Posts Tagged ‘Dustin Gish’

Seattle: American Political Thought at APSA

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

American Exceptionalism

Date: Saturday, Sep 3, 2011, 10:15 AM-12:00 PM

Chair(s): Michael P. Zuckert
University of Notre Dame, zuckert.1@nd.edu
Author(s):
The Origins of American Exceptionalism   [Download Paper]
James W. Ceaser
University of Virginia, jwc2g@virginia.edu
Two Cities on a Hill: From Winthrop to Reagan   [Download Paper]
Patrick J. Deneen
Georgetown University, pjd35@georgetown.edu
American Exceptionalism in the Early Republic  [Download Paper]
Peter S. Onuf
University of Virginia, pso2k@virginia.edu
Our Republican Example: The Significance of the US in the 21st Century   [Download Paper]
Rogers M. Smith
University of Pennsylvania, rogerss@sas.upenn.edu
Discussant(s): Alan Ray Gibson
California State University, Chico, agibson@csuchico.edu

Executive Power and the Politics of Rights

Date: Sunday, Sep 4, 2011, 8:00 AM-9:45 AM

Chair(s): Steven Kautz
Michigan State University, kautz@msu.edu
Author(s):
Jefferson’s Executive: More Unitary, More Responsible, and Less Stable  [Download Paper]
Jeremy D. Bailey
University of Houston, jbailey@central.uh.edu
Law and the Problem of the Exception in American Constitutionalism  [Download Paper]
Tobin L. Craig
Michigan State University, craigt@msu.edu
Benjamin A. Kleinerman
Michigan State University, bkleiner@msu.edu
Alexander Hamilton on Executive Discretion  [Download Paper]
George Thomas
Claremont McKenna College, gthomas@claremontmckenna.edu
Restraining the Discretionary Executive: The Turn to Formalism and Beyond  [Download Paper]
Lucas Thompson
Yale University, lucas.thompson@yale.edu
Quantum Constitutionalism: Time and Probability in James Madison’s Theory of Rights  [Download Paper]
Greg Weiner
Assumption College, gregory_weiner@brown.edu
Discussant(s): Dustin A. Gish
College of the Holy Cross, dgish@holycross.edu
Randal R. Hendrickson
Duke University, randal.hendrickson@gmail.com

Call for Papers Northeastern Political Science Association

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Northeastern Political Science Association

www.northeasternpsa.com

2010 Annual Meeting

11-13 November 2010

Boston, Massachusetts

Conference Hotel:  Omni Parker House, 60 School St., Boston, MA 02108  (www.omnihotels.com)

CALL FOR PAPERS AND PARTICIPATION

The 42nd Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association (NPSA) will be held at the Omni Parker House Hotel in Boston, on Nov. 11-13, 2010. Proposals for papers, panels, or roundtable discussions, and to serve as a chair and/or discussant must be submitted by June 15, 2010 via the NPSA submission website (e-mail submissions will not be accepted):

http://convention2.allacademic.com/one/npsa/npsa10/

(Once on the submission website, create a username and password and follow the instructions.)

Only one paper submission per person will be accepted. A paper presenter may also serve as a chair or discussant on a second panel or as a round-table participant. Questions should be directed to the Section Chair or the Program Chair (see below). Additional information about the conference is available on the NPSA website.

PROGRAM CHAIR

Eric N. Budd

Fitchburg State College

Phone: 978 665-3732

ebudd@fsc.edu

POLITICAL THEORY

ANCIENT AND MEDIEVAL POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

All aspects of Ancient (Greek, Roman) and Medieval (Jewish, Christian, Islamic) Political Thought

Dustin A. Gish

Department of Political Science

College of the Holy Cross

307 Fenwick Hall, Worcester, MA 01610

Phone:  508-793-3519

dgish@holycross.edu

ANNOUNCEMENT:

The 2010 annual meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association (NPSA) will be held in Boston, MA, this November 11-13. Please see the “Call for Proposals” for papers and full panels within the “Ancient and Medieval Political Philosophy” section. Proposals must be submitted on-line through the NPSA submission website. The deadline for submissions to be posted on-line is June 15.

Boston in 1772 vs. 1880.

Boston 1772

At the 2009 Annual Meeting, the “Ancient and Medieval Political Philosophy” section was (for a second year in a row) the largest at the conference, with 24 panels, 80 papers and presentations, and nearly 100 panel participants overall. Your participation, as well as your assistance in encouraging colleagues and graduate students to attend, is essential to our future success.

Best Regards,
Dustin Gish

Department of Political Science

College of the Holy Cross

307 Fenwick Hall,

Worcester, MA 01610

Phone:  508-793-3519

Fax: 508-793-3945

dgish@holycross.edu

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