_________________________________________________________

1 new item posted on 10 August 2010
__________________________________________________________
SASA_book
_________________________________________________________

1 new item posted on 19 July 2010
__________________________________________________________

Academic position at the University of Stellenbosch
SUN_100719
__________________________________________________________

1 new item posted on 22 June 2010
__________________________________________________________
Sanparks
__________________________________________________________

1 new item posted on 13 April 2010
__________________________________________________________

Wits_adv
__________________________________________________________

1 new item posted on 27 January 2010
__________________________________________________________

2010_term_1
__________________________________________________________

1 new item posted on 2 December 2009

__________________________________________________________

Lecturer position at Rhodes University - apply by 15 January.

Rhodes ad

__________________________________________________________

1 new item posted on 26 August 2009
__________________________________________________________

Vacancy: Academic Position in the UJ Department of Sociology.
Closing date for applications: 28 August 2009.
To read the advertisement, please click through from
  • 1 new item posted on 18 August 2009
News about the South African Review of Sociology and Deadlines

Submitted by the editors: Peter Alexander, Shireen Ally, Marcelle Dawson and Bridget Kenny

Following discussions between the editors of SARS and Taylor & Francis, it is likely that our journal will be published by T&F under its Routledge imprint from the beginning of 2010. It is anticipated that in future SARS will be published three times a year. We still require clarity on some matters and any agreement on this important matter rests with the Council of SASA. In the meantime, the editors are once again considering papers for publication. At this stage two types of contribution will be considered.

1) Articles. Standard research articles or review articles that should be 5,000-8,000 words long. They should be accompanied by an abstract, not more than 200 words long, that summarises the argument made, indicating its novelty.

2) Briefings. Shorter papers, 1,500-3,000 words long. These should be based on research related to topical issue or report recent findings that might shape academic debate.

Those who know the Review of African Political Economy will be familiar with the distinction between articles and briefings. In both cases, papers will be peer reviewed if they have the potential to be accepted (that is, they are relevant to the South African sociological community and might be considered acceptable by a reviewer). To assist the journal fulfil its developmental mandate, potential contributors who have not yet been published in an academic journal should indicate that thet are a first time author.

In the future, articles and briefings may be submitted at any time, but for the next ssue the following deadlines apply:

Articles: 12 September

Briefings: 15 October

Contributions should be submitted to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

The journal will also include Debates and a small section of Community News. Information about these will be made available later. The editors will also be announcing a deadline for proposals for special issues of the journal. For further information about SARS, including it new vision, see the editors’ report to the AGM, which is available on the SASA web site.

Editorial Board. The editorial board includes one member nominated by each department of sociology in South Africa. The aim is to make the EB more representative and more active. Whilst most departments have nominated somebody, a few have not yet done so. The deadline for further nominations in 12 September.

Also see this document which included the AGM report.

__________________________________________________________

1 new item posted on 3 August 2009
__________________________________________________________

revised_anniversary_programme
  • 1 new item posted on 15 July 2009
uj_sociology_term_3_programme
  • 1 new item posted on 28 June 2009
Die Noordwes-Universiteit wag aansoeke in vir die volgende pos:

POTCHEFSTROOMKAMPUS

FAKULTEIT LETTERE EN WYSBEGEERTE

SKOOL VIR SOSIALE EN OWERHEIDSTUDIES

LEKTOR/ JUNIOR LEKTOR: SOSIOLOGIE

Minimum vereistes: Vir die Junior lektor ‘n BA (Hons) in Sosiologie met onderrigleer- en navorsingsbetrokkenheid of vir die Lektor ‘n MA in Sosiologie met ongeveer 3 jaar onderrigervaring en bewys van navorsingsuitsette gelewer.

Die Universiteit onderskryf die beginsels van die Wet op Gelyke Indiensneming en pas hierdie beginsels toe. Terwyl meriete, gegrond op kwalifikasies, ervaring en bewese prestasies, die grondslag vir aanstellings uitmaak, is die Universiteit verbind tot die behoefte daaraan om te transformeer en sy personeelprofiel te diversifiseer.


Die Universiteit behou die reg voor om nie ? aanstelling te maak nie.

Sluitingsdatum: 10 Julie 2009.

