crisis & contingency: states of (in)stability
TRANSCRIPT
Crisis & Contingency: States of (In)stability
Council for European Studies
20th International Conference of EuropeanistsAmsterdam, The Netherlands • June 25-27, 2013
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Conference Program
Crisis & Contingency: States of (In)stability
20th International Conference of EuropeanistsAmsterdam, The Netherlands • June 25-27, 2013
2
20th International Conference of EuropeanistsAmsterdam, The Netherlands • June 25-27, 2013
Sebastien Chauvin, Co-ChairUniversity of Amsterdam
Peter Gourevitch, Co-ChairUniversity of California, San Diego
Lucio BaccaroUniversity of Geneva
Bela GreskovitsCentral European University
Susana NarotzkyUniversity of Barcelona
Jonas PontussonUniversity of Geneva
Emmanuelle SaadaColumbia University
Mike SavageYork University
Lucan WayUniversity of Toronto
Cornelia WollSciences Po
Anne WrenTrinity College Dublin
Jonathan ZeitlinUniversity of Amsterdam
Conference Program Committee
Executive CommitteeJohn Bowen, Chair
Washington University of St. Louis
Juan Díez Medrano, Chair-electUniversidad Carlos III, Madrid
Dominic Boyer, TreasurerRice University
Jason BeckfieldHarvard University
Patrick Le GalèsSciences Po
Virginie GuiraudonSciences Po
Sophie MeunierPrinceton University
Emmanuelle SaadaColumbia University
Jan Willem Duyvendak, ChairUniversity of Amsterdam
Sebastien ChauvinUniversity of Amsterdam
Joni HaijenUniversity of Amsterdam
Iris Hirschel University of Amsterdam
James Kennedy University of Amsterdam
Karen KraalUniversity of Amsterdam
Sarah de LangeUniversity of Amsterdam
Sophie LechelerUniversity of Amsterdam
Virginie MamadouhUniversity of Amsterdam
Clemens de OldeUniversity of Amsterdam
Olga SeznevaUniversity of Amsterdam
Local Organizing Committee
Floris VermeulenUniversity of Amsterdam
Michael WintleUniversity of Amsterdam
Siovahn Walker, DirectorCouncil for European Studies
Corey Fabian BorensteinCouncil for European Studies
Shivani RayCouncil for European Studies
Aleksandra TurekCouncil for European Studies
Administration
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Table of Contents
Call for Papers: 21st International Conference of Europeanists - Washington, D.C. 2014 4
Schedule of Sessions & Events Tuesday, June 25, 2013 6
Wednesday, June 26, 2013 23
Thursday, June 27, 2013 39
Mini-Symposia 54
Plenaries & Meetings 57
Research Network Sessions 58
Subject Index 64
Participant Index 65
Resources
Technology 74
Conference Venues & Map 75-6
Hotels 75
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Twenty-First International Conference of EuropeanistsWashington, D.C., U.S.A. • March 14-16, 2014
Organized by the Council for European Studies (CES)
Resurrections
In the wake of crisis in Europe, bits and pieces of the past are being resurrected as a means of understanding the present and imagining the future. Historical figures are re-evaluated and held out as models, once-dismissed ideologies reappear as possibilities or as bogeymen, myths and symbols from the past crop up in new productions, and old political and economic institutions are revived as alternatives for action. But resurrections are not simply about nostalgia, and they aren’t just a restoration of the past in unchanged form. Resurrections necessitate fundamental transformations: inserting old things into new contexts, changing their natures, and assigning them new meanings and values. For CES 2014, we welcome papers that relate to the theme of “resurrections.” What elements of Europe’s past, and present, are amenable to reanimation? How do they work in contemporary de-bate, and how is their relevance to the present disputed? What is the process through which they are revived and how are they changed as they are brought back to life or combined with new elements? For the 2014 conference, the Council for European Studies (CES) invites proposals for panels, roundtables, book discussions and individual papers on the study of Europe broadly defined. We encourage proposals in the widest range of disciplines; in particular, we welcome panels that combine disciplines, nationalities, and generations. Although it is not mandatory that papers be related to the conference theme, papers that do so are especially welcome. The Committee will accept only two submissions per person and participants are permitted to present in a maximum of two sessions.
We strongly encourage participants to submit their proposals as part of an organized panel. Full panel proposals will be given top priority in the selection process by the program committee. Participants may find it useful to connect with like-minded scholars through the growing number of CES networks, links to which can be found here: http://councilforeuropeanstudies.org/research/research-networks
Proposals may be submitted from August 15 to October 1, 2013. Participants will be notified of the Committee’s decisions by December 1, 2013. Information on how to submit will be posted on the CES website and disseminated through its newsletter. To subscribe to the CES newsletter visit: http://councilforeuropeanstudies.org/
Juan Díez Medrano, Chair, Council for European Studies
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Kathleen R. McNamara, Co-Chair, CES Conference Program Committee
Georgetown University
Elizabeth Cullen Dunn, Co-Chair, CES Conference Program Committee
University of Colorado at Boulder
Call for Papers
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Schedule of
Sessions & Events
Crisis & Contingency: States of (In)stability
20th International Conference of EuropeanistsAmsterdam, The Netherlands • June 25-27, 2013
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Tuesday, June 25
Tues
day,
June
25
001. Civil Society and Democratization I: Transitions in Southern and Eastern Europe Compared
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Tiago Fernandes, New University of Lisbon Participants:
How Civil Society Matters in Democratization: Theorizing the Iberian Divergence. Robert Fishman, University of Notre Dame
The Moore Thesis: What’s Left after 1989? Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
Civil society organizations and democratization processes. Some reflections. Donatella Della Porta, European University Institute
“Conventional” and “Virtual” Civil Societies in Hybrid Regimes. Mark Beissinger, Princeton University
Discussants: Philippe Schmitter, European University Institute; David Ost, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
002. Introduction to the Symposium ‘No Money – No Teeth – No Brain?’: The EU’s Role in Global Governance: The Legal Dimension (OUP 2013) (Book Panel)
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Marise Cremona, European University Institute Participants:
Bart van Vooren, Univeristy of Copenhagen Joris Larik, European University Institute Adelina Adinolfi, University of Florence Marise Cremona, European University Institute Steven Blockmans, Centre of European Policy Studies
Discussant: Andrés Delgado Casteleiro, Durham University
003. Transformations of Gender, Sexuality, and Citizenship in South-East Europe
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55Chair: Jo Shaw, University of Edinburgh Participants:
Transformation of Gender Regimes through Transformation of Citizenship Regimes. Adriana Zaharijevic, University of Belgrade
From workers to soldiers to nothing? Male citizenship in the former Yugoslavia. Oliwia Berdak, University of Edinburgh
A contested terrain of non-heterosexual citizenship: The Europeanization of sexual citizenship in the region of former Yugoslavia. Katja Kahlina, University of Edinburgh
Gendering citizenship regimes and welfare regimes in post-Yugoslav states. Chiara Bonfiglioli, University of Edinburgh
Discussant: Susan Gal, University of Chicago
004. Crisis and Community in Historical Perspective 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23
Participants:
Crisis and the Limits of Urban Community in Late-Medieval France. Adam Boss, Brown University
“‘Scorn and Scandal:’ English Catholicism and Anti-popery in the Wake of the Irish Rebellion of 1641”. Christopher Gillett, Brown University
Creating outsiders: The Press and Social Democrats in the German Empire. Sonja Glaab, Brown University
Rumors Of Pain: Fear, Perception, and the North American Reaction to Europe’s Early Nineteenth Century Cholera Epidemics. Nicholas Bonneau, Notre Dame
