ISA's 50th ANNUAL CONVENTION

NEW YORK CITY, NY, USA, FEBRUARY 15-18, 2009

EXPLORING THE PAST, ANTICIPATING THE FUTURE

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Welcome to the website for the 2009 ISA Annual Convention in New York and thank you for your commitment to serve as a participant during the convention. The convention theme is: Exploring the Past, Anticipating the  Future. This website will serve as a resource for information about your role as a program participant and will provide critical information about the upcoming meeting. Be sure to visit this site often in the months and weeks prior to the convention as additional information will be added. Please browse the site using the menu to the left.

Convention News

  • Contact the Program Chairs:

    Sabine Carey, Co-Chair      
    University of Nottingham 
    Centre for International Crisis Management and Conflict Resolution
    School of Politics and International Relations
    University Park            
    Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK

    Gerald Schneider, Co-Chair
    University of Konstanz
    Department of Politics and Management
    Postbox D80
    78457 Konstanz, Germany

    Joint e-mail: isa2009@uni-konstanz.de

  • Paper and Panel Proposals: 
    Please submit your proposal online using the MyISA system. This is a new conference management system and we ask that you first create an account on the system (if you have not already done so). Once you create an account you will be able to manage your proposals (and even save drafts if you are not ready to submit them), pay for registration, and manage your ISA membership (if you are a member).

Call For Papers

ISA 50th Annual Convention
New York, February 15–18, 2009

          
Nils Petter Gleditsch, President
Sabine Carey, Program Chair
Gerald Schneider, Program Chair


Exploring the past, anticipating the future

Prior to the autumn of 1989, few people predicted the fall of the Soviet empire and those who did usually did so for the wrong reasons – such as nuclear war with the West, war with China, or ethnic disruption. The general prescription for East-West relations was to find the right mix of confrontation, which could move things forward, and conciliation to minimize the risk of war. Only two and a half years after the spring 1989 decision of the Hungarian government to open its borders, the Soviet Union imploded. Not only had it let the Warsaw Pact countries go their own way, but the same privilege was granted to the 15 republics that made up the Union. Germany was reunited, a scenario held in low esteem by most international relations experts only a short time before.

Ten years earlier, after the end of the Mao era, almost no one had predicted how fast China would be overtaking the Soviet Union and become the main geo-strategic and economic challenger of the United States. The social sciences were equally silent on the prominent role that the internet and other technological innovations would play in what came to be known as “globalization”.

Following such sea-changes in international relations, scholars began to see the potential for dramatic changes behind every corner. Would the liberal twins, capitalism and democracy, be so successful that we had reached “the end of history”?  Would Russia disintegrate, as had the Soviet Union? Would Ukraine and Russia go to war over the sharing of the Societ nuclear weapons or over the future of Crimea? Would the world see a “Clash of civilizations”? Would Ebola or Bird Flu produce plague-like human health disasters?

The 2009 ISA Annual Convention investigates different aspects of change and continuity in international relations under the heading of exploring the past and anticipating the future. Regional arms races, globalization, development, secularization, and the earth’s climate are all stories of change. Is mankind being overwhelmed by these changes or can we handle them in piecemeal fashion? Is the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists justified in moving its doomsday clock forward from 17 minutes to midnight in 1991 to just 5 minutes to midnight in 2007, closer to doomsday than at any time since World War II except the 1950s and the early 1980s? Does globalization provide an incremental road to development, democracy, peace, and respect for human rights, or a slippery slope towards increased inequalities and civil strife?

For over ten years the US government has sponsored social science projects in trying to understand state failure with a view to preventing it from spreading. The UN and many non-governmental organizations would sorely like to predict conflict, genocide, and humanitarian catastrophes and move before they happen. In our lifetime, meteorologists have succeeded in forecasting short-term variations in weather (at least) on a better basis than yielded by the time-honored forecast that the weather tomorrow will be like the weather today. But predictions of conflict and genocide still remain largely at the level of trend projection. Can we do better?