Diensaanvaarding: Soos ooreengekom met die suksesvolle kandidaat.

Vergoeding en byvoordele: ? Mededingende vergoedingspakket kan beding word. Aantreklike studievoordele sowel as die gewone byvoordele geld.

Vir ? volledige POSPROFIEL en’n AANSOEKVORM, skakel die Departement Mensehulpbronne, tel. (018) 299 4960/4961 of stuur ? e-pos na This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

________________________________________________________________

The North-West University invites applications for the following position:

POTCHEFSTROOM CAMPUS

FACULTY OF ARTS

SCHOOL OF SOCIAL AND GOVERNMENT STUDIES

LECTURER / JUNIOR LECTURER: SOCIOLOGY

Minimum requirements: For the Junior lecturer a BA (Hons) in Sociology with teaching-learning and research involvement or for the Lecturer a MA in Sociology with approximately 3 years’ teaching experience and proof of research output.

The University subscribes to and applies the principles of the Employment Equity Act. While merit, based on qualifications, experience and proven achievements, forms the basis for appointment, the University is committed to the need to transform and diversify its staff profile. The University reserves the right not to make an appointment.

Closing date: 10 July 2009

Commencement of duties: As agreed with the successful candidate.

Remuneration and fringe benefits: A competitive remuneration package is negotiable. Attractive study benefits as well

as the normal fringe benefits apply.

For a JOB PROFILE AND APPLICATION FORM, contact the Human Resources Department,

tel. (018) 299-4960 / 4961 or e-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

  • 1 new item posted on 19 June 2009
edward_webster_colloquium_programme_27_-_28_june_2009
  • 1 new item posted on 20 February 2009

CONFERENCE ON ‘COMPREHENDING CLASS’

 

A conference organized by the University of the Johannesburg’s Centre for Sociological Research with the University of the Witwatersrand’ History Workshop and the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation.

 

To be held in Johannesburg, 23-26 June 2009

 

The world is now a more unequal place than at any point in our lifetimes. In an earlier era, this polarization would have been understood – in popular as well as academic discourse - through the language of ‘class’. The meaning of this concept was always contested, and it had various references – class structure, class position, class consciousness, and so on – but few doubted that classes existed and mattered politically. Now, though, many social theorists and political actors have abandoned the idea, and most would be hard pressed to provide definitions with much confidence. Nor has the assault been purely ideological. Evidence from different corners of the world reveals that individual class identities are flexible, often multiple, and sometimes absent, and social structures have changed in ways that can appear to defy assessment in terms of class.

This conference takes, as its starting point, three assumptions:

1) Class is an essential concept for understanding history, and it remains an important basis for popular mobilization against inequality and marginalization. However, critiques of class are not merely about intellectual fashion; they also reflect changing realities

2) There is a pressing need for research and debate on the meaning of class, both with respect to class identity and class structure, and also in relation to other ways of understanding the social world and political change.

3) There is much to be gained from an engagement between people trying to make sense of the concept in different parts of the world, and between academics on the one hand and activist intellectuals on the other.

Hitherto, most of the literature on class has been generated in the North. This conference aims to expand debate by also drawing on experiences and research from the South. A dialogue between North and South will highlight the extent to which, in our globalized world, classes are universal or geographically conditioned. South Africa has greater inequality and worse unemployment than almost anywhere else in the world, and the conference’s location will underline the importance of factoring the realities of poverty into any class-based understanding of society.

The following are some of the themes and questions the organizers would like to consider:

  • Is there a poor class separate from the working class?
  • Why do so many people describe themselves as middle class?
  • How is class consciousness diffused and defused?
  • To what extent have marketing and the media changed perceptions of class?
  • Can contemporary views of class reshape the ways we think of the past?
  • How has class shaped struggles for democracy in the era of globalization?
  • How does class intersect with race, ethnicity, nation, gender and generation?
  • What is the relationship between class, faith and politics?
  • Is class politics still relevant?
  • Has globalization globalized class experience?
  • Is there a new ‘Empire’ of capital?
  • Does language shape the meaning of class?
  • Can there be exploitation without class?
  • Has urbanization eradicated the peasantry?