005. Corporate Welfare in Europe: A Changing Role for Social Partners?
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oost-Indisch Huis E0.02 (VOC Room)Chair: Maria Jepsen, European Trade Union InstituteParticipants:
Changing Occupational Welfare in Europe. Marek Naczyk, University of Oxford; Martin Seeleib-Kaiser, University of Oxford
The multifaceted rise of “Corporate Welfare” in Italy. David Natali, University of Bologna; Emmanuele Pavolini, Macerata University
The Transformation of the Dutch Welfare State Revisited. Mara Yerkes, The University of Queensland, Australia
Unemployment risks redistribution under post-industrialism: explaining employer cross-sectoral divides in Germany and Italy. Federico Pancaldi, European Commission, DG Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion
Privatizing the Ghent System, Unions and the Rise of Private, Unemployment Insurance in Sweden. Johan Davidsson, Lund University
Discussant: Isabela Mares, Columbia University
006. Crisis and Austerity From a Sub-National Perspective (Part I): Transnational Activities of Sub-National Authorities in Times of Crisis
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.03Chair: Roger Lawrence, Wolverhampton City CouncilDe Montfort University Participants:
Austerity and Crisis in Local Democratic Institutions: Exploring the impact on cohesion of the deinstitutionalisation of local governance. Chris McInerney, University of Limerick
Crisis and Austerity From a Sub-National Perspective: The case of Hungary, a small new EU member state. Judit Kalman, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Partnerships, networking, and macro-regional dimensions to addressing the crisis. Michael Danson, Herriot-Watt University
How effective are local authorities at engaging in transnational networking? Christopher Huggins, University of Portsmouth
European networks of local governments in times of crisis. Arnau Gutierrez-Camps, Province of Barcelona
Tuesday, June 25
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Discussant: Roger Lawrence, Wolverhampton City Council / De Montfort University
007. Crisis and Livelihood Changes in Europe’s Periphery 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18B
Chair: Susana Narotzky, University of Barcelona Participants:
The failure of homeownership and the reconfiguration of class identities in Spain. Mikel Aramburu, Universitat de Barcelona
A conflictual marriage: credit and changing livelihood practices in Spain. Jaime Palomera, Universitat de Barcelona
“You can always get by here”: Crisis, land, and livelihood in the periphery of Europe’s periphery. Jaume Franquesa, University at Buffalo
Informal Care and State Care system in times of crises: Changing livelihoods in Portugal. Antónia Lima, CRIA / ISCTE-IUL
Discussant: Donald Kalb, Central European University
008. Gender and Party Politics 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17
Chair: Johanna Kantola, University of Helsinki Participants:
Political Parties shaping Gender Norms and Constructions. Johanna Kantola, University of Helsinki
Party Politics and Symbolic Representation: Playing with Agents and Principals. Petra Meier, University of Antwerp; Emanuela Lombardo, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Party Women’s Organizations: Ladies Auxillaries or Sites of Substantive Representation? Sarah Childs, University of Bristol
Quotas and Beyond: Political Parties and the Promotion of Female Candidates. Mona Krook, Rutgers University
Representing Women Voters, the Role of Political Parties. Rosie Campbell, Birkbeck College, University of London
Parties regulating Descriptive Representation at the Intersection of Gender and Ethnicity. Karen Celis, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Silvia Erzeel, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Discussant: Joni Lovenduski, Birkbeck, University of London
009. Motors, Mechanisms, and Measures: Understanding and Measuring Stability and Change in European Party Systems
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chair: Kevin deegan-Krause, Wayne State University Participants:
Party System Dynamics: New Tools for the Study of Party System Change and Party Transformation. Fernando Casal Bértoa, Leiden University; Kevin deegan-Krause, Wayne State University; Mariano Torcal, Universitat Pompeu Fabra; Tim Haughton,
University of BirminghamTime as Age: Measuring the Durability of Party
Systems. Markus Kreuzer, Villanova University; Vello Pettai, University of Tartu
Interchangeable or Different? the Levels of Gross and Net Electoral Volatility in Eastern Europe. Sergiu Gherghina, GESIS Cologne
Greece’s course from two-party politics to party system collapse: An explanation by mechanisms. Takis Pappas, European University Institute
Exit, Voice and Legacy: Explaining Patterns of Party Politics in Slovakia . Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham
Discussant: TBA
010. Naturalization, Dual Citizenship, and Immigrant Integration
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04Chair: Rainer Baubock, European University Institute Participants:
Does Dual Citizenship Increase Naturalization? Evidence from Indian Immigrants in the U.S.. Daniel Naujoks, European Commission – United Nations Joint Migration and Development Initiative (JMDI) / Hamburg Institute of International Economics (HWWI)
Dual Citizenship As Segmented Assimilation? Naturalization, Citizenship of Origin, and Employment Status of Immigrants in the Netherlands. Maarten Vink, Maastricht University / European University Institute
Having Two Passports: The Economic Effect of Citizenship in Sweden. Pieter Bevelander, Malmö Institute of Migration, Diversity and WelfareMalmö University
Discussant: Joachim Blatter, University of Lucerne
011. Negotiating Cultural Heritage in the Former Yugoslav Societies
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.21Chair: Matthijs van de Port, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Museums to Workers: Negotiating Industrial Heritage From Below. Tanja Petrovic, Scientific Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Dancing Memory. Heritage and the Post-War World-Making in Central Bosnia-Herzegovina. Maja Lovrenovic, VU University Amsterdam
Socialist heritage revised: Culture-Artistic Societies in post-Yugoslav space(s). Ana Hofman, Scientific Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Discussant: Ireme Stengs, Meertens Instituut
012. Political Interchanges Between Unions and Governments: Cooperation and Conflict
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23Chair: James Cronin, Boston College
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25
Participants:Institutions, Civil Society Organizations, and Protest
Behavior. Johannes Lindvall, University of Lund, Sweden
The Electoral Consequences of General Strikes in Western Europe. Alison Johnston, Oregon State University; John Kelly, Birkbeck College, University of London; Kerstin Hamann, University of Central Florida
When The Weak Prevail: Minority Governments and Pension Reforms in Western Europe. Sabina Avdagic, University of Sussex; Martin Rhodes, University of Denver
Trade Unions and the Crisis. Gerd Grözinger, Flensburg University; Wenzel Matiaske, HSU
Discussant: Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance
013. Practices and Discourses of European External Migration Policies: Beyond a Eurocentric Analysis of European External Action.
