University of Westminster) 5-15 Critical security narratives: hookahs, bazookas, and beyond

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    Security, Politics, Critique C PLANA Chair: Paul Roe (Central European University) Paper 1: Ambiguous narrative of the EU drugs policy: towards securitization or

    normalization? Marke Hirvonen (University of Tampere) Paper 2: How come that small arms and light weapons are not a human security

    issue? Nikola Hynek (Masaryk University Brno and University of Bradford) Paper 3: American hegemony and gendered nuclear proliferation Saara Ollikainen (University of Tampere) Paper 4: Reflexive securitization: the environmental sector and beyond Julia Trombetta Discussant: Paul Roe (Central European University) 5-16 Peoples on the move: Sovereignty and migration in international relations Sovereignty and Agency 10 GIOLITTI Chair: Chris Gilligan (University of Ulster) Paper 1: Migration management and local outcomes: Albania, BiH and Ukraine Martin Geiger (University of Bonn) Paper 2: Theorizing 'illegal' immigration in developed liberal democracies Gerry Boucher (Queen's University Belfast) Paper 3: The 'container model' paradox: borders, frontiers and the states own

    image of itself Festus Ikeotuonye (University College Dublin) Discussant: Chris Gilligan (University of Ulster) 5-17 State capacity, ethnicity, and conflict The role of state capacity for development and peace N PLANA Chair: Lars-Erik Cederman (ETH Zürich) Paper 1: Globalization and civil war in historical perspective Andreas Wimmer and Brian Min (UCLA) Paper 2: Grasping the shape of ethnic wars Lars-Erik Cederman and Luc Girardin (ETH Zurich) Paper 3: Group concentration and conflict mobilization - disentangling the mechanisms Nils Weidmann (ETH Zurich) Paper 4: Fixing the fluid: theoretical and methodological strategies for

    endogenising ethnicity in the international escalation of 'ethnic' conflict Martin Austvoll (PRIO, Oslo)

    Discussant: Kristian Gleditsch (University of Essex)

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    5-18 Exploring Mechanisms and Processes of Regional Community Building in Asia I The contribution of Regional and Area Studies to IR Theory E PLANA Chair: Anja Jetschke (University of Freiburg) Paper 1: Processes of institutional socialization in a contested context – the

    ASEAN security community Brian Job (University of British Columbia) Paper 2: Socialization and Asian regionalism David Capie (Victoria University of Wellington) Paper 3: Competing discourses of regional governance – the case of the

    “ASEAN Security Community” Katja Freistein (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) Paper 4: The balance of power and Asia-Pacific security in the 21st century Liselotte Odgaard (Aarhus University) Discussant: Jürgen Haacke (London School of Economics) 5-19 Balance of Power The English School Approach to International Relations III ROSINE Chair: Benjamin de Carvalho (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs Paper 1: The balance of power as an eighteenth-century institution: rekindling

    the history vs. science debate Silviya Lechner (University of Wales) Paper 2: Guicciardini, Bull, and the balance of power Richard Little (University of Bristol) Paper 3: Origins of balance of power Torbjørn Knutsen (Norwegian Institute of Science and Technology) Discussant: John Hobson (Sheffield University) 5-20 Homogeneity and Heterogeneity in World Politics I: Globalisation Dynamics and the Middle East The Place of the Middle East in International Relations: Making Sense of Global Interconnection and Local Dynamics in Middle East Politics G PLANA Chair: Stephan Stetter (University of Bielefeld) Paper 1: World society and the Middle East: the politics of inclusion and

    exclusion Stephan Stetter (University of Bielefeld) Paper 2: Democratisation, transitology and Orientalism: organising knowledge

    and moral cartographies of democratisation in the Middle East Andrea Teti (University of Aberdeen) Paper 3: Deconstructing the IR meta-narrative: creating space for theorizing on

    political Islam Corinna Mullin (London School of Economics)

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    Paper 4: Remapping the geopolitics of globalization in the Middle East Waleed Hazbun (Johns Hopkins University) Discussant: J. Ann Tickner (University of Southern California) 5-21 UN, Social Development and Millennium Development Goals The UN is the globalized international system II ROSINE Chair: Ilja Ulrich (Czech UN Association) Paper 1: The Millennium development goals of the UN as an insurance for

    global security Ilja Ulrich (Czech United Nations Association)

    Paper 2: The role of the UN system in the process of political articulation of local authorities as a global actor Monica Salomon (Pontificia Universidade Católica de Rio de Janeiro) and Javier Sánchez Cano (Patronat Català pro Europa, Generalitat de Catalunya Barcelona)

    Paper 3: Fulfillment of Millenium development goals - economic and social aspects Klara Kaderabkova (University of Economics, Prague)

    Paper 4: Regime failure and bilaterialization - the Millenium goals and the substantive patent law treaty Thomas Eimer (University of Hagen)

    Discussant: Yvona Sabackó (University of Economics, Prague) 5-22 Remaking the West II Towards a Post-Western West H PLANA Chair: Christopher Browning (Keele University) Paper 1: Don’t mess with nature: the cultural origins of the transatlantic divide

    over agricultural biotechnology Hannes R. Stephan (Keele University) Paper 2: The remaking of the West as an ethical project Andreas Behnke (University of Reading) Paper 3: Ancient cynicism: a case for salvage Piers Revell (University of Plymouth