Participation in the conference will be based on the presentation of a paper that presents an original idea based on evidence. This might be a traditional academic paper, but we also invite contributions from union, social movement and NGO activists. The organizers will select papers on the basis of an abstract, no more than 300 words long, summarizing the purpose of the proposed paper. Please email your abstract to Annelize Naidoo at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . Remember include the title of the paper, your name, institutional affiliation, email address, and fax and telephone numbers.

Keynote speakers include: Erik Olin-Wright (Wisconsin-Madison), Satish Deshpande (Delhi), Alex Callinicos (King’s College, London), Birgit Mahnkopf (Berlin School of Economics), Celi Scalon (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro).

Final date for submission of abstracts: 6 April 2009

Final date for submission of paper: 25 May 2008

Registration fees. OECD countries (full): R2500. OECD countries (students): R1,500. Non-OECD (full): R1000. Non-OECD (students): R600. A few bursaries for participation from non-OECD countries are available to cover registration. Applicants for these should email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it including their CV. Payment can be made by Electronic Fund Transfer (EFT). For this, use the following information. ABSA Bank, branch code:632005, account number: 405 628 0705 (University of Johannesburg). Give you first initial and surname as the reference.

Accommodation. We strongly advise participants to arrange their accommodation in one of the many guest house in the Melville district of Johannesburg. This is pleasant and safe area with many restaurants and bars. Transport will be arranged to take participants to and from Melville and the conference venue. Our transport will also assist participants staying at the Millpark Holiday Inn.

You may be interested to know that our conference will be followed by the annual conference of the South African Sociological Association, which will be held at the University of the Witwatersrand from 28 June – 2 July. Also, the FIFA Confederation Cup will be held in South Africa from 14 - 28 June. Whilst this will make a visit to Johannesburg more interesting for some, it also means that participants should book accommodation as soon as possible

  • 1 new item posted on 11 November 2008

BRITISH SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2009

Thursday 16th – Saturday 18th April 2009

Cardiff City Hall, Cardiff

The 2009 Conference is a new way of organising the annual conference of the Association. Instead of the conference being organised under a single conference theme, participants can present on whatever topics they wish within broad streams (and open streams) that reflect the core research areas of the membership:


Consumption

Culture, Media and Society

Economy and Society

Education

Generations and the Lifecourse

Medicine, Health and Illness

Methods

Religion

Theory

Science and Technology Studies Social Divisions / Social Identities

Social Relationships

Space, Mobility and Place

Open Stream(s)


All BSA study groups have been strongly encouraged to contribute posters/ papers and other activities addressed to these streams. There will also be opportunities for study groups to meet independently.

Plenary speakers at the conference have been confirmed as Patricia Hill Collins from the University of Maryland, USA and Boaventura de Sousa Santos from the University of Coimbra, Portugal and University of Madison-Wisconsin, USA. They will speak on topics relating to the 2009 conference theme:

The Challenge of Global Social Inquiry

Within each of the main streams a sub-plenary will be organised to address the Conference theme. These sub-plenaries will be staggered across the Conference timetable.

Further information available from:

BSA Website: www.britsoc.co.uk/events/Conference

E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
  • 1 new item posted on 28 October 2008

The Indian Sociological Society (ISS) is having its conference for the All India Sociological Society in Jaipur, India from 27 to 29 December. Fees vary between A,B and C category counties and SA falls under the B category as stipulated by the ISA. Access full details of the conference on the following sites: www.uniraj.ernet.in/conferences/socio2008.html and http://www.insoso.org. For more information, email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

  • 1 new item posted on 9 October 2008
wits2
  • 1 new item posted on 1 September 2008

Call for nominations and applications for the South African Review of Sociology (SARS), a Journal of the South African Sociological Association (SASA).

 

The editorial collective’s term of office is four years. Although the editing of the journal is non-remunerative, it however offers the incumbents a challenging and fulfilling experience in editing and spearheading one of South Africa’s well established and respected SAPSE accredited journals. This is also an opportunity to contribute towards the building of a transformed scholarly community of sociologists in South Africa.

