Best Section and Region Practices

ISA Region Websites

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Section Websites

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  • International Security Studies
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  • Post Communist States in International Relations
  • Scientific Study of International Processes
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Archives

  • July 2007

Creating Convention Panels

An Invitation to Create an Innovative Panel for the ISA 2008 Meeting
May 2007 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak, Director of Academic Development

In an effort to stimulate creativity and innovation, ISA encourages members to experiment with new panel formats for the upcoming ISA 2008 meeting in San Francisco. These may include, but are not limited to, the following possibilities:

  • a debate format or a "town hall" meeting style
  • short panel presentations and audience discussions about a particularly timely or controversial topic with a moderator who helps facilitate discussion
  • a panel where you invite experts from outside academia to join a scholar in discussion of a particular topic or theme
  • use internet technology to broadcast your panel session to a broader audience
  • design a "trial balloon" session where panelists briefly present the skeleton of a research topic and the audience and/or other panelists help shape or better define the project

At the 2007 ISA meeting in Chicago, there were two experimental panel formats that attracted high praise. First, the Active Learning in International Affairs (ALIAS) section organized an interactive session near the poster room to highlight novel teaching simulations and strategies. Second, the International Political Economy (IPE) section hosted a forum designed to facilitate dialogue around Alternative Globalizations. We encourage individuals and ISA sections to build off of these initial experiments.

With the June 1st deadline for submitting paper/panel submissions for the 2008 meeting fast approaching, we encourage you to think “outside the box” and craft a new format panel for the upcoming meeting. These panels will occur in addition to the regular allocation of traditional ISA panels and they will be accepted on a first-come basis. Please email (agerlak@u.arizona.edu) me your suggestions and ideas and I can help facilitate the planning and organization.

Section Memberships

The Benefits of ISA Section Membership
April 2007 Membership
Andrea K. Gerlak, Director of Academic Development

Today, ISA sponsors 23 sections ranging from Active Learning in International Affairs to Scientific Study of International Process. Our two newest sections -- International Political Sociology and Human Rights -- have attracted much attention and new activity. In the past two years, membership in ISA sections increased by 12%.

Membership in a section allows ISA members the opportunity to be part of a community of scholars with similar substantive research and teaching interests.

More specifically, membership in an ISA section offers practical benefits, including access to:

  • Annual Program – participate in the framing of the annual program by proposing a panel, roundtable or special session, or by serving as a section program chair and organizing your section’s conference panels.
  • Research Workshop Grants – apply through a section for a workshop grant to venture into emerging and potentially transformative research areas or preliminary work on untested and novel path-breaking ideas.
  • Section Newsletters -- provide current news related to sections, including new section officers and awards as well as announcements of new research projects, academic programs, publications, and academic jobs.
  • Section Blogs -- provide opportunities for members to find common research interest and form linkages to generate a proposed panel at an upcoming ISA annual conference.
  • International Studies Compendium Activities -- provide opportunities to participate by writing a review essay and reviewing review essays, which are largely facilitated through ISA’s sections.

ISA members can add a section to their membership at any time by visiting the MyISA website.

Compendium Project Update

The ISA Compendium Project Moves Forward
March 2007 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak, Director of Academic Development

The ISA Compendium Project is designed to provide the most comprehensive major reference resource in international studies. Since undertaking the project at our 2006 meeting in San Diego, we have worked to complete three major tasks. First, the various elements of the project had to be solidified. Our on-line version, International Studies On-Line (ISO) will provide both compendium review essays and live links to archives, datasets, cases and pedagogical materials. Our hardback version (ISE) for sale to libraries will include the review essays in a standard order. The third version, the section volume series, is voluntary. Sections may choose to gather additional material and propose a special separate section publication if they wish.

Getting the word out to any group as large as the ISA is difficult and news of the compendium project was slow to make its way from members of the Governing Council to the membership. As a result, we began a major information campaign. Please check out either of our two websites for information on the history, rationale or current status of the project: www.isanet.org/compendium/ or www.udel.edu/poscir/radenemark/denemarkprojects.html. Anyone with questions or concerns is welcome to contact Bob Denemark at denemark@udel.edu.

