Thursday, March 23, 2023

CFP: Going Local: A Comparative Study of the Historical Evolution of Local Civil Society Organizations

Call for Contributions: 

Going Local: A Comparative Study of the Historical Evolution of Local Civil Society Organizations

Dipendra KC, Thammasat University, Thailand

Patricia Maria Emerenciano Mendonca, University of São Paulo, Brazil

Emmanual Kumi, University of Ghana

Anna Domaradzka, University of Warsaw, Poland

Elizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada

Christopher Pallas, Kennesaw State University, United States


Abstract: We are seeking interested authors to submit a 500-word proposal for contributions to an edited volume examining the origin and evolution of local civil society organizations. We are particularly interested in the perspectives of local experts who can provide deep understanding of local civil society organizations (CSO) populations and the processes by which they have historically managed both local interests and global influences.

 

Call: Civil society organizations (CSOs) have arisen organically in nearly every country and culture, serving vital social, political, and economic functions. Yet the origins and evolution of local CSOs remains under-researched, particularly for CSOs from the Global South. Academic research on local CSOs has often focused on the role of global philanthropy and national regulations, emphasizing the period from the 1970s to the 2000s when international donors sought CSOs as partners to deliver foreign aid, promote democracy, and advance human rights. However, local CSOs’ operations long predate these trends, and CSOs’ responses to these national and international trends reflect local culture and history.

 

For this volume, we seek to explore how local CSOs’ agency has interacted over time with national and international pressures to reshape CSOs’ operations and change the local population of CSOs. We are looking for country chapter contributions that will help readers better understand the origins and evolution of CSOs in eight to ten selected countries in an empirically nuanced fashion based on deep national narratives by local experts who can reveal layers of complexity and challenge unidirectional and linear accounts of civil society development. In so doing, we aim to not only expand our understanding of local civil society, but also promote a decolonized discourse in which the historical assumptions and approaches of Northern scholars can be challenged and debated.

 

By building locally informed, empirically grounded understandings of the historic evolution of local CSOs in low- and middle-income countries, we aim to capture the diverse array of types of CSOs, with different scales and degrees of formalization, found around the world. We consider why some organization types survive over time as others fade out while the nature of state-society relations, political and economic environments, national demographics, and the nature of international integration also change.

 

We propose an initial set of framing questions for each chapter to address but we will organize a collaborators meeting on Zoom among selected contributors to further refine these questions before chapters are drafted.

  • How has the ecosystem or population of CSOs in your country changed over time? What did the original CSOs look like?  What did CSOs look like during key historical eras?  What have been the relative numbers of formal and informal CSOs and relationships between them? What types of CSOs have survived to the present day and which have not?

  • What is the relationship between the state (including any pre-colonial government or colonial government, as well as modern governments) and CSOs, and how has this shifted over time? What factors can be linked to (may have caused) these shifts?

  • Are there identifiable inflection points which mark major changes in civil society in your country? Can you put approximate dates to these shifts and identify likely drivers of change? Are the changes sharp or gradual? At these inflection points, what has stayed the same and what has changed? Do you have a sense of why? How does this compare to neighboring countries or the broader region? 

  • What role, if any, did global political, legal, economic, or social factors play in the changes in civil society?  How did local CSOs act to mitigate or adapt to international pressures or events?  What local practices have had global effects or been diffused elsewhere?

 

We are looking for a 500-word proposal for chapters of roughly 6,000-8,000 words to be submitted to Elizabeth Bloodgood (elizabeth.bloodgood@concordia.ca). Each chapter will be a single country narrative of the historical evolution of CSOs from beginning to present. We are seeking four to six chapters of CSO evolution in low- to middle-income countries which are underrepresented in the global literature on civil society in addition to chapters on Brazil, Ghana, Nepal, and Poland. The selected contributors will help to refine and then apply a shared framework to organize the narratives. The concluding chapter of the edited volume will compare across countries to identify common and divergent themes and outcomes for civil society evolution. Chapter contributors will be selected according to country and depth of expertise CSOs in their country. Contributors will participate in two virtual workshops in late summer and early fall to receive feedback on their chapters from other participants in the volume and relevant academic communities.  Once the list of contributors has been established, a complete proposal for the volume will be submitted to Georgetown University Press.