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Virginie Guiraudon, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) Participants:
The European Union and International Migration Governance in Central Asia. Oleg Korneev, Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies / European University Institute
Ideas and ambiguity in European external policy: the case of “conditionality” in migration policies.. Nora El Qadim, Centre d’études européennes -Sciences PoCERAPS - Université de Lille 2
The making of EU external border control. Julien Jeandesboz, Unievrsity of Amsterdam; Polly Pallister-Wilkins, University of Amsterdam
Harmonized visa policy? The comparative analysis of Schengen and marriage visas delivering practices at the consulate of Belgium, France, and Italy in Casablanca.. Federica Infantino, FNRS/Free University of Brussels (Cevipol)
The European borders as a space of contention: The changing geographies of the protest against Fortress Europe.. Pierre Monforte, University of Leicester
Discussant: Christina Boswell, University of Edinburgh
014. Socio-Ethnic Leveraging: How Status Majorities Elevate One Minority to Downgrade Another
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chair: Erik Bleich, Middlebury College Participants:
Racial and ethnic leveraging in a color-blind context: Roma and Muslim patients in French hospitals. Christophe Bertossi, French Institute of International Relations; Dorothée Prud’homme, Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Bordeaux
How the Latinos Became...? David Leal, University of Texas, Austin
Us, Them, and Others: Ethnic Leveraging and National Identity in Diverse Societies. Elke Winter, University of Ottawa
The Gendered Politics of Muslim Integration in Western Europe. Kimberly Morgan, George Washington University
The nativist triangle: Religion, race, and sex in the Netherlands. Paul Mepschen, University of Amsterdam; Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam; Markus Balkenhol, VU University Amsterdam
Discussant: Michèle Lamont, Harvard University
015. Stigma of Mental Illness in Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18C
Chair: Sigrun Olafsdottir, Boston University Participants:
A Blueprint for Measuring Complex Concepts in a Cross-National Framework: Stigma of Mental Illness as a Case. Tait Medina, Indiana University
Modeling the sources of mental illness stigma in England and the United States. Anne Rogers, University of Manchester; Jack Martin, Indiana University; Bernice Pescosolido, Indiana University
Who is Stigmatized? Exploring Cross-National Variation in Stigma in Europe. Sigrun Olafsdottir, Boston University
Understanding the gender gap in mental health service use; is stigma a gendered phenomenon? A European cross-national study.. Elise Pattyn, Ghent University; Piet Bracke, Ghent University
Discussant: Elyas Bakhtiari, Boston University
016. Technocrats or Technicians? Experts in EU Policy Fields
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14Chair: Sophie Vanhoonacker, Maastricht University Participants:
Experts and the Crisis of Competition Policy: At the Origins of the “More Economic Approach”. Laurent Warlouzet, Université d’Arras / London School of Economics
Catalyst for Change or Impediment? Experts and early attempts at CAP Reform. Carine Germond, Maastricht University / University of Portsmouth
Experts or Advocates? The Role of Scientists in early European Environmental Policy. Jan-Henrik Meyer, University of Munich
From Colonial Know-How to Development Economics: Experts and Expertise in Early EEC Development Cooperation. Martin Rempe, Universität Konstanz
Discussant: Wolfram Kaiser, University of Portsmouth
017. The Comparative Political Economy of Immigration 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17
Chair: Richard Johnston, University of British Columbia Participants:
Where you come from, what you know, and why you
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Tuesday, June 25
come: disaggregating the effects of region of origin, migrant characteristics and migration type . Robert Ford, University of Manchester; Anthony Heath, University of Oxford
The political economy of trade and migration: Evidence from the U.S. Congress. Paola Conconi, ECARES, Universite’ Libre de Bruxelles; Giovanni Facchini, University of Nottingham; Max Steinhardt, Hamburg Institute of International Economics; Maurizio Zanardi, Université Libre de Bruxelles
Opposing low-skilled immigrants: Labor market competition, welfare state, and deservingness. Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB); Hanspeter Kriesi, European University Institute
Individual differences and preferences for immigration. Peter Loewen, University of Toronto, Mississauga; Chris Dawes, New York University; Raymond Duch, University of Oxford
How Entry Criteria Structure Labor Market Outcomes for Immigrant Communities. Karen Jusko, Stanford University; Maggie Peters, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Ashley Laragon, Stanford University
Discussant: Richard Johnston, University of British Columbia
018. The Euro Problem: What Went Wrong with the Single Currency?
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08Chair: Mathieu Segers, Utrecht University Participants:
The Euro Crisis and the Dangers of Disembedding Liberalism: Lessons from the Gold Standard. Matthias Matthijs, Johns Hopkins SAIS
Currency Unions in Historical Perspective: What Can We Learn? Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University
A Crisis of EU Institutions and the Weakness of Economic Governance. Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University
The Euro Problem: European Democracy and the Limits of European Solidarity. Vivien Schmidt, Boston University
Discussant: Mathieu Segers, Utrecht University
019. Welfare States in Comparative Perspective I 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.22
Chair: Julia Moses, University of Sheffield Participants:
Conditionality Travels North: International Determinants of Welfare State Reform in Europe. Alexander Kentikelenis, Harvard University
The Politics of Tuition Fees and Subsidies. Julian Garritzmann, University Konstanz, Germany
Social Insurance Universalism After 1945. Milena Guthoerl, University of Basel / SNFS Sinergia Project “Patterns of Transnational Regulation”
Public Support for Markets in Social Services: Exploring Policy Feedback by Comparing 17 OECD Countries. Arvid Backstrom, Umeå University
Discussants: Klaus Petersen, University of Southern Denmark; Herbert Obinger, University of Bremen
020. Institutions of Representation and Responsiveness 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23
Chair: Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa Participants:
Direct Democracy, Popular Majorities and Policy Choice: The Impact of Institutional Settings On Democratic Legitimacy. Lucas Leemann, Columbia University; Fabio Wasserfallen, University of Zürich
Bridging Direct and Representative Democracy (with applicationst o German Bundstag). Andranik Melik-Tangyan, Hans Boeckler Foundation / Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Improving Representation? The Effects of Direct Involvement Structures On Government Responsiveness. Yvette Peters, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin; Alexander Trechsel, European University Institute
Is Democracy Timed Out? The Temporal Qualities of Responsive and Responsible Government. Klaus Goetz, University of Potsdam
Elections, Appointments, and Public Goods Provision: Assessing Causal Effect. Noah Buckley, Columbia University / International Center for the Study of Institutions and Development at the Higher School of Economics; Ora John Reuter, University of Rochester; Timothy Frye, Columbia University; Guzel Garifullina, Higher School of Economics
Discussant: Lucie Spanihelova, Leiden University
021. Party Systems: Issues In Adapting To Change 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18A
Participants:Party Systems and European Integration: How Much
Europe Sets a Party System in Motion? Sanja Badanjak, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Does Party Structure Affect Electoral Success? Center-Right Party Organization in Europe. Nasos Roussias, Sheffield University; Harris Mylonas, George Washington University
Conflict and Adaption to the Peace Process in Northern Ireland: Political Representation and Party Change. William Crotty, Northeastern University
New and Old Democracies: Party System Nationalization and the Role of Party Discipline in Europe. Carolina de Miguel, University of Toronto
Public Funding of Political Parties in Europe: A Tool to Promote or to Restrict Democratic Processes? Daniela R. Piccio, Leiden University
Discussant: Steven Wolinetz, Memorial University of Newfoundland
022. Patterns of Urban Development in Contrasting Settings
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.04Chair: Jan Rath, University of Amsterdam
Tues
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25
10
Participants:Europe’s Maritime Borders and Their Urban Undoing.