Most critically, ISA sections have worked hard to establish lists of topics to be considered in the project. These are to be serious review essays that consider important topics, their historic treatments, and the current status of the literature. These will be up to 10,000 words in length and will be subject to peer review. According to General Editor Bob Denemark, some 475 topics have already been suggested, and another 100 are expected in the immediate future. Individuals who wish to access the lists can go to the isanet.org/compendium site and click on “sections” to review topics and find the names and contact information for compendium section editors. Over the next few months, authors will be identified. Prospective authors and reviewers are most welcome and can submit their information via ISA’s website at www.isanet.org/compendium/.

Innovative Panels

Innovative Panels at the Upcoming ISA 2007 Conference
February 2007 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak, Director of Academic Development

We’d like to call your attention to two interesting and innovative panels scheduled for ISA’s annual meeting later this month.

The Active Learning in International Studies (ALIAS) Section will host an Interactive Learning Session on Thursday, March 1st, 2007 (TC98) from 1:45pm – 3:30pm in the poster room next to the exhibit hall. Faculty will experience active learning techniques hands-on with a visual, multi-media presentation. Demonstrations will run continuously throughout the scheduled panel time and presenters will be available to discuss their teaching techniques. Topics include: 

  • Teaching the Scientific Method Without Tears
  • Interactive Simulations in International Relations
  • What Every Discussant Needs to Know
  • Communicating Human Rights
  • Foreign Policy, Security and Human Rights
  • Maxism and Legos
  • Teaching About North-South Economic Relations

The International Political Economy (IPE) Section has organized the Assemblage and Research Planning for Alternative Globalizations Forum on Friday, March 2nd (FA01) from 8:30am-10:15am in the Grand Ballroom. This is a growing network of researchers with an open invitation to new members in any discipline (and at any educational level) whose work focuses on the broad thematic of alternative globalizations. At this inaugural session, forum organizers hope to construct a space that is meaningful and engaging for future research on alternative globalizations through participatory processes. The forum will include an opening address by Susan George. For those who are unable to attend, we invite you to send an email to Hasmet Uluorta (hasmet@workingalternatives.net) with a brief summary of your research interests as well as any suggestions on how to ensure that this forum exceeds participant expectations. This information will be added to the existing database and then distributed to the growing list of researchers whose work focuses on alternative globalizations.

The overall aims of the forum are: (1) to provide a space for researchers to network and to (2) institutionalize the “alternative globalizations” assemblage within the ISA orbit. The innovative format will include introductions, “speed networking,” as well as research planning and strategizing. Facilitators will guide the discussions. Participants will engage in dialogue rather than presenting formal research.

ISA Region Conferences

A Review of the 2006 ISA Region Conferences
January 2007 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak, Director of Academic Development

From Las Vegas to Boston, over 650 people participated in conferences organized by ISA’s regions in the west, midwest, northeast, and southern United States. Regional meetings demonstrate the importance of partnering with host universities, ISA sections and other organizations. They also illustrate the value of conference themes and organized activities such as luncheons with keynote speakers, and tours of local places. At this year’s meetings, ISA regions demonstrated their commitment to professional development with an emphasis on active learning activities and graduate student support and development.

The ISA South meeting, held in Birmingham, Alabama, featured a reception for the participants at the University of Alabama at Birmingham President's house. Apart from the nice surroundings and fine entertainment provided by President Garrison, the event highlighted the administration's commitment to international studies and its support for such meetings. This meeting demonstrates how ISA South, and all regions, can benefit greatly from weaving participation by their institution's higher administrators more closely to the conference. Such a partnership institutionalizes support from the university and can help defray organizing expenses. In addition, participants visited the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute where ISA members witnessed the history of the civil rights movement in Alabama. According to Program Chair Nikos Zahariadis (University of Alabama, Birmingham), such efforts to introduce the city and its history to the participants enhanced participation and made the meeting more memorable.