 

Timeline: 

Author information and a 500-word proposal due April 17, 2023

Editorial collaboration will select and contact potential contributors by May 17, 2023

Zoom collaborator meeting to develop project and framework early June 2023

Draft chapters due September 30, 2023

 

Any questions can be sent to Elizabeth Bloodgood (elizabeth.bloodgood@concordia.ca). Brief proposals for chapters, as well as author(s) identifying information should be emailed to elizabeth.bloodgood@concordia.ca by April 17, 2023.

Monday, March 13, 2023

CFP - Beyond the Numbers 2023 (November 6th-8th, 2023 - St. Louis, Missouri)

Call for Proposals for Beyond the Numbers 2023
Submission deadline: Friday, June 9, 2023
Conference URL: https://research.stlouisfed.org/conferences/beyond-the-numbers/

The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis seeks submissions for its biennial conference on economic information. This conference will bring together librarians, information professionals, data researchers, and data managers to improve understanding of economic resources and how to find, use, and share them.

We encourage users, educators, creators, curators, and managers of economic, business, and financial information to share their expertise and provide insights into the challenges they face. If you have attended before, consider presenting and sharing your expertise!

Possible topics include but are not limited to:

Data Literacy
  • How do we cultivate it for ourselves?
  • How do we teach it?
  • How do we combat economic illiteracy and misinterpreted data?

Data Management
  • Access, preservation, sharing, and reuse
  • Data management plans and changing requirements to secure research funding
  • Best practices for promoting FAIR principles (findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reuse)

Data Tools and Resources
  • New, misunderstood, underused, or non-traditional economic information tools and sources
  • Library instruction using economic data: case studies, best practices
  • Accessing data through APIs
  • Data wrangling and cleanup
  • Finding hidden economic information (e.g., data stored in archives and institutional repositories)
  • Economic data visualization: best practices, tools, and what to avoid

Hot Topics in Business, Economics, and Data Librarianship
  • Environmental, social, and governance (ESG)
  • Artificial intelligence, ChatGPT, and related topics
  • Cryptocurrency, blockchain, and related topics
Choose your preferred presentation type:
  • Lightning talk: 5-7 minutes
  • Session: 20 minutes

Abstracts for each proposal should be no more than 250 words. Clearly state the aim of the presentation, the topic, and the specific knowledge attendees will gain.

All proposals will be reviewed by the Conference Organizing Committee and must be submitted by Friday, June 9, 2023, to research.event.services@stls.frb.org

Please include the following information in your submission:
  • Title
  • Presenter(s)
  • Presenter affiliation
  • Presenter email(s)
  • Presentation type
  • Abstract (250 words)

Monday, March 06, 2023

CFP: Academic BRASS Spring 2023 Issue #BusinessLibrarianship

Interested in seeing your name in print? Want to add another line to your CV? Have something to share with other business librarians? The Business Reference in Academic Libraries Committee of BRASS is seeking articles for the next issue of its online publication Academic BRASS. Academic BRASS is a newsletter--not a journal--that publishes issue-based articles and information for the general and educational interest of BRASS members and academic business librarians.

Topics of interest to the editors are those dealing with business librarianship, such as resources, liaison and outreach activities, strategies, and instruction. Reviews of books, databases, and web sites are welcome as well. Maybe you have another cool idea - that's fine too - get those submissions in!

Deadline for submissions for the upcoming issue is April 21, 2023.

You may want to see previous editions. For access to the full text articles of past issues of Academic BRASS, see
http://www.ala.org/rusa/sections/brass/publications/academicbrass

The typical length of an Academic BRASS article is 500-800 words, but past articles have been as long as 1,000 words or more. Authors should be guided by what they have to say rather than an arbitrary word length. All articles are subject to editing for length, style, and content, and there is a template on the "About Academic BRASS" page (https://www.ala.org/rusa/sections/brass/publications/academicbrass/about) that provides formatting guidance. The newsletter follows the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 7th edition for all matters of style and citation. Authors whose articles include references to print or Internet resources are urged to observe the conventions set forth in that publication and on the APA website (http://www.apastyle.org/).

Please send article proposals or submissions to all of the editors, LuMarie Guth  (lumarie.guth@wmich.edu), Tim Tully (ttully@sdsu.edu), and Katie Hut