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Call for Applications

Theme: Religion and Politics in Comparative Perspective
Type: 6th Annual Africa Workshop
Institution: American Political Science Association (APSA)
   Institute for Governance and Development
Location: Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso)
Date: 1.–12.7.2013
Deadline: 15.3.2013

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The American Political Science Association (APSA) is pleased to
announce that the 6th annual Africa Workshop will take place in
Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso in cooperation with the Institute for
Governance and Development (IGD). The two-week program will be held
from July 1-12 at the IGD's Center for Democratic Governance (CDG),
on the theme of "Religion and Politics in Comparative Perspective."
The organizers, with a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation,
will cover all the costs of participation (including travel, lodging,
meals, and materials) for up to 26 qualified applicants. The workshop
will be conducted as a dual-language program with both English and
French as working languages.

The workshop leaders are Einas Ahmed (Centre d'Études et
Documentation Économiques, Juridiques et Sociales, Sudan), Augustin
Loada (University of Ouagadougou and IGD, Burkina Faso), Mahaman
Tidjani-Alou (University Abdou Moumouni, Niger), Leonardo Villalón
(University of Florida, USA), and Kenneth Wald (University of
Florida, USA).

Workshop Fellows

The workshop is targeted at university and college faculty in the
social sciences residing in Africa who are in the early stages of
their academic career. APSA welcomes applications from scholars who
have completed their Ph.D as well as those who are working towards
completion. Up to four advanced U.S. Ph.D. students will also be
accepted.

All Workshop Fellows must be actively engaged in a research project
in political science or an area of inquiry related to politics.
Fellows should be working on a manuscript, paper, book chapter, or
article that can be developed during the workshop into an eventual
publication.

The 2013 workshop will be a dual-language program; both
French-speaking and English-speaking scholars are welcome to apply.
Bi-lingual fluency is not required but participants should command a
professional fluency in one of workshop's two working languages. 

Workshop Theme

For two weeks, workshop fellows will study a series of interrelated
theoretical and methodological themes under the banner of "Religion
and Politics in Comparative Perspective." After collaborative
examination of the theoretical traditions and key concepts in the
study of religion as a political factor, participants will present
their own research.

Discussion will focus on four key themes:
1) the relationship between religion and the state;
2) the role of religion on individual political behavior;
3) the impact of religion on the politics of gender, sexuality, and
   family law;
4) the politics of inter-religious relations.

Within these discussions, participants will compare and contrast the
experience of the United States (and more broadly of the West) with
Africa, as well as the distinct roles of religion in the Anglophone
and Francophone state traditions. The workshop will interrogate
potential differences of political culture within specific religious
traditions: notably Christianity and Islam, but also Judaism and
traditional African religious. 

Applications

To submit an application for participation in the workshop, first
review the eligibility requirements on APSA's Africa Workshop website
and then follow the web link to the online 2013 Application Form. If
preferred, a copy of the Application Form in Microsoft Word can be
e-mailed to you upon request. Complete applications, including all
necessary supporting documents, should be uploaded through the online
application form, or sent to APSA electronically by March 15, 2013;
please email all materials directly to africaworksh...@apsanet.org.
The final list of selected Workshop Fellows will be announced in
early April.

Applications may be submitted in English or French, and must include:

1) The completed online Application Form.

2) A detailed, recent Curriculum Vitae/resume.

3) A 500-word statement that describes your current research plans or
ideas and how it relates to the workshop theme.

4) The draft working paper or manuscript in progress that you propose
to take with you to the workshop. This can be a work-in-progress
drawn from your current research, or part of a paper, article, or
chapter under development. At a minimum, this should be a 2,500-word
document that includes: a) a 150-word abstract; b) a description of
research design; c) a one-page bibliography of literature most
relevant to your paper.

5) Two letters of reference on official letterhead and scanned as
electronic files. If you are a graduate student, one letter should be
a letter of introduction from your supervising professor. If you are
a researcher or faculty member, the letters can be from a former
dissertation supervisor, a colleague or collaborator at your home
institution or elsewhere, a university official, or an employer. 

Contact Us: Send an email at africaworksh...@apsanet.org, or call
Andrew Stinson at (202) 349-9364, if you have questions or would like
more information about the workshops or application process.


Contact:

Andrew Stinson
Coordinator, International Workshops
American Political Science Association
Phone: +1 (202) 349.9364
Email: astin...@apsanet.org
Web: http://www.apsanet.org/~africaworkshops/content_82322.cfm?navID=1035




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