This year, ISA West began a theme call for papers, which attracted almost a dozen panels and will result in several group publications based on conference participation. The meeting also attracted conference co-sponsorship from the International Ethics section of the ISA, the Carnegie Institute for Ethics and International Affairs, and Women in International Security, which helped to broaden the participant base. According to Program Chair Laura Sjoberg (Duke University), a number of distinguished speakers, including ISA President Ann Tickner (University of Southern California), Ambassador Thomas Graham, and Professor George Lopez (University of Notre Dame) were instrumental in guiding the conference discussion.

ISA Midwest hosted their largest meeting ever this year in St. Louis with over 200 attendees. They partnered with the Central Slavic Conference and the Mid-America Alliance for African Studies. According to Program Chair John Ishiyama (Truman State University), a highlight of their meeting was a special roundtable on the status of women in the profession which included ISA President Ann Tickner, Vicki Hesli (University of Iowa, chair of the American Political Science Association’s Committee on the status of Women in the Profession), ISA Vice President Meredith Sarkees (Saint Mary’s College) and former longtime chair of the Women’s Caucus of ISA), Marie Henehan (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign), ISA Midwest President Carolyn James (University of Southern California), and chaired by Marijke Breuning (Truman State University).

ISA Northeast partnered with the Northeast Political Science Association for their 37th annual meeting in Boston this past November. They co-sponsored well over fifty international relations panels, their largest conference yet, drawing faculty and students from across the US, as well as from various international universities and colleges. The conference featured a series of special events which included a sold out luncheon co-sponsored by The Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs, where Professor Neta Crawford of The Watson Institute for International Studies delivered the luncheon address entitled “When Soldiers 'Snap': Locating Moral Responsibility for Atrocities in Iraq”.

All regional meetings had an active learning component, organized in partnership with the Active Learning in International Studies (ALIAS) Section of ISA. A workshop on how to design appropriate simulation exercises for the international studies classroom, led by Carolyn Shaw (Wichita State University) and Bob Switky (University of Nebraska-Kearney) was featured at the ISA Midwest meeting. Approximately 20 participants learned about the conceptual considerations necessary for creating a simulation and then divided into small groups for a hands-on opportunity to design their own exercises. At the end of the session, participants had laid the foundation for three different exercises on the topics of Energy Security, a Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and Experiencing Realism. The workshop provided an opportunity for those who were familiar with role playing to exchange ideas, as well as for first timers to acquire resources for designing their own simulations. At ISA Northeast meeting, there were two workshops, "Constructing Good Courses: From Learning Goals to Assessments" and "Engaging the Millennials: Techniques in Active Learning for a New Generation of Students," coordinated by David Reilly (Niagara University) and John J. O'Rorke (Frostburg State University). The ALIAS section of ISA coordinated with the program chairs at ISA West for a breakfast workshop that addressed the use of active learning techniques in the classroom. They followed up the workshop with a roundtable on the impact of active learning on gender issues, both in teaching gender and in gendered issues within the classroom. Douglas Becker (University of Southern California) led a workshop at ISA’s West meeting entitled "How to Design an Active Classroom,” with topics ranging from simulations to film and games, and Model United Nations. A panel at ISA South targeted both curricular and professional development topics, highlighting internet learning (Regina Gaillard, Troy University) and the challenges of introducing world cultures to first year undergraduates (Catherine Danielou, University of Alabama, Birmingham).