The twin pitfalls of over-predicting and under-predicting change and continuity form the background for the 2009 conference. We will look back as well as forward. We encourage the submission of panels and papers that help us to better understand the past and anticipate the future in all aspects of the international system. The exact composition of panels will, as usual, depend on all of our members, as well as on input from the sections. Panels might explore likely changes in the international trade system and how these could affect the relationship between East and West, North and South. The dynamics between security, population flows, and changing levels of development might form the basis of another set of panels. We might have a session on why the profession did not predict the end of the Cold War and another on why theories of the imminent decline of the US have once again become fashionable. We could ask whether 9/11 (2001) is a turning-point of the same magnitude as 11/9 (the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989). Is global warming about to cause major damage to the health of the planet if we let things run their course, or is it something that we can easily deal with if we apply some reasonable countermeasures?

We anticipate that the ISA’s 50th conference in New York in 2009 will be full of constructive controversy. Meeting in the city that also provides the home for the United Nations we also hope to convey a message to the world policy community that international relations scholars have something to offer in its assessment of change – beyond the Scylla of stability and the Charybdis of apocalyptic change.


DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS OF PROPOSALS:
MAY 30, 2008

PROPOSALS MAY BE SUBMITTED ONLINE HERE

Please note that due to limited space and extremely high demand to be on the annual program, we will have to require the following:

  • Only two paper presentations per person will be accepted for the program. If you propose more than two papers, and for some reason more than two are accepted, the program chairs will choose the two without consulting you. This “two presentation” rule applies as well to roundtables, although does not include participation as discussants or chairs. This rule applies to all participants, irrespective of their geographical origin. Co-authorship of a paper counts as a half-participation.
  • There is an assumption that when you apply, you will be available for the entire conference to present. There are too many participants to juggle schedules. If, for religious reasons you cannot participate on a certain date, please indicate to the program chair the day when you apply. Otherwise, we will assume that you will accept your placement on the program once your presentation(s) are accepted.


Contact information for panel and paper proposals
:

Sabine Carey, Co-Chair      
University of Nottingham       
School of Politics and International Relations
University Park            
Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK


Gerald Schneider, Co-Chair
University of Konstanz
Department of Politics and Management
Postbox D80
78457 Konstanz, Germany

Joint e-mail: isa2009@uni-konstanz.de

Convention Hotel & Travel

ISA is partnering with the New York Marriott Marquis Times Square for the 2009 Annual Convention. Located in the heart of Times Square and the Broadway theater district, this midtown Manhattan hotel is perfect for weekend getaways, family travel and business travel. The Marriott Marquis sparkles with updated hotel rooms, high-speed elevators and six hotel restaurants and lounges. With area attractions such as Fifth Avenue shopping, Radio City Music Hall, Rockefeller Center, NBC Studios and Central Park just minutes away, a stay at this New York City hotel ensures that entertainment is just around the corner. The Marriott Marquis is conveniently located near New York City attractions like Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, the UN and Madison Square Garden.

Marriott


New York Marriott Marquis
1535 Broadway
New York, NY 10036
Phone: (212) 398-1900
Toll-free:  1-800-843-4898

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Register for the Annual Convention

ISA offers convention registration rates based on status (student, member, non-member). You may register for the Annual Convention using the MyISA system.

Early Registration: May 12 - Nov. 19, 2008

  • ISA Member: $120
  • Non-Member: $170*
  • Student Member: $60
  • Student Non-Member: $85*

Late Registration: Nov. 20, 2008 - Feb. 6, 2009

  • ISA Member: $145
  • Non-Member: $195
  • Student Member: $85
  • Student Non-Member: $110

On-Site Registration: Feb. 15 - 18, 2009

  • ISA Member: $170
  • Non-Member: $220
  • Student Member: $110
  • Student Non-Member: $135

*Note that the Early Registration deadline for non-ISA members is Oct. 13, 2008.