The editorial collective’s main responsibilities will include:

  • Leading the journal by making editorial decisions

  • Upholding the values and principles as well as the vision of the SASA in terms of pursuing the new initiatives and addressing challenges as highlighted above,

  • Being accountable to the SASA membership through reports on the journal’s progress and the finances at the SASA Annual General Meeting (AGMs),

  • Convening the AGM of the Journal at the SASA annual conferences aimed at dealing with matters pertaining to the journal,

  • Appointing a senior editor or convenor from amongst members of the editorial collective, and

  • Approaching guest editors, where necessary, for the special issues of the journal.

The SASA Council is thus delighted to invite nominations and/or applications for the editorial collective for a new term of four years. Nominations and applications are invited from currently registered members of SASA only. When nominating or applying, the following information should be supplied:

  • the nominee or applicant's full name
  • the nominee or applicant's CV

It is important that consent is received from the nominee before submitting his/her name and details. Nominations and applications are open until Friday 19th September 2008. The Council will make the appointments during its next Council meeting in October 2008.
All applications and nominations should be sent to the SASA Secretary, Dr Monty Roodt at the following addresses and contact numbers:

 

Department of Sociology
Rhodes University
Grahamstown
Tel: 046 6038868
Phone: 0832326646
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

  • 1 new item posted on 13 August 2008
wits_ad08
  • 1 new item posted on 7 August 2008

CALL FOR PAPERS

BRITISH SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION
ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2009

Thursday 16th – Saturday 18th April 2009, Cardiff City Hall, Cardiff

The 2009 Conference is a new way of organising the annual conference of the Association. Instead of the call for papers being organised under a single conference theme, participants can present on whatever topics they wish within broad streams (and open streams) that reflect the core research areas of the membership:

Work, Economy and Society

Religion

Medicine, Health and Illness

Social Divisions / Social Identities

Consumption

Science and Technology Studies

Culture, Media and Society

Space and Place

Theory

Social Relationships

Methods

Education

Generations and the Lifecourse

Open Stream(s)

All BSA study groups are strongly encouraged to contribute posters/ papers and other activities addressed to these streams. There will also be opportunities for study groups to meet independently. The BSA Presidential Address and two Keynote Plenaries organised to address the Conference theme:

The Challenge of Global Social Inquiry

Within each of the main streams a sub-plenary will be organised to address the Conference theme. These sub-plenaries will be staggered across the Conference timetable.

Abstract submission form available from

BSA Website: www.britsoc.co.uk/events/Conference

IMPORTANT DATES:

Friday 26th September 2008: Deadline for abstract submission.

Friday 16th January 2009: Last date for presenters to register.

E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

  • 1 new item posted on 15 July 2008

Click here for advertisement for projects' officer position with the UJ Centre for Sociological research. Queries to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . Apply online at http://www.ujhb.drm-za.com/.

  • 1 new item posted on 10 June 2008

Constitutional amendment proposed on forum. All SASA members please read.

  • 1 new item posted on 9 June 2008

From Universiy World News, 9 June 2008

AFRICA: Sociologist to lead donor's regional programmes
Date: 08 June 2008


Nigerian sociologist Dr Omotade "Tade" Akin Aina has been selected as programme director of higher education in Africa for the Carnegie Corporation of New York. It was announced last week that Aina - whose widely recognised research has investigated urban poverty, governance and development - would "refine and implement the corporation's strategy to accelerate economic and social development in Africa by strengthening teaching, research, scholarship and leadership".

Aina, who for the past decade has been the Ford Foundation's regional representative for East Africa based in Kenya, will join Carnegie Corporation in September. Both Ford and Carnegie are founding members of the Partnership for Higher Education in Africa, a consortium of foundations that are investing $300 million over the decade to 2010 in higher education on the continent. The partnership has been supporting the development of university infrastructure and capacity, especially information technologies and internet connectivity.

"Africa's vibrant universities are helping to prepare a new generation of leaders in civil society, industry and government who can meet the continent's many needs," said Aina in a Carnegie Corporation statement. "We must continue to find innovative approaches to strengthening these institutions while pioneering new ways of linking them to offer the highest quality instruction to scholars, scientists and humanists."

Aina studied sociology at the University of Lagos and the London School of Economics, and has a doctorate from the University of Sussex. He became a professor specialising in urban poverty, governance and development at the University of Lagos, and published widely on a range of issues. He was also an activist, co-founding the Nigerian Environmental Study Team and the Lagos Group for the Study of Human Settlements.