Jasper Cooper, Sciences Po ParisNew Urban Activisms: Reclaiming place from public
space through social innovation. Andres Walliser, New York University
Post-Socialist Urbanization and the Balkan Periphery: Construction and Urbanization in Coastal Bulgaria. Max Holleran, New York University
Discussant: Phil Steinberg, Florida State University,
023. Political Origins and Political Dynamics of the Euro Crisis
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18DChair: David Abraham, University of Miami Participants:
Mechanisms of Capitalist Development: Explaining the Decline of Political Resistance to Active Markets for Corporate Control. Helen Callaghan, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies
Welfare Substitution or Learning From Financial Crises? Mortgage Credit in Britain, Denmark and Sweden. Ismail Bayram, European University Institute
The Political Underpinnings of the Great Recession. Lucy Barnes, University of Oxford; Anne Wren, Trinity College Dublin
The Eurozone Debt Crisis and the Democratic Deficit. David Cameron, Yale University
Strategies of Perpetuation: How Financial Journalists Maintain Economic Imaginaries During Crisis. Amelie Kutter, Lancaster University
Discussant: Desmond King, University of Oxford
024. Civil Society and Democratization II: Consolidation in Southern and Eastern Europe Compared
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Mark Beissinger, Princeton University Participants:
Civil Society in Poland after the Fall of Communism: a Diachronic Perspective (1989-2009). Grzegorz Ekiert, Harvard University; Jan Kubik, Rutgers University; Michal Wenzel, Warsaw School of Social Sciences and Humanities
Civil Society and the Quality of Democracy: Portugal, 1974 – 2010. Tiago Fernandes, New University of Lisbon; Rui Branco, New University of Lisbon
Civil Society and Democratic Consolidation: Hungary in the 1990s and 2000s. Bela Greskovits, Central European University; Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley
Civil society in Greece before and after the economic crisis. Dimitrios Sotiropoulos, University of Athens
Discussants: Nancy Bermeo, University of Oxford; Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University
025. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel I: The Effect of Institutions on Immigrants, Case
Studies 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60
Chair: Sarah Valdez, Juan March Institute Participants:
We Are/Not Immigrants: French Antillean Perspectives on Migration and Immigration in France. Crystal Fleming, SUNY at Stony Brook
Cooperate or Compete? Muslim Political Expression in Spain’s North African Cities. Danny Koski-Karell, University of Washington
Immigrants and Institutions in Contemporary France: the Case of Second Generation “Immigrés” in the All-Volunteer Armed Forces. Christophe Bertossi, French Institute of International Relations
Policing and equal treatment of ethnic-minority youths. Jörgen Svensson, University of Twente; Sawitri Saharso, University of Twente
Discussant: Maureen Eger, Umeå University
026. Including Migrant Workers Voice, Representing Migrant Workers Rights: Between Trade Union Action and Self Organization
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04Chair: Janice Fine, Rutgers University Participants:
Class, Intersectionality and Collective Action: Rethinking the Study of Migrants Political Engagements. Davide Pero, University of Nottingham
Inclusion and democracy in trade unions: Comparing migrant and ethnic minority sections in Italy and the Netherlands. Stefania Marino, Manchester Business School
‘Unorganisable’? The determinants of migrant union membership. Torbin Krings, Johannes Kepler University Linz
Integrating or organising migrant workers? Identities, educational initiatives and new alliances for trade unions in the UK. Maite Tapia, Cornell University
Transnational posted worker organization in the German meatpacking sector. Ines Wagner, University of Groningen
Between precarity and organization: Law, racism, and struggles of migration in recent Italy. Giorgio Grappi, University of Bologna
Discussant: John Wrench, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
027. No Money? Economic Governance and the International Credibility of the Union in Times of Crisis
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Joris Larik, European University Institute Participants:
International law as a tool for strengthening economic governance in the euro area. Angelos Dimopoulos, Tilburg University
The International Responsibility of the European Union: Between pragmatism and Proceduralization. Andrés Delgado Casteleiro, Durham University
Tuesday, June 25
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The involvement of the EU in the G20 and the IMF, juggling the double role as actor in trouble and as the key for problem solving in Europe. Laura Puccio, European University Institute
Discussant: Nikos Skoutaris, London School of Economics and Political Science
028. Notions of Revolution and Changing Images of Europe: Theories of Revolution and Conceptions of Europe
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Silvana Sciarrotta, University of Salerno Participants:
Crisis and revolution: Europe and ‘the modern’. Vittorio Dini, University of Salerno
Bridge over troubled waters: The concept of “Europe” and modern international order(ing), 1618-1815 (Part I). Carlos Federico Pereira da Silva Gama, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro
Bridge over troubled waters: The concept of “Europe” and modern international order(ing), 1618-1815 (Part II). Fernando Neves da Costa Maia, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro
The European Industrial Revolution as a “Bourgeois Revaluation”in the mirror of the Ottoman Empire . Stefania Ecchia, University of Salerno
Popular revolts and reason of State in Europe: The broken time of political modernity . Laurie Catteeuw, CHIRPHLES - CNRS
Discussant: Adriano Vinale, University of Salerno
029. The ‘Invisible Hand’ of Europeanisation in Reconceptualising the ‘Citizenship - Rule of Law’ Nexus in the New States in South Eastern Europe
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55Chair: Igor Stiks, University of Edinburgh Participants:
Rewriting/Unwriting Europe: Narratives of Reconciliation in the Shadow of Secrecy At a War Crimes Tribunal. Timothy Waters, Indiana University Maurer School of Law / Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law (Heidelberg)
Citizenship as a ‘space of law’: The case of the new states in South Eastern Europe. Jo Shaw, University of Edinburgh
The unbearable lightness of Europeanisation: Citizenship, extradition, and the erosion of sovereignty in the post-Yugoslav states. Jelena Dzankic, European University Institute
Europeanisation through mobility: visa liberalisation and citizenship regimes in the Western Balkans. Simonida Kacarska, University of Leeds
Discussant: Adam Fagan, Queen Mary, University of London
030. ‘Winner Take All’ Politics in Europe? (Roundtable) 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis E0.02 (VOC Room)
Chair: Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania Participants:
Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics and Political Science Karen Anderson, Radboud University Nijmegen Stefan Svallfors, Umeå University Matthias Matthijs, Johns Hopkins SAIS
031. Borrowing, Lending, and Regulating: The Origins and Evolution of the European Sovereign Debt Crisis
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08Chair: Pepper Culpepper, European University Institute Participants:
European Sovereign Debt Crisis: A Consequence of Fiscal Irresponsibility or Sectoral Labour Market Imbalances? Robert Hancke, London School of Economics and Political Science; Alison Johnston, Oregon State University; Suman Pant, Oregon State University
Restrained Markets for Corporate Control in French and German Banking and the Depth of the Sovereign Debt Crisis. Michel Goyer, Warwick Business School; Rocio Valdivielso, University of Warwick
Searching under the Lamp Post: The Evolution of Fiscal Surveillance. Deborah Mabbett, Birkbeck College; Waltraud Schelkle, London School of Economics
Discussant: Pepper Culpepper, European University Institute