Regional meetings also included panels and workshops specifically devoted to the professional development of graduate students. This year, ISA West sponsored a publishing workshop for graduate students. More than a dozen graduate students attended the workshop and the topics of discussion included the process of choosing the right journal or publisher for a piece of work, the review process, and the process of revision and resubmission. Participants also discussed job market and tenure requirements, strategies for increasing publication opportunities, networking, and peer review process. ISA South organized a workshop on "International Studies and the Profession" to help young professionals network and be exposed to job acquisition tips and skills. Topics included curricular development and the internet, the status of women in the profession, and tips on landing the first academic job. ISA Midwest organized a workshop on how to publish books in the profession with representatives from major publishers in International Relations and Comparative Politics (including Northern Illinois University Press, Lynne Rienner Publishers and M.E. Sharpe Publishers) for a roundtable discussion on what it takes to get a book manuscript published. For the ISA Northeast region this was the second year for the extremely successful methodology clinic organized and directed by Patrick T. Jackson (American University). The clinic, titled “Interpretive and Relational Research Methodologies,” brought together faculty and graduate students in a pedagogical environment to discuss both interpretative and relational methodologies. The tutorial sessions were followed by sessions in which graduate student participants had an opportunity to receive feedback from established scholars and from their fellow workshop participants. In addition to these workshops and panels targeted at the professional development of graduate students, both the ISA South and Midwest offer graduate students travel grants to help defray the costs of attending their regional meetings.

ISA Headquarters applauds these contributions from ISA regions. We thank the various regional Program Chairs and other conference leaders for their hard work and efforts. We are excited to support such activities, particularly professional development activities. We encourage regions to partner with other organizations and ISA sections when planning a meeting. As always, we are pleased to help with meeting planning and logistics. For information on locations of 2007 ISA regional meetings, visit the ISA Region website at: http://www.isanet.org/regions.html.

ISSS Annual Conference

ISA’s International Security Studies Section Meets in Tucson
December 2006 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak

For the past two decades, the International Security Studies Section (ISSS) of the ISA has offered their members an annual meeting devoted to security issues and international affairs.  This past October 2006, ISSS held their annual section conference in Tucson , Arizona .  This year’s meeting was a partnership between ISSS and the American Political Science Association’s International Security and Arms Control Section, along with the University of Arizona’s School of Public Administration and Policy, its Department of Management Information Systems, and its emerging Eller Security Lab; the US Air Force Academy’s Institute for National Security Studies; and the Tucson Committee on Foreign Relations.  The meeting’s theme, “Security, Globalization, and Mass Society into the Global Information and Terrorism Age,” attracted more than 60 participants from the U.S. and abroad, including a number of representatives of the military and the intelligence community.

An evening reception on the terrace at the beautiful Omni National Golf Resort and Spa in Tucson jumpstarted the conference.  Participants presented papers over two days, Friday, October 27th and Saturday, October 28th.  The $149 advance registration fee included lunch and dinner on Friday. The fascinating lunch keynote speaker was Dr. Albert Bergesen, a nationally known sociologist of social movements who spoke on comparing radical Protestantism of the 1700s with today’s global Jihadist terrorist movement and how the ruling Catholic leaders were as perplexed as the westernized world is today in devising strategies for response.  The lively evening keynote speaker was Congressman (R) Jim Kolbe who intrigued and energized his audience by discussing moderate conservative predications that mistakes made in the past few years may take up to a generation to repair. Congressman Kolbe is retiring and looking to teaching, traveling, and speaking in the next years (hint for you all who want a lively, interesting speaker).

Conference organizer, Dr. Chris Demchak of the University of Arizona ’s School of Public Administration and Policy, Political Science Department, and Eller Security Lab, applauds the ISA Headquarters for their absolutely critical assistance with the contracts with hotels and a large number of essential meeting logistics.  Staff at ISA Headquarters established and responsively maintained an electronic registration site for the meeting and closely negotiated the otherwise costly elements of the often confusing contract with the local hotel on behalf of International Security Studies Section. The Section in return vigorously promoted the meeting through their website, in the listserve, in numerous e-mail reminders, and in ISA newsletters.  Demchak credits the personal dedication of the ISA staff (and the judicious use of slowly increasing registration rates), for helping the section to afford such a beautiful resort and attracting many ISSS members who had drifted out of frequent attendance.