Before joining the Ford Foundation in 1998, Aina was deputy executive secretary of the Dakar-based Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. He has spoken and written about African universities, including authoring a monograph critically assessing the history of higher education on the continent, Quality and Relevance: African Universities in the 21st Century.

"Tade's grasp of Africa's complex development needs, the difficult questions he asks and the truths he seeks will help the Corporation better understand the challenges in building human capacity," said Carnegie's president, Vartan Gregorian.

"Throughout his career as a scholar and administrator, he has worked with determination to develop routes toward deepening democratisation, reforming public policy and building civil society." Gregorian added that Aina was selected after an international search for a leader who understands the imperative for human resource development in Africa, and champions the role of universities in development.

Created by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to promote "the advancement and diffusion of knowledge and understanding", the corporation's capital fund had a market value of US$3 billion last year. In Africa, Carnegie is working in South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Ghana and Nigeria, investing in initiatives that include networks of scholars and institutional support for universities and libraries.

  • 1 new item posted on 16 May 2008
N-AERUS 2008 Conference
Barcelona 11-13 September 2008

CALL FOR PAPERS
SECURING POSITIVE CHANGE IN INTERNATIONAL URBAN POVERTY
REDUCTION POLICIES:
Is international action changing urban poverty on the ground or not?
The Millenium Development Goals (MDGs) framework has been put in place
through one of the international agreements hosted by the United Nations
where governments from around the globe have committed themselves to
developing a series of actions addressing the reduction of poverty, hunger,
disease, illiteracy, environmental degradation and discrimination against
women. Those MDGs most directly related to urban development and planning
are located within Goal Number 7, which addresses environmental degradation
and sets objectives in the areas of access to safe water and sanitation and
improvements in slums. The MDG framework is but one example of several
efforts emerging in the last half century identifying development targets at an
international level of governance. However, such initiatives raise the following
questions:
How successfully do such policy efforts transcend the various tiers of the
existing multilevel governance structures from the global all the way to the
local?
How effectively are they translated and operationalised in context so as to
secure the intended objectives on the ground?
What scope do they posses for in-built replicability and flexibility and what
are the conditions required for such processes to deliver the targeted
results?
The conference aims to provide a platform to discuss the policy-praxis nexus in
today's multilevel governance context and explore the actual delivery of
development and poverty reduction in a localised manner, hence the emphasis
on their operationalisation at the urban level. The relevance of such issues is
highlighted by the celebration in 2008 of the International Sanitation Year, urban
sanitation being one of the issues this conference will address, among the wide
range of other themes linked to urban poverty reduction which will be
discussed.
We are interested in the analysis of actors involved in development and urban
poverty reduction projects and the scales at which they work, the different aid
cultures, and the different scales of intervention, focusing on the range from the
local to the urban. We are also interested in analysing their technological
discourses and capabilities and their adaptation to local realities. Within this
framework, we wish to explore the role of universities and research centres
working on urbanisation in the South.
The conference will include papers addressing poverty reduction approaches
from an urban to local perspective including specific experiences from
programmes and projects and their links with the responses to goals such as
the MDGs and other internationally-driven initiatives.
To this end, 4 sub-themes are proposed:
1) Poverty reduction theory and ideology within a context of globalisation
How do political and macro-economic ideologies and approaches influence the
formulation and operation of poverty reduction policies? This sub-theme
proposes a critical analysis of whether, and how, governments at various levels
pursue a balance between policies which respond to pressures from
globalisation (e.g. privatisation) and those which seek to protect urban
livelihoods and equity. Is there a meeting point in framing and applying policies
related to poverty while favouring globalisation-linked policies? This sub-theme
offers scope to address issues such as: macro-economic ideologies and their
interaction with national/local contexts; implementation of urban poverty
reduction programmes within the context of globalisation and neo-liberal
economic agendas; alternative approaches to urban development and poverty
reduction; and policy approaches to livelihoods among the urban poor.
2) Institutional articulation of urban poverty reduction programmes and
projects with government spaces, popular spaces and negotiated spaces
To what extent do these programmes and processes respond to the institutional
structures (i.e. the organisational structures and mental models that both
underpin and result from these) that exist in each place or to imported models?
The sub-theme proposes a critical review of the appropriateness to context of
organisational processes related to the achievement of the MDGs and other
internationally-driven initiatives, and of how internationally-promoted processes
such as participation, negotiation, etc. are adapted to specific contexts in the
preparation and implementation of local programmes and projects. This subtheme
therefore offers scope to address issues such as: cultural influences;
legal and regulatory frameworks; planning, implementation and monitoring
frameworks and processes; role of public, private, aid agency, NGO and
community actors; development of civil society organisations and networks;
partnerships; social capital; and finance.
3) Appropriate responses for urban poverty reduction: technologies and
organisational approaches
This sub-theme proposes a review of the issue of appropriate technologies
within the framework of the discourse of sustainability and the context of new
emerging technologies which leapfrog the need for large fixed infrastructures
(micro-generation, photovoltaics, decentralised services management, etc.). It
provides the opportunity to explore the potential of, and experience in, using
such technologies to reduce urban poverty and support urban livelihoods. It also
allows an examination of the environmental impacts of such technologies and
the implications of such impacts for long-term sustainability of urban poverty
reduction approaches. This should be seen in conjunction with organisational
structures, both in terms of adapting/developing technologies which are
appropriate to existing organisations and institutional models, and in terms of
the impact of new technologies on organisational restructuring. This sub-theme
offers scope to examine issues such as: advantages and disadvantages of the
use of appropriate technologies in urban poverty reduction; experiences and
lessons in the use of such technologies to aid urban poverty reduction; social,
economic and environmental impacts of appropriate technologies; use of local
knowledge in identifying and developing appropriate technologies; interactions
between technologies and social and organisational structures in urban poverty
reduction; scaling up of appropriate technologies to the scale of the slum, city
and beyond.
4) Role of research in urban poverty reduction
Within this context, what is and what ought to be the role of research, especially
from universities and research centres, in generating discourse and proposing
appropriate rather than imposed organisational approaches and technologies?
What intellectual (and other) forms of collaboration can be established – and
are established – between researchers and research centres in the North and
the South? To what extent is the ‘North-South’ conceptualisation still valid when
it comes to research and to possible research collaboration? There is scope
therefore within this sub-theme to discuss issues such as: implications of
research infrastructures (funding streams, organisational structures, capacity,
etc) in the North and the South, and potential for, and experiences of, higher
collaboration between these; examination of trends in research approaches an
capacity related to urban poverty; potential and examples of impact of research
on urban poverty reduction, from policy-influencing and lobbying level to local
project implementation level; interactions between researchers and the urban
poor.
  • 1 new item posted on 1 April 2008