032. Crisis and Austerity From a Sub-National Perspective (Part II): The Effects of the Crisis on EU Cohesion Policy and Their Implications for Regional Governance
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03Chair: Marcin Dabrowski, University of ViennaParticipants:
New Challenges for Structural Funds: The new Territorial Capital approach in the perspective of the evolution of the EU regional policy. Nicola Dotti, Independent Researcher
EU financial engineering instruments for urban development: ‘Doing more with less’ in an age of austerity. Marcin Dabrowski, University of Vienna
Co-financing EU cohesion policy during the crisis: A deterrent for ineffective projects or a constrain for poorer member states? Simona Milio, London School of Economics
The interplay between austerity, domestic territorial reform, and the European Union Cohesion Policy. Anastassios Chardas, Independent Researcher
Discussant: Christopher Huggins, University of Portsmouth
033. EU Public Health and Health Security 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18D
Chair: Holly Jarman, University at Albany Participants:
Managing Health Crises at the EU Level and Ensuing Policy Change: The H1N1 Case. Madalina Busuioc, London School of Economics and Political Science; Anniek de Ruijter, University of Amsterdam
EU Health Crises and the ‘voice of the European People’ (the European parliament). Paulette Kurzer,
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University of ArizonaCrisis and Collective Action: Agendas, Alternatives,
and Programmatic Elites in European Union Public Health Policies. Scott Greer, University of Michigan School of Public Health
Effective Multilateralism and the EU’s Contribution to Global Health Governance. Louise Van Schaik, Netherlands Institute for International Relations, Clingendael
Discussant: Holly Jarman, University at Albany
034. Intersectional Struggles in Europe and Beyond: Race, Religion, Migration, and Gender in Public Debates and Social Movements
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17Chair: John Bowen, Washington University in St. Louis Participants:
Framings of Gender and Ethno-national Diversity across Europe – citizenship and trans-national solidarity. Birte Siim, Aalborg University
Reframing Citizenship at the intersection of gender, religion and ethnicity. Headscarf debates in Europe. Birgit Sauer, Universität Wien
Intersectional Justice Claims under Austerity: Minority Women’s Third Sector Activism in France and the UK. Leah Bassel, University of Leicester
Impossible intersectionality? French feminists and the struggle for inclusion. Eleonore Lepinard, Université de Montréal
Uneven Commitments: Charting Feminist Attention to Intersectionality in Uruguay. Erica Townsend-Bell, Oklahoma State University
Discussant: Mieke Verloo, IWM, Institute for Human Sciences
035. Making Sense of Social Change: Public Responses and Civic Resilience in Times of Crisis
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis A1.18CChair: Nicole Doerr, Freie Universität Berlin Participants:
Fighting austerity measures: Protecting interests or promoting principles? Jacquelien Stekelenburg, VU Amsterdam
Populist protectionism. Neoliberalism, ‘Europe’, and the transformation of nativist politics in the Netherlands. Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam; Paul Mepschen, University of Amsterdam
Resilient citizens in a time of social change. Michèle Lamont, Harvard University
The “Welfare Queen” in Israel and the US: The Role of Cultural Repertoires in the (De-)Stigmatization of Welfare Rights Activists. Noa Milman, Boston College
Does Europe have a political Translation Deficit? A Deliberative Democracy Perspective. Nicole Doerr, Freie Universitaet Berlin
Discussant: Jason Beckfield, Harvard University
036. Managing Migration and Integration in Europe’s Multi-Level Context
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14Chairs: Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam; Tiziana Caponio, University of Turin Participants:
Immigration Policies Through States and Localities: The Case of the United States. Michael Jones-Correa, Cornell University
Managing Migration in Federal States: The Role of the Sub-National Level of Governance in Canada and Germany. Oliver Schmidtke, University of Victoria
National Visions, Local Realities: Swedish Urban Migration Management. Linda Berg, University Gothenburg; Andrea Spehar, University of Gothenburg
Immigrant Integration Policy-Making in Italy: Regional Policies in a Multilevel Governance Perspective. Tiziana Caponio, University of Turin; Francesca Campomori, University of Venice
Discussant: Rinus Penninx, University of Amsterdam
037. New Developments in Compliance and Implementation Research
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23Chair: Christian Adam, University Konstanz Participants:
Multi-form non-compliance: Reinforcing the EU’s crisis? Gerda Falkner, University of Vienna
Europe à la carte: Is there a differentiated integration through the backdoor? Moritz Knoll, Free University Berlin
Games of Compliance: The Commission, the European Court of Justice, and Enforcement of EU Law. Dimiter Toshkov, Leiden University
Compliance as an administrative problem: Transposition performance with multiple deadlines. Bernard Steunenberg, Leiden University; Robin van der Zee, Leiden University
Compliance, Conflict, and Supranational Administrative Acts. Christian Adam, University Konstanz
Discussant: Tanja Dannwolf, University of Mannheim
038. Party Regulation in Post-Communist Europe: The Balkans and the Baltics in Comparative Perspective
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23Chair: Ingrid van Biezen, Leiden University Participants:
The Contribution of Party Regulation and Finance to Party System Stabilization: the Case of Estonia. Vello Pettai, University of Tartu
Party Regulation as an Instrument of Party System Consolidation and of Mending Party Legitimacy in Slovenia. Danica Fink-Hafner, University of Ljublijana; Alenka Krasovec, University of Ljubljana
Increased regulation as a road to civility? Party legislation evolution in Latvia. Janis Ikstens, University of Latvia
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Party regulation in Lithuania: balancing between the efforts of consolidation and anti-party sentiment. Aine Ramonaite, Vilnius University
Party Regulation and the Party System in Croatia. Goran Cular, University of Zagreb
Discussant: Fernando Casal Bértoa, Leiden University
039. Republicanism as an Alternative Paradigm for European Integration
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23Chair: Vivien Schmidt, Boston University Participants:
Neo-Roman republicanism and the democratic value of equality. Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University
Republicanism and Liberal Rights. Jean-Fabien Spitz, Pantheon-Sorbonne University
The European Union as a Republic. Stefan Collignon, S. Anna School of Advanced Studies
Discussant: Giuliano Amato, Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies
040. Secrecy and Technology in European Security Integration
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04Chair: Marcel Maussen, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Secrecy and European Security Governance: In/Visibility in the Terrorism Financing Tracking Programme. Marieke de Goede, University of Amsterdam
Discreet and discretionary: The development of EU JHA databases and the problematisation of integration. Julien Jeandesboz, Unievrsity of Amsterdam
Unveiling Regulated Secrecy in European Security: The Law and Practice of Classified Information. Vigjilenca Abazi, University of Amsterdam
Security Market Integration in Europe. Marijn Hoijtink, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Floris Vermeulen, University of Amsterdam
041. Street Politics in the Age of Austerity: Comparative Perspectives
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17Chair: Pierre Monforte, University of Leicester Participants:
New Movements, the Digital Revolution and Social Movement Theory: Five Propositions Concerning New Forms of Internet Mobilisation. Eric Turner, University of New Mexico