ISSS will host their 2007 meeting at the Doubletree Plaza Hotel in Montreal , Canada on October 19 and 20, 2007.  The theme is “Global Security Challenges: When New and Old Issues Intersect,” and the proposal deadline is July 31, 2007.  For additional details, check out the section’s website.

Compendium Project

The International Studies Compendium Project
November 2006 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak, Director of Academic Development

Several months ago, the International Studies Association (ISA), in partnership with Blackwell Publishers, launched the International Studies Compendium Project.  The project has attracted considerable attention and a flurry of activity among ISA members.

What is the Compendium Project?

At the 2006 annual meeting in San Diego , CA , the International Studies Association approved the undertaking of a major Compendium Project to be published by Blackwell Publishers.  The project is designed to serve as high quality reference for international studies that will be of enduring value to the entire profession.   

At the heart of the project are a series of review essays that will trace the development, current status and future prospects of the literature in various issue areas.  Blackwell will market this hardback product to libraries and other institutions.  In the electronic version, titled International Studies On-Line, the essays will be enhanced with live links to archives, datasets, cases, pedagogical aids and other relevant materials.  Along with the on-line version of the project, there will be an on-line discussion forum so that individuals may respond to the essays.  This project should be the start of a set of valuable conversations about where we have been, where we are, and where we might be headed in international studies.  Along with the on-line version, Blackwell will also publish a hardback version of the materials in A-to-Z format to be titled ISE (International Studies Encyclopedia).  Sections will also have the option of pursuing an independent volume.  Bob Denemark of the University of Delaware will serve as general editor.

What is the purpose of the Compendium Project?

The Compendium Project will serve as a repository of information about the development of our thinking on a given issue, the status of the current literature, and possible future directions.  This would be of significant use to students, professional scholars, and those who might wish to understand international studies in a sophisticated manner. 

The adoption of review essays in the ten thousand word range also allows us to set high standards of scholarship.  The ISA considers this project to be on a par with its journals, and each manuscript will be peer reviewed.  This is important because it will assure quality and will allow those essays accepted to take their legitimate place on the CVs of their authors.  Unlike traditional encyclopedia entries, many of which are paid for, these longer essays will be more sophisticated, have a more serious analytical content, and serve as a scholarly publication.   

What is the status of the Compendium Project?

ISA sections have been asked to provide the lists of topics to be covered.  Presently, all ISA sections are putting together committees to help coordinate this task.  The committees are designed to include representatives from different facets of the discipline, as well as those of different ranks.  Committees will identify potential authors and reviewers to cover the critical issues and topics within their section’s subfield.  See the Compendium website for more information.

Recently, a Board of Advisory Editors was constructed to help guide the project.  All former ISA presidents were asked to serve.  Additional information on the Advisory Board can be found at the Compendium website.

How can I contribute to the Compendium Project?

The first goal of the Compendium Project is to have each section generate a list of topics to be considered and identify potential authors by the February, 2007 ISA annual meeting in Chicago , IL.  Manuscripts should be ready for review around the end of 2007.   If you are interested in participating in the Compendium Project as an author or potential reviewer, please contact the appropriate section chair.  ISA section information can be found at: http://www.isanet.org/sections.html.  Please use the ISA Feedback Form to convey any suggestions or thoughts you may have on the larger project at http://www.isanet.org/feedback.html.

Section Websites

Section Websites
October 2006 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak

ISA Sections use the web to communicate with section members and showcase upcoming events and activities.  Every ISA section has an individual website linked through ISA’s main website.  See http://www.isanet.org/sections.html for a look at section websites.   

Typically, a section’s website includes information regarding section leaders and contact information, section charters, minutes of past section business meetings, links of interest, current and archived section newsletters, information related to section awards, and announcements of upcoming events.  Several section websites, including Ethnicity, Nationalism and Migration Studies, Foreign Policy Analysis, International Communication, and Peace Studies provide links to related course syllabi.  Other sections, like Environmental Studies and International Political Economy offer links to colleges and universities with programs in their respective areas.  “Most importantly, a section’s website should provide the visitor with an overview of the section’s mission as well as current officer contact information,” according to Joel Davis, Internet Projects Coordinator at ISA Headquarters.   