Registration for the 2008 SASA Congress is now open. The deadline for online submission of abstracts has been extended to 18 April. The 2008 SASA Congress registration form can be found on the SASA website, under SASA conferences. Reduced conference fees will be limited to those who have received confirmation that their 2008 membership is up-to-date from the SASA treasurer.

  • 1 new item posted on 11 December 2007

Arrangements for the 2008 SASA Congress are well under way. The Call for Papers has been published on the website and abstracts may be submitted online. Please click on the relevant menu item for more information.

SASA's Google mailing list is another important source of up-to-date information on the conference and other matters, so please ensure that you are subscribed to that group at http://groups.google.co.za/group/sociology-south-africa?hl=af&lnk=srg .

  • 1 new item posted on 15 November 2007

 

 

Conference announcement:

2008 Social Sciences Conference

Confronting Inequalities: Social Sciences and Public Challenges

Conference deadlines: Social Sciences Conference 2008

a. Conference Announcement End November 2007

b. Abstract Deadline 14 March 2008

c. SSNSA to meet to discuss conference: 4 April 2008

d. Scientific committee work through abstracts 5th and 6th April

e. Notification to presenters 18 April 2008

f. Deadline for final papers submitted 1 August 2008

g. Opening ceremony 2 October 2008

h. Conference 3 + 4 October (half day)

Venue

  • Preferably Birchwood – Arlene to check availability.
  • All expenses supported/fully funded

Publishing

  • Discussants at the conference should act as first peer reviewers
  • Revised papers must be submitted by presenters by 2 February 2009
  • 1 new item posted on 1 November 2007

2007 Student Paper Competition - S Ally, 2007/11/01 15:00

The South African Sociological Association hereby invites submissions for the Best Student Paper Presented to the 2007 Annual Congress in Potchefstroom

First Prize: Book Prize, plusOne year’s subscription to the South African Review of Sociology and free registration for 2008 SASA Annual Congress

Eligibility: All postgraduate students registered at a South African university (full-time or part-time) for an Honours or Masters in Sociology who presented a paper at the 2007 Annual Congress are eligible for the competition.

Submission Information: All papers should be submitted via e-mail in MS Word format to the Chair of the Selection Committee, Dr Shireen Ally: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Selection and Announcement:

The Selection Committee, comprising members selected by the SASA Council, will review all eligible submissions, and select a winner.

Deadline: 14 December 2007

  • 1 new item posted on 19 August 2007

Call for proposals: 2008 SASA Congress themes
SASA members are invited to submit proposals for themes for the 2008 SASA Congress, to be hosted by Stellenbosch University. As SASA Council needs to agree on a theme at their next meeting on 18 September, proposals should be sent to the Council Secretary at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it on or before 13 September 2007.
In terms of criteria, themes should be broad enough to attract scholars from outside the discipline of Sociology to the Congress. Proposals should include a motivation for the theme, as well as a proposal for a keynote speaker(s) to be invited with the theme in mind.

  • 1 new item posted on 11 July

To join SASA's new spam-free google list, please go to

http://groups.google.co.za/group/sociology-south-africa?hl=af&lnk=srg

and follow the instructions.

  • 2 new items posted on 10 July 2007

To Whom It May Concern

I am Antonella Spanò, board Member of the Italian Sociological Association (AIS).

The AIS, in collaboration with the Faculty of Sociology, at the Federico II University of Naples have carried out a project for the online publication of abstracts pertaining to the scientific work written by members of the Association: ItalSoL (Italian Sociology on Line) in English.

The project, begun in 2004, updates its database every year, and in the past
has distributed a Cd to all the participants at the XVIth World Congress of Sociology in Durban. At present almost 600 abstracts of printed works written by AIS members are included in the data base. The next update, planned for September, will bring the total of abstracts from 2003 to 2007 up to about 1000.

The online database permits bibliographical research by author, title, or word in the abstract, and by keyword. For each bibliographical reference, it is possible to find the following information: the title in Italian, complete bibliographical references, title in English, author’s Department and e-mail, abstract in English, keywords in English.
As the aim of our project is to make Italian sociology better known, it would be very important for us to enter into collaboration with sociology associations in other countries. I am writing therefore to ask you to kindly put the ItalSoL link on your association’s site. The link is: http://www.ais-sociologia.it/modules/italsol/index.php

Thank you very much for your help. I look forward to hearing from you
soon.

Yours Sincerely,
Antonella Spanò

Prof. Antonella Spanò, Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II
Dipartimento di Sociologia
Vico Monte di Pietà n.1, 80134 Napoli
Tel. 0039 081 2535845
e-mai address This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

1968: Impact and Implications

BSA Theory Study Group Conference

In collaboration with the Birkbeck Institute for Social Research

3-4th July, 2008, Birkbeck, University of London

Call for Papers

This conference is timed to coincide with the fortieth anniversary of May 1968. It seeks to provide a forum for reflecting back on the events of that time as well as thinking about their implications for current and future endeavours – theoretical and political. Alongside plenary events with keynote speakers and roundtables, there will also be a number of parallel paper sessions. We would welcome ideas for roundtables and papers on the following streams:

  • The Legacy of 1968: Sociological and Theoretical Considerations
  • Social Movements: Theory and Practice
  • Global Considerations
  • Feminism and Women’s Movements
  • Questioning Science and Expertise
  • Civil Rights Movements in the US
  • Empire, Decolonization, Postcolonial Others
  • Transforming Sexualities: Gay Liberation and Beyond
  • Poetry, Art, and Performance
  • Critical Theory and Protest
  • The Situationists and Subversion
  • The Rise and Fall (and Rise) of Marxism
  • Structuralism, Post-structuralism, Politics
  • Black Power and Pan-Africanism
  • Student Politics and the Politics of Education
  • The Post-68 Subject: Personhood and Self
  • Poster Presentations
  • Open stream