The Strategic Use of Humor in the Spanish Indignados Movement. Eduardo Romanos, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
The Crisis in Europe, the Precariat’s Movements and Trade Unionism: Differences and Possibilities of Cooperation in Action. Dora Fonseca, University of Coimbra
New Transnational Economic Contention in the Eurozone: Greek and Southern European Anti-
Austerity Resistance. Maria Kousis, University of Crete
Public Square Occupations and Anti-Austerity Protests: Some Challenges for a Comparative Perspective. Pascale Dufour, Université de Montréal; Marcos Ancelovici, McGill University; Héloïse Nez, Université de Tours
Discussant: Donatella Della Porta, European University Institute
042. The Institutional Design of International Organizations
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18AChair: Liesbet Hooghe, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Participants:
Dispute Bodies with Teeth: An Exploration of the Sources of Authoritative Dispute Settlement in International Organizations. Jeanine Bezuijen, VU Amsterdam; Liesbet Hooghe, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Supranationalism in Motion: Regional Organizations in Time. Tobias Lenz, VU Amsterdam; Gary Marks, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Explaining the Transnational Design of International Organizations. Jonas Tallberg, Stockholm University; Thomas Sommerer, Stockholm University; Theresa Squatrito, Stockholm University; Christer Jönsson, Lund University
The institutional design of international organizations and the potential for politicization of international governance. Michael Zürn, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB); Christian Rauh, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB)
The Politics of Implementing European Court of Human Rights Judgements. Erik Voeten, Georgetown University
Discussant: Gerald Schneider, University of Konstanz
043. Welfare States in Comparative Perspective II 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22
Chair: Matthieu Leimgruber, University of Geneva Participants:
Why Did Austrian Business Oppose Welfare Cuts? The Role of Organizational Structures in Shaping the Attitudes of Economic Interest Groups Towards Social Policy Retrenchment. Thomas Paster, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies
Is the Middle Class Abandoning Universalism? Explaining Recent Welfare State Reforms in Scandinavia. Carsten Jensen, Aarhus University; Kees van Kersbergen, Aarhus University
Re-Conceptualizing Welfare State Retrenchment: Bringing Distributional Conflict Back in. Efe Savas, Bilkent University / London School of Economics and Political Science; H. Tolga Bolukbasi, Bilkent University
Counting Outsiders: Exit and Voice. Rebecca Oliver,
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Miami University of Ohio Discussant: Marius Busemeyer, University of Konstanz
044. Problems and Potentials in Turkish Accession 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13
Chair: Ayse Caglar, University of Vienna Participants:
The Impact of Turkey’s Potential Membership on European Union’s Relations with the United States. Nihal Kirkpinar Acar, Izmir Katip Celebi University
Public Support for Turkey’s EU Membership: Crisis, Stability and Religiosity. Ali Carkoglu, Koc University
Turkey and the EU: Euroscepticism Gone Mainstream? Gamze Avci, University College Utrecht
The Cyprus Issue: An Actual or Potential Obstacle to Turkey’s Accession to the EU? Yonca Ozer, Marmara University European Union Institute
Discussant: Ebru Ertugal, Izmir University of Economics
045. Social Movements, Democracy, and the Welfare State 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21
Participants:Dance Festivals Gone Awry: Accountability Processes
Following the Hoek Van Holland Riot and the Love Parade in Duisberg. Sandra Resodihardjo, Radboud University Nijmegen; Brendan Carroll, Leiden University; Carola van Eijk, Leiden University; Sanne Maris, Radboud University Nijmegen
When Mass Social Justice Movements Diffuse: Lessons From Israel and Spain in 2011. Michael Shalev, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Benjamin Tejerina Montaña, University of the Basque Country
The Triumph of Impersonal Rule. Chandra Mukerji, University of California, San Diego
Indignant We Stand, Divided We Fall: Social Protest Movements and the Polarization Paradox of Democracy in Spain. Sandra Marco Colino, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Discussant: John Stephens, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
046. The Politics of a Knowledge Economy 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18B
Chair: Robert Kloosterman, University of Amsterdam Participants:
The Politics of Economic Adjustment: Technocratic Appointments and Representation in Economically Advanced Parliamentary Democracies. Despina Alexiadou, University of Pittsburgh
Beyond Remittances: Croatian ‘Expert Expatriates’, Ethnic Citizenship, and Post-Socialist Strategies of Diaspora Enticement. Daphne Winland, York University
The Impact of the Financial Crisis in Greek Higher Education: The Odyssey of Young Researchers and Scientists. Foteini Asderaki, University of Piraeus
Restoration of the Knowledge Economy to Restore Infrastructure and Trade. James Greene, The Catholic
University of America Discussant: Anne Wren, Trinity College Dublin
047. Research Network Luncheon: European Integration and The Global Political Economy - New Directions
12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04
048. Research Network Luncheon: Industrial Relations, Skill Formation and Welfare State Policies
12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03
049. The Euro Crisis and Questions Of Legitimacy 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis E0.02 (VOC Room)
Chairs: Claes Belfrage, University of Liverpool Marius Busemeyer, University of Konstanz; Caroline de la Porte, University of Southern Denmark, Odense Participants:
Fritz Scharpf, Max Planck Institute, Cologne Pepper Culpepper, European University Institute Philippe Pochet, Université Catholique de Louvain Vivien Schmidt, Boston University
050. Agenda-Setting and Policy Change in the European Union
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18BChair: Sebastiaan Princen, Utrecht University Participants:
The CAP after 2013: A Break from the Past or More of the Same? Robert Ackrill, Nottingham Trent University; Adrian Kay, Australian National University
The Deaf Leading the Blind? Public Opinion and European Union Policy. Christine Arnold, Maastricht University; Mark Franklin, European University Institute; Christopher Wlezien, Temple University
Reforming Regulatory Regimes in the EU: Measuring Incremental Adaptations and Discontinuous Changes. Manuele Citi, Copenhagen Business School
Issue framing and policy change: Lessons from the European Union. Falk Daviter, University of Potsdam
Paradigm Change in EU Policy-Making: The Case of the Stability and Growth Pact. Sebastiaan Princen, Utrecht University; F.A.W. J. Van Esch, Utrecht University
Discussant: Marcello Carammia, University of Malta
051. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel II: The Effect of Institutions On Immigration, Comparative Studies
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chair: Sarah Valdez, Juan March Institute Participants:
The Politics of Immigrant Integration. Terri Givens, University of Texas, Austin
Explaining Immigrant Integration: The Impact of Sending and Receiving Countries on Immigrants in
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Europe. Maureen Eger, Umeå UniversityImmigrant Multiculturalism: A Contested Field in
Cross-National Comparison. Ruud Koopmans, Social Science Research Center Berlin
Discussant: Sarah Valdez, Juan March Institute
052. Mobilizing Against Inequality: Immigrant Workers, Unions, and Crisis of Capitalism (Book Panel)
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04Chair: Melanie Simms, Warwick Business School Participants:
Union Campaigns as Countermovements: “Best Practice” Cases from the United Kingdom, France and the United States. Maite Tapia, Cornell University
Challenging inequity: opportunity and choice for unions organizing immigrant workers. Gabriella Alberti, Leeds University Business School
