PhD Seminar Series in International Political Sociology (2023-2024)

Description

Organised by the research group DoingIPS and PhD students in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London, the School of Politics and International Relations at Queen Mary University of London, and the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics.

Now into its 6th year, the ‘Doing IPS’ PhD Seminar Series introduces graduate students to research inspired by International Political Sociology’s (IPS) commitment to challenge methodological and conceptual assumptions in their research disciplines, and ask new questions about transdisciplinary modes of inquiry. It will address the need for doctoral candidates to have a forum dedicated to IPS where they can: (1) present their work and receive feedback from peers and senior academics in the field; (2) engage with contemporary IPS research designs and debates; and (3) develop transdisciplinary and cross-institutional relationships with a view to facilitating further discussions and collaborations around common research themes. Lastly, the series will strengthen the analysis and evaluation skills of early career researchers.

The series runs over a period of 10 months starting from September usually meeting on the last Friday of each month, from 3-5pm. In each seminar, two participants have the chance to present their work-in-progress on/in IPS to PhD student colleagues and senior academics from universities across London and the UK who work within the realm of IPS. The seminars will rotate between the three host institutions (King’s College London, Queen Mary University of London, and London School of Economics and Political Science).

In addition to our regular seminars, we organise special events around IPS topics and debates. Check this page regularly for updates.

Sponsor

The seminar series is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council’s London Interdisciplinary Social Science Doctoral Training Partnership (LISS-DTP). Additional financial support is provided by the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics.

Doctoral student organisers

  • Frederic Larden, School of Politics and International Relations, Queen Mary University of London

  • Dalia Saris, School of Politics and International Relations, Queen Mary University of London

  • Nandana Thipperudraiah, Department of War Studies, King's College London

  • Sara Wong, Department of International Relations, London School of Economics

Senior academic organisers

  • Audrey Alejandro, Assistant Professor of Qualitative Text Analysis, Department of Methodology, London School of Economics and Political Science

  • Jef Huysmans, Professor of International Politics, School of Politics and International Relations, Queen Mary University of London

  • Mirko Palestrino, Lecturer in Sociology, School of Politics and International Relations, Queen Mary University of London

Programme

The series will run from September 2023 to June 2024, usually meeting on the last Friday of the month. In each two-hour seminar, two participants introduce their work-in-progress (thesis chapter, book chapter, journal manuscript) to the group and invite a senior academic as discussant. The discussion is followed by questions and answers with the group. All participants are expected to make every effort to attend the seminars and are expected to have read the papers in advance. Presenters are encouraged to invite their supervisors and colleagues interested in their work. 

Date: 29 September 2023 (cancelled due to industrial action):

Presenter: Shruti Balaji (LSE), Title TBC,

Discussant: TBC

Presenter: Mariah Thornton (LSE), “Ideational Resistance, Legitimisation and De-Legitimisation: civic technologies in Taiwan's Counter-interference”.

Discussant: Dr Alexander Stoffel (QMUL)

 

Date: 27 October 2023

Presenter: Livio Silva-Muller (LSE/Geneva Graduate Institute), “The Amazon as a Carbon Sink: how transnationalism makes and brakes climate mitigation policies?”.

Discussant: Prof Ana Karine Pereira (University of Brasilia/LSE)

Presenter: Timor Landherr (QMUL), “Migration Diplomacy from Below: Spatial Ruptures in the Transit Migration Space”.

Discussant: Prof Serhat Karakayali (Leuphana University Lueneburg).

 

Date: 24 November 2023

Presenter: Lucas Perez Florentino (Geneva Graduate Institute), “Sensorial Politics at the CTBTO-PrepCom: Modes of Global Nuclear Governance Through Monitoring, Data-
Transmission, and Data-Making”.

Discussant: Professor Egle Rindzeviciute (Kingston University London)

Presenter: Silvester Schlebruegge (Warwick), “Countercurrents: The aesthetics of subversion and the (im)possibilities of dissensus in the ‘Channel migrant crisis’”.

Discussant: Travis Van Isacker (University of Bristol)

Presenter: Mariah Thornton (LSE), “Resistance through statecraft: Taiwan's open-source governance and algorithmic co-governance technologies”.

Discussant: Dr Alexander Stoffel (QMUL)

 

Date: 8 December 2023

Presenter: Meena Masood (QMUL), “The Gendered “Instinct” Underpinning Vulnerability”.

Discussant: Professor Elisabeth Olivius (Umeå University, Sweden)

Presenter: Nandana Thipperudraiah (KCL), “Evidentiary practices at international criminal trials -Agency Expertise and Practices”.

Discussant: Shilpa Thipperudriah (Yale University)

 

Date: 26 January 2024

Presenter: Aida Hassan (QMUL), “Unravelling state-centrism in global (health) governance through postcolonial sociology”.

Discussant: Dr Maria Berta Ecija (QMUL)

Presenter: Florence Wolstenholme (QMUL), “Naughty or evil money’? How regulation has shaped the political economy of Dubai’s offshore secrecy jurisdictions”.

Discussant: Professor Adam Hanieh (University of Exeter)

 

Date: 23 February 2024

Presenter: Caio Simoneti (Cambridge), “The Subject of Intelligence: AI as Existential Risk and the Constitution of the Human”.

Discussant: Professor Claudia Aradau (King’s College London)

 Date: 22 March 2024

Presenter: Taif Alkhudary (Cambridge), “Fanon Goes to Basra: Abolishing relations of (im)mobility on the frontiers of extractive capitalism in Iraq”.

Discussant: TBC

Presenter: TBC

Discussant: TBC

 

Date: 26 April 2024

Presenter: Isabelle de Geuser (Universite Paris-Est Creteil), “Equilibrists consultants, handymen and women of evaluation”.

Discussant: TBC

Presenter: Anni Roth Hjermann (Cambridge), “Liminal others in-between the state and its outside: Russia’s discourse-practice towards LGBTQ+ people and the Ukrainian ‘Euromaidan’”.

 

Date: 24 May 2024

Presenter: Dalia Yasmin Saris (QMUL), TBC.

Discussant: TBC

Presenter: Freddie Larden (QMUL), TBC.

Discussant: TBC

 

Date: 28 June 2024

Presenter: Chana Rose Rabinovitz (QMUL), TBC.

Discussant: Yingtao Li (KCL), „Counter-securitization of the securitized threats and the audience engagement towards securitization in the landscape of social media”.