Recently, several sections have expanded their websites to include new communication mechanisms like weblogs.  Blogs quickly allow sections to communicate information and better connect with colleagues engaged in similar research and teaching.  Some sections are finding blogs particularly helpful in organizing panels or workshops for ISA meetings. (See http://www.isanet.org/news/isanews_blogs.html)   

Many sections have found that updating their website is a constant challenge as information quickly becomes outdated. We encourage sections to address webpage updates at least annually.    Immediately following your section’s annual business meeting at the ISA annual conference is a great time to update your webpage.  Typically, new section officers have been elected and this is a good time to build off the momentum and excitement of the ISA annual meeting.  We caution sections to keep it simple -- don’t try to be everything to everyone but rather decide what best serves your section.  Regularly poll your members to better learn how they use the webpage and what they value most.

ISA Headquarters can assist your section by linking to your independently hosted website or by providing web hosting services and a webpage template for sections to follow.  The new International Security Studies Section webpage provides an illustration.  Their webpage can be found at:  http://www.isanet.org/sections/iss/.  Please contact Joel Davis at ISA Headquarters at isa@u.arizona.edu to get started.

Professional Development Programs

Professional Development and ISA 2006 Regional Meetings
September 2006 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak

Typically, ISA regional meetings occur in the fall semester.  Regions often collaborate with ISA sections, international organizations, and universities to offer a richly diverse conference that spans well beyond the region’s geographic boundaries.  In 2006, ISA’s regions offer many professional development activities for graduate students and faculty alike.   

At the ISA West regional meeting this fall (September 29-30, Las Vegas ), Women in International Security (WIIS) will sponsor a panel titled, “Nonproliferation and Arms Control Issues.”  Ambassador Tom Graham, former head of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, and Dr. Bill Potter, head of the Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute, will participate.  The idea to connect WIIS with ISA’s regional meeting was developed by a group of University of California , San Bernardino students who sought to bring some of the networking and programming features of WIIS, a traditionally Washington, DC-based organization, to the west coast.  In addition, ISA West will sponsor a publishing workshop for graduate students.

Meanwhile, ISA South demonstrates their commitment to graduate students and junior faculty at their upcoming meeting in Birmingham , Alabama on October 20-21.  Because they realize conference presentation is an integral part of socializing students to the profession, they are making travel grants available to graduate students presenting a paper of up to $150 each to defray the cost of attending the conference. ISA South conference organizers awarded 19 grants for this fall’s meeting.  In addition, they’ve organized a workshop on "International Studies and the Profession" to help young
professionals network and be exposed to job acquisition tips and skills.  Topics include curricular development and the internet, the status of women in the profession, and
tips on landing the first academic job.

ISA Midwest has organized a workshop on how to publish books in the profession with representatives from major publishers in International Relations and Comparative Politics.  At their November 3-5 meeting in St. Louis , MO , they have also created a special roundtable on the status of women in the profession.  Similar to the ISA South, organizers of the ISA Midwest meeting also support graduate student participation by defraying hotel costs for graduate students at the conference hotel. 

Finally, ISA Northeast is featuring a graduate student workshop titled “Interpretive and Relational Research Methodologies” at their annual November 9-11 in Boston , MA .  This workshop aims to bring together faculty and graduate students in a pedagogical environment to discuss both interpretative and relational methodologies.  The tutorial sessions will be followed by sessions in which graduate student participants will have an opportunity to receive feedback from established scholars and from their fellow workshop participants. 

The Active Learning in International Studies (ALIAS) Section of ISA has linked with the regional meetings this fall.  At ISA’s Midwest meeting there will be a workshop entitled, "How to Design IR Simulations" led by Carolyn Shaw and Bob Switky.  At ISA Northeast, there are two workshops scheduled entitled "Constructing Good Courses: From Learning Goals to Assessments" and "Engaging the Millennials:  Techniques in Active Learning for a New Generation of Students," coordinated by David Reilly and John O'Rourke.  Finally, Doug Becker will lead a workshop at ISA’s West regional meeting entitled "How to Design an Active Classroom.”