Success and failure in the UK: the importance of local communities. Jane Holgate, Leeds University Business School
Strategic implications for trade unions and migrant organizations. Janice Fine, Rutgers University
053. No Teeth? On How to ‘Afford’ a Foreign and Security Policy for the EU
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Karolina Podstawa, European University Institute Participants:
Europe unpowered? Progress, Potential, and Limitations of EU External Energy Policy. Bart van Vooren, Univeristy of Copenhagen
Discounting Europe? EU Security and Defence Policy between financial, political, and constitutional constraints. Joris Larik, European University Institute
The role of EU delegations in ensuring protection of EU citizens in the world. Madalina Moraru, European University Institute
Reverse subsidiarity in external relations: Shifting competence to the European Union level? Jerzy Dudek, European University Institute
Discussant: Andrés Delgado Casteleiro, Durham University
054. Notions of Revolution and Changing Images of Europe: From the Eighteenth to the Nineteenth Century
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Annamaria Amato, University of Salerno Participants:
Thomas Paine’s idea of revolution: Between the New and the Old World. Maurizio Griffo, University of Naples Federico II
Tocqueville’s Europe between one Ancient Regime and two revolutions . Danilo Breschi, LUSPIO - Rome
Between civilization and revolution: On François Guizot’s idea of Europe. Matthew D’Auria, University of Salerno
Revolution: From science to politics. Adriano Vinale, University of Salerno
Longing for the European revolution. Neapolitan Hegelians and the concept of Modernity. Fernanda Gallo, University of Lugano
Discussant: Richard Deswarte, University of Essex
055. Beyond the Economic: Ethnographic Approaches to the European Crisis-Reflections Upon the Greek Case
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18CChair: Sevasti Troubeta, University of the Aegean, Greece Participants:
“Between Good and Evil, Victim and Culprit, Credible and Untrustworthy”: Moralizing as a Means of Narrating the Greek Debt Crisis. Aspasia Theodosiou, Technological Educational Institute of Epirus, and Open University
Between Disavowal and Submission: Experiences and Subjectifications in the Greek Crisis. Konstantinos Kalantzis, University College London
Universities in Crisis: Towards an Anatomy of “Resistance”. Vassiliki Yiakoumaki, University of Thessaly, Greece
Desolated Spaces, Violated Bodies: Narrating Violent Encounters in the Historic Center of Athens. Elia Vardaki, University of Crete
Discussant: Rosie Read, Bournemouth University
056. Citizens’ Resilience in Times of Crisis (Roundtable) 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17
Chair: Hans-Joerg Trenz, Arena Centre For European Studies, Oslo Participants:
Michèle Lamont, Harvard University Neil Fligstein, University of California, Berkeley Marcos Ancelovici, McGill University Rainer Baubock, European University Institute
Discussants: Ettore Recchi, University of Chieti-Pescara; Virginie Guiraudon, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
057. Democratization, De-Democratization, and Political Activism in Contemporary East-Central Europe
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23Chair: Adam Fagan, Queen Mary, University of London Participants:
Nation-Building and Transnational Processes in Upper Silesia, Poland. Magdalena Dembinska, Université de Montréal
The Emergence of a New Democracy and “Critical Citizen” Politics in Central-Eastern Europe. Ondrej Cisar, Charles University; Katerina Vrablikova, University of Mannheim
Between Radicalism and Extremism: Street Politics in Central and Eastern Europe. Grzegorz Piotrowski, Södertörn University
Radical Right Mobilization in Visegrad Countries. Ondrej Cisar, Charles University; Jiri Navratil, Masaryk University, Brno
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Authoritarianism: The Social Psychology of Activism in Hungary Today. Judit Kende, Eötvös Loránd University; Anna Kende, Eötvös Loránd University
Discussant: Adam Fagan, Queen Mary, University of London
058. Global Challenges, Diverse Outcomes: Health Care Reforms in Four European Countries
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22Chair: Tuba Agartan, Providence College Participants:
Crisis and Internal Politics: Determinants of Healthcare Reforms in Italy and Poland. Monika Ewa Kaminska, University of Amsterdam; Stefano Neri, University of Milan
Building and Re-building Markets in Eastern European Healthcare: The Case of Czech Republic. Tamara Popic, European University Institute
Changing Origins of Inequalities in Access to Healthcare in Turkey: From Occupational Status to Income? Volkan Yilmaz, University of Leeds
Discussant: Tuba Agartan, Providence College
059. Huizinga, Culture, and History 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21
Chair: John Torpey, CUNY Graduate Center Participants:
Huizinga, America, and the tissue of contrast and harmony. Willem Otterspeer, University of Leiden
Huizinga and the Emergence of the United States as a Reference Culture. Jaap Verheul, Utrecht University
Huizinga, Tocqueville, and Weber on America. John Torpey, CUNY Graduate Center
A Tapestry of Contrasts: Huizinga’s Hermeneutics of Historical Inquiry. Herman Paul, University of Leiden
Discussant: Jim Jasper, CUNY Graduate Center
060. Regionalist Parties in Multilevel States 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03
Chair: Bonnie Field, Bentley University Participants:
Decentralization and Regionalist Parties’ Electoral Strength: What Causes What? Emanuele Massetti, Gediz University; Arjan Schakel, Maastricht University
Decentralization as a National-Level Electoral Strategy in Western Europe. Bonnie Meguid, University of Rochester
Regionalist parties between niche and catch all: Party strategies in multi-dimensional and multi-layered political systems. Anwen Elias, Aberystwyth University; Filippo Tronconi, University of Bologna
Nationalist parties in Spain and the UK: Disentangling “policy packages” along the centre-periphery dimension. Sonia Alonso, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB); Braulio Gómez, University of Deusto; Laura Cabeza, University of Deusto
Regionalist parties and national governance in a multitier system. Bonnie Field, Bentley University
Discussant: Régis Dandoy, Université Libre de Bruxelles
061. Representation and Adjudication of Interests in the Supra-National European Legal Order
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55Chair: Jessica Lawrence, VU University Amsterdam Participants:
Interests, identities, and European legal orders. Geoff Gordon, VU University Amsterdam
Unfolding the Union: Constitutional Sedimentation and the authority of the European Court of Justice. Luigi Corrias, VU University Amsterdam
Economic integration and the purposes of socio-economic institutions. Gareth Davies, VU University Amsterdam
The intensity of judicial review of EU and Member States’ legislative acts. Laurens Ankersmit, VU University Amsterdam
Discussant: Tanja Aalberts, VU University Amsterdam
062. State Transformation in the Advanced Capitalist World
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Stephan Leibfried, University of Bremen Participants:
State Transformation in the Advanced Capitalist World. Jonah Levy, University of California, Berkeley; John Stephens, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Stephan Leibfried, University of Bremen
The Corporatist Political Economies: From Industrial Corporatism to the Social Investment State in the Knowledge Intensive Service Economy. Jingjing Huo, University of Waterloo; John Stephens, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
From ISI to an open economy: The state transformed, not in retreat. Herman Schwartz, University of Virgina; Sebastian Etchemendy, Universidad Torcuato di Tella
The Trajectory of the Statist Model: France and Japan Compared. Jonah Levy, University of California, Berkeley
Discussant: Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
063. The Impact of the Economic Crisis On Public Support for the Welfare State