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS (confirmed):

  • Paul Gilroy, Anthony Giddens Professor in Social Theory, LSE, author of Ain’t No Black in the Union Jack and The Black Atlantic
  • Juliet Mitchell, Professor of Psychoanalysis and Gender Studies, University of Cambridge, author of Siblings: Sex and Violence and Mad Men and Medusas
  • William Outhwaite, Professor of Sociology, University of Newcastle, author of Social Theory and Postcommunism (with Larry Ray) and contributor to The Disobedient Generation: Social Theorists in the Sixties
  • Ken Plummer, Professor of Sociology, University of Essex, author of Inventing Intimate Citizenship and editor of Sexualities: Critical Assessments
  • Lynne Segal, Anniversary Professor of Psychology and Gender Studies, Birkbeck College, author of Making Trouble and Why Feminism? Gender, Psychology, Politics

Those interested in presenting papers or organizing sessions on the topics listed above are invited to submit proposals to the conference organizing team by September 14th, 2007. For paper presentations please submit an abstract of up to 300 words, specifying the stream you would like to be considered for, to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ; if you would like to organize a panel session please email us a brief synopsis of the session together with contributors and titles of papers; for posters please email us a short outline of your ideas.

Conference Organizing Team:

Gurminder K. Bhambra (Warwick), Ipek Demir (Leicester), Helen Gregory (Exeter),

Timo Juetten (Sussex), Steve Kemp (Edinburgh), Maki Kimura (Open University),

Sasha Roseneil (Birkbeck)

We expect this conference to be very popular and request that you submit abstracts in good time.

  • 1 new item posted in March 2007

Readership / Chair in Sociology

School of Languages and Social Sciences

£40,335 to 46,758 p.a. exceptionally up to £51,095
Professorial minimum £46,625 p.a.

The School of Languages and Social Sciences is expanding its Social Sciences portfolio and seeking to make a key appointment in Sociology. We are a multidisciplinary School including Languages, Politics, International Relations, Sociology and European Studies. We have a long-standing reputation for excellence, achieving Grade 5 RAE in 2001.

The successful applicant will make a major contribution to academic leadership, research and teaching. Candidates should have a strong international research profile and a proven ability of securing external research grants. Successful experience of supervising research and sustained excellence in teaching is also required.

All areas of specialisation will be considered, with preference given to applicants whose interests complement and overlap with the Schools existing specialisms: Globalisation, Work and Organizations, Gender and Ethnicity, Social Theory and Social Change, Knowledge and Education, Environment and Health.

Application forms and further particulars are available on our web site: http://www.aston.ac.uk/jobs, or by telephoning: 0121 359 0870 (24 hour answerphone), or by email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , quoting reference number A07/19/99.

Closing date: 1 March 2007.

Click here for Employer Profile http://www.jobs.ac.uk/ep/links/43/


Lectureship / Senior Lectureship in Sociology

School of Languages and Social Sciences

£26,666 to 46,758 p.a. exceptionally up to £51,095

The School of Languages and Social Sciences is expanding its Social Sciences portfolio and seeking to make a key appointment in Sociology.
We are a multidisciplinary School including Languages, Politics, International Relations, Sociology and European Studies. We have a long-standing reputation for excellence, achieving Grade 5 RAE in 2001.

Applicants should have a strong research background and the ability to contribute to teaching and programme development at undergraduate and postgraduate level. They should have a first degree and a doctorate in a relevant subject.

All areas of specialisation will be considered, with preference given to applicants whose interests complement and overlap with the Schools existing specialisms: Globalisation, Work and Organizations, Gender and Ethnicity, Social Theory and Social Change, Knowledge and Education, Environment and Health.

Application forms and further particulars are available on our web site: http://www.aston.ac.uk/jobs, or by telephoning: 0121 359 0870 (24 hour answerphone), or by email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , quoting reference number A07/18/99.

Closing date: 1 March 2007.

Click here for Employer Profile http://www.jobs.ac.uk/ep/links/43/

  • 1 new item posted on 17 November 2006

SASA launches web site

Our new website is online at www.sasaonline.org.za

SASA Member Login

Login for member services and resources

Register

Latest News

© 2010 SASA - South African Sociological Association | Design: