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Working Groups 2011

  • International Political Sociology
  • Public Diplomacy

Working Groups 2010 Archive

  • ICOMM: Networks in Global Information and Communication Policy
  • HUMAN RIGHTS: The Real Cost of Recession: Human Rights and the Economic Downturn
  • FTGS: Gender and Security: Theory & Practice

Working Groups 2009 Archive

  • Active Learning in International Affairs
  • Environmental Studies
  • Human Rights

ISA Working Groups

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What is a Working Group?

Several years ago, ISA sponsored a small slate of working groups as a part of a pilot project. Since then, we’ve been sponsoring a few working groups at our annual conference each year to offer attendees a forum for dialogue and interaction around designated issue areas within the association. By participating in a working group, conference attendees discuss the most thought-provoking issues in their sections as well as their own research through an extended and focused discussion. Such dialogue may stimulate new research questions and project ideas, and contribute to development of new communities of scholars.

Working groups are sponsored by ISA Headquarters on a competitive basis. In addition to the quality of the proposal itself, we consider diversity of section representation, thematic integration across sections, and linkages to the program theme. Typically, the deadline for working group proposals is mid-June.

We are pleased to sponsor two working groups at the 2011 conference:

Public Diplomacy: Interdisciplinary Research, Teaching, and Practice

Interrogating the Use of Norms in International Relations


How Does a Working Group Work?

Participants meet within their working group on three separate occasions during the conference. The first meeting will occur in advance of the start of the panels and provides an opportunity for participants to create a framework to guide their interactions. Working group participants then also meet towards the middle of the scheduled conference and again at the end of the conference. Participants commit to attend a small group of related panels throughout the course of the meeting to discuss during their group meetings. Because of the scheduling of other events at the conference, please note that participants will not all attend the same panels. A working group coordinator for each working group crafts the group theme and schedule. In addition, the working group coordinator will facilitate communication with participants and relevant ISA Sections and facilitate assessment surveys.

Working groups consist of approximately 20-25 participants. Participants join working groups on a first come-first served basis and must be committed to attending all of the group sessions. Group coordinators strive for balance in terms of seniority and expertise in each group. Participants will receive a certificate of recognition for their participation. 

Working Groups 2009 Archive

As part of our pilot project in 2009, ISA sponsored three working groups at the annual convention in New York. Please see the Working Groups 2009 links menu to the left to review the group schedule.

Working Groups 2010 Archive

As a continuation of our pilot project, ISA sponsored three Working Groups at the 2010 Annual Convention in New Orleans. Please see the Working Groups 2010 links menu to the left to review the group schedule.

2011 Working Group: Public Diplomacy

Public Diplomacy-Banner

DESCRIPTION 

The primary objective of the Working Group on Public Diplomacy is to establish a productive community of scholars from across the disciplines and divisions of ISA in order to advance the scholarship and teaching on public diplomacy. Public diplomacy represents an increasingly important convergence of multiple research trajectories within the ISA – including theoretical and practical research on influence efforts and ‘soft power,’ comparative work on foreign policy and practices of public engagement, as well as the instrumental role of international communication and global media leveraged by state and non-state institutions. The Working Group invites scholars actively engaged in research and teaching that recognizes the increased salience of public diplomacy as a foreign policy imperative around the world, and, how public diplomacy has transformed conceptual boundaries between diplomacy, communication, and international politics.

The Working Group aims to build an inclusive and interdisciplinary forum that will address the pressing research, pedagogical, and practical issues pertaining to public diplomacy studies. The Working Group intends to cultivate a sustainable network of scholars to share perspectives and resources. An important aspect of this effort is to move the debate forward on what is increasingly a global phenomenon that has theoretical and practical linkages to the broader community of scholars in ISA. The Working Group will address three primary areas of concern related to public diplomacy scholarship: (1) the trajectory for interdisciplinary theoretical development and research methods, (2) the increased demand from international actors for measures of effectiveness and evaluation, (3) the need to share resources for academic program development in public diplomacy.


GROUP COORDINATORS

Craig Hayden, American University
chayden@american.eduCraig_Hayden_w

Craig Hayden is an assistant professor in the International Communication Program at American University’s School of International Service. His current research focuses on the discourse of public diplomacy, the rhetoric of foreign policy related to media technologies, as well as the impact of global  media and media convergence on international relations. He is particularly interested in the comparative study of public diplomacy and media culture as a pivotal resource for international relations, as well as the impact of communication technology on international influence. Dr. Hayden received his Ph.D. from the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Southern California. Dr. Hayden's previous studies include analysis of media framing of the United States in pan-Arab media content, as well as analysis of media-based public argument by US presidential advisors prior to the invasion of Iraq in 2003. He also blogs at intermap.org.  His forthcoming book, "The Rhetoric of Soft Power: Public Diplomacy in Global Contexts" will be published in Spring 2011 by Lexington Books.

Fitzpatrick

Kathy Fitzpatrick, Quinnipiac University
Kathy.fitzpatrick@quinnipiac.edu

 

Kathy R. Fitzpatrick is professor of public relations and director of graduate studies in public relations in the School of Communications at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut. She is a senior public  relations advisor, an attorney, and an internationally-recognized scholar whose research focuses on U.S. public diplomacy and legal and ethical issues in public relations. Her recent books include The Future of U.S. Public Diplomacy: An Uncertain Fate (Brill, 2009) and Ethics in Public Relations: Responsible Advocacy (Sage, 2006). Fitzpatrick is the co-editor of the Palgrave Macmillan Book Series on Global Public Diplomacy and serves on the international advisory board of PD Magazine. She frequently speaks at industry and professional forums and serves on the editorial review boards of Journal of Public Relations Research, Public Relations Review, Communications Quarterly, and the Journal of Mass Media Ethics. She is a member of the Arthur W. Page Society and a former head of the Educators Academy of the Public Relations Society of America. Fitzpatrick received her juris doctor degree from Southern Methodist University and master and bachelor degrees in journalism from West Virginia University.


SCHEDULE

Tuesday, March 15, 2011
8:30am - 5:00pm
Pre-Conference Workshop

8:30 - 9:00 am Welcome & Introductions   

9:00 - 10:00 am Keynote and Discussion  
Matthew Armstrong

Matthew Armstrong publishes Mountainrunner.us, the leading blog on U.S. public diplomacy and strategic communication and is president of the MountainRunner Institute, a nonprofit public diplomacy research firm.


10:00 - 10:30 am Coffee Break                
       
10:30 - 12:00 pm Roundtable                  
Measurement, Effectiveness and the implications of Institutional Research on Public Diplomacy
                                                                         
12:00 - 1:30 pm Luncheon Keynote Speaker and Discussion   
The implications of “engagement” for redefining the uses of technology in diplomacy
Maureen Cormack

Maureen Cormack currently serves as the Executive Assistant in the Office of the Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs.

1:30 - 3:00 pm Roundtable                  
Research, Theory and Interdisciplinarity in Public Diplomacy Studies

3:00 - 3:30 pm Coffee Break                

3:30 - 5:00 pm Roundtable                 
Public Diplomacy Pedagogy and Academic Program Development

                                   

Thursday, March 17, 2011
4:00-5:45 pm
Follow-up Meeting


Roundtable Presentation                                         
Public Diplomacy Subfield Presentation- International Broadcasting and New Media 

Amelia Arsenault (University of Pennsylvania), Shawn Powers (Georgia State University), Christina Archetti (University of Salford), Anthony Deos (University of Otago, NZ), and Ezzeddine Abdelmoula (Al-Jazeera).

Presenters will address how public diplomacy is implicated by developments in the geo-politics of news, the rise of social media technology, the use of so-called “PD 2.0” strategies within diplomatic institutions, and impact of international journalism.

 

Saturday, March 19, 2011
8:15 – 10:00 am
ISA Roundtable


Roundtable Discussion                                    
“Multi-disciplinary Approaches to Public Diplomacy”

This roundtable discussion will review the panels attended during the conference, address the future of public diplomacy studies at ISA, and discuss the enduring impact of the Working Group through a sustainable online social media platform for collaboration and communication. 

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