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08Chairs: Jørgen Goul Andersen, University of Aalborg; Heikki Ervasti, University of Turku Participants:
Economic Downturns and Public Support for the Welfare State. Heikki Ervasti, University of Turku; Jørgen Goul Andersen, University of Aalborg; Mikael Hjerm, University of Umeå
The Rise and Fall of Social Cohesion. Christian Larsen, Aalborg University
How Welfare States Shape the Democratic Public. Staffan Kumlin, Institute for Social Research,
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OsloUniversity of Gothenburg; Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen, University of Bern
Resistance to Retrenchment. Troels Hedegaard, Aalborg University
Discussant: Stefan Olafsson, University of Iceland
064. Understanding European Political Communication: Content & Effects
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04Chair: Rens Vliegenthart, University of Amsterdam Participants:
When News is Politics and Politics becomes News: A reciprocal analysis of parliamentary questions and press coverage in four West-European countries. Rosa van Santen, Leiden University; Peter Van Aelst, University of Antwerp; Luzia Helfer, Leiden University
Framing the Event: When Events Facilitate Re-framing. Camilla Jensen, Aarhus University
Attack or Substance? Different types of conflict in the news and their effect on citizen engagement. Andreas Schuck, University of Amsterdam; Claes de Vreese, University of Amsterdam
Political Humour in the Media: Effects on citizens’ social trust and efficacy. Sophie Lecheler, University of Amsterdam; Andreas Schuck, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Gunnar Thesen, Aarhus University
065. Variations in Educational Systems and Their Consequences
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chairs: Herman van de Werfhorst, University of Amsterdam; Jaap Dronkers, Maastricht University Participants:
The high performance of Dutch and Flemish 15-year-old native pupils: Explaining country differences in math scores between highly stratified educational systems. Jaap Dronkers, Maastricht University
Education and effective labor market allocation: To what extent can job mismatches in Europe be affected by educational systems? Mark Levels, School of Business and Economics, Research Centre for Education and the Labour Market; Rolf van der Velden, Maastricht University
The impact of tracking on civic engagement inequality: A difference-in-difference design. Jacqueline Witschge, University of Amsterdam; Herman van de Werfhorst, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Rolf van der Velden, Maastricht University
066. Changing Labor Markets 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23
Chair: David Rueda, University of Oxford Participants:
United They Stand, Divided They Fall? Labor Heterogeneity and the Taxation of Low Wages. Achim Kemmerling, Central European University
Labour Market Deregulation in France: Who wants the
contrat de travail unique? Social support for labour market flexibilisation in France. Bruno Amable, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne / Institut Universitaire de France
Job Referrals and Immigrants’ Occupational Status. The role of Bridging Social Capital. Bram Lancee, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB)
Do Interactions Between Finance and Labor Market Institutions Affect Wage Distribution? Thibault Darcillon, CES University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Paris School of Economics
Dynamics of Change in Labour Market Policies in Pre-Accession Countries: Toward Europeanization of Flexicurity? H. Tolga Bolukbasi, Bilkent University; Efe Savas, London School of Economics and Political Science / Bilkent University
Discussant: Alison Johnston, Oregon State University
067. Country Variations in the Banking Crisis 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18D
Chair: Daniel Mügge, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Between Financial Stability and Fairness in Resolution: The Role of Special Bank Resolution Regimes in Post-Crisis Financial Regulation. Martin Carstensen, Copenhagen Business School
Neoliberalism, Financialization, and the Credit Cycle. Terrence Casey, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
Why Did Regulation Save Australian, Canadian, and Japanese Banks but Not the US, UK and German Banks During the GFC? Caner Bakir, Koc University
A Tale of Two Crises: Ireland and Iceland During the Great Recession. Oddny Helgadottir, Brown University
Genesis and Persistence of Trust in Banks – A Transatlantic Approach. Rolf Luede, University of Hamburg; Ingrid Größl, University of Hamburg; Jan Fleck, University of Hamburg
Discussant: Michel Goyer, Warwick Business School
068. Dynamics of Gender and Sexuality in Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17
Chair: Wisnu Reksodirdjo, Marseille Centre Norbert Elias Participants:
Women, Feminism, and Gay Liberation in France: A Case Study. Manon Tremblay, University of Ottawa
Same-Sex Couples and Same-Sex Unions in Europe. Maks Banens, University of Lyon
Gender and Political Responses to Economic Crisis in Spain. Sandra Ezquerra, Universitat de Vic
Sexual Nationalisms “in” Europe: Methodological and Political Challenges. Gianmaria Colpani, Utrecht University
Masculinities Flailing and the Sovereign Debt Crisis: The Figure of “the Migrant” and Greek Nationals As the European “Other”. Alexandra Halkias, Panteion University
Discussant: Nicholas Boston, CUNY Lehman College
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069. Gender and Political Influences 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18A
Chair: Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin Participants:
Marine Le Pen, Female-Led Political Dynasties, and the Challenge to Politics As We Know It. Dorit Geva, Central European University
Should Men Have More Rights…? Gender Role Related Attitudes Before and During the Crisis. Judit Takács, The Hungarian Academy of Sciences; Ivett Szalma, Corvinus University of Budapest
Beauty Will Save the World: European Union and Decline At Miss Europe 1929-37. Aro Velmet, New York University
A Man’s World? Gender, Networking and Careers in the European Commission. Hussein Kassim, University of East Anglia; Sara Connolly, University of East Anglia
Discussant: Alison E. Woodward, Institute for European Studies
070. Migration and the Welfare State 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14
Chair: Jeroen Doomernik, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Intersections of Social and Integration Policies: Immigration, Austerity, and Policy Change in Western Europe. Gregory Baldi, Western Illinois University; Sara Goodman, University of California, Irvine
Reforming Scandinavian Immigration and Integration Policies: Canada As Rational, Natural and Mythical Model. Trygve Ugland, Bishop’s University
Disentitling, Selecting, or Investing? Understanding Institutional Responses to Immigrant Welfare Dependence. Edward Koning, University of Guelph
Migration and Welfare State Spending. Stuart Soroka, McGill University; Keith Banting, Queen’s University; Richard Johnston, University of British Columbia; Anthony Kevins, McGill University; Will Kymlicka, Queen’s University
Discussant: Georg Menz, Goldsmiths College, University of London
071. Political Extremism in 20th-Century Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23
Chair: Meindert Fennema, University of Amsterdam Participants:
“Shirkers and Cowards”: Fascism’s Crusade Against Socialism, 1919 - 1922. Marla Stone, Occidental College
Democrats by Default? Fascism, Populism, and Christian Democracy in Italy 1943-1948. Pepijn Corduwener, Utrecht University
A Moscow Trial in Spain? The POUM Trial of October 1938 and the Politics of Stability. Jonathan Sherry, University of Pittsburgh
Fascism After Second World War in France and Italy. A Comparative Approach. Jose Sanmartin, University of Alicante
Discussant: Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University
072. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel III: The Effect of Immigration on Institutions
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chair