Special thanks to John Ishiyama, Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, Fran Pilch, Carolyn Shaw, Laura Sjoberg, and Nikolaos Zahariadis for providing valuable information pertaining to their respective regions and sections.

Section Blogs

Introducing Blogs
August 2006 Newsletter
Andrea K. Gerlak, Director of Academic Development

Blogs are increasingly being used to enhance web-based communication.  According to the Wikipedia Encyclopedia, a weblog, typically shortened to blog, is a “website where regular entries are made and presented in reverse chronological order.   Blogs often offer commentary or news on a particular subject, such as food, politics, or local news; some function as more personal online diaries.”  Entries in a blog are commonly referred to as “postings”.  Postings follow postings on the blog, providing a virtual bulletin board of communications.  Perhaps you have already assigned a blog to students in one of your classes, or you’ve looked at some of the more popular political blogs on the web (See our list of International Studies and International Relations blogs at http://isapraxis.blogspot.com/).

Some members of ISA are finding blogs can serve a number of communication functions.  In recent months, sections and regions have begun to use blogs to communicate information to members and facilitate dialogue.   Blogs can serve as a channel of information from section officers to members by providing frequent and timely updates.  Because they provide a permanent web archive of previous postings, they also provide a record of events or communications.  Perhaps most importantly, blogs can facilitate interaction between members by allowing members to offer feedback to an initial posting.  Among the many purposes, ISA sections and regions can use blogs to announce upcoming meetings and workshops, solicit nominations for awards and officer vacancies, list job announcements, and promote panel organizing efforts.

Frequent visitors to the ISA website are familiar with the "What's New at ISA" link that directs them to the ISA News blog  (http://isanet.blogspot.com/) where we post links to the latest calls for papers, conference announcements, region and section news, and news from the field of international studies.  Feel free to send us your section or region news you would like posted to the ISA News blog.  In 2005, ISA also created a group blog for our members to use as a discussion forum. If members are interested in using this vehicle for communication, please see http://isapraxis.blogspot.com/

Creators of the Feminist Theory and Gender Studies blog, hope their members will use their blog like an e-mail list where they would sign up to get an e-mail every time there was a new post to the blog.  Section members would then go to the blog and comment on the e-mail as appropriate.  Most recently, section leaders found their blog was used to help organize panels for the 2007 ISA meetings.  Members posted initial ideas for panels.  Some responded and a proposed panel was formed.

This is exactly what ISA member Patrick Jackson had in mind when he and a team of his graduate students at American University created two blogs earlier this year.  The blogs were designed to increase opportunities for interactions among scholars from different geographical regions and at different stages in their academic careers.   Thought to be an area where people interested in the many questions about international relations can put up requests for fellow panel members with similar interests, blogs were created for both the 2007 ISA annual meeting and the 2006 Northeast ISA meeting.  For the 2007 annual meeting, there were at least a dozen postings on the ISA panel blog.  To see the exchanges, please visit http://isapanels.blogspot.com (ISA panel blog) and http://isanepanels.blogspot.com ( ISA NE blog).

The idea is catching on.  The Women’s Caucus recently launched their blog (see http://www.isawcis.blogspot.com/).  And a blog is in the works for the International Organization section (see http://isaionet.blogspot.com/).  If you interested in setting up a blog for your section or region, please let us know.  ISA Headquarters would be pleased to create the blog for you.  Please note that your blog can be configured as a private blog or it can be public (and listed in the Index of Public Blogs hosted on blogger.com).  It cannot be password protected.  One person can post to the blog or a team of section leaders can post to the blog.  If you want your blog to be really low hassle, you can simply send your postings to ISA Headquarters and we can post them on your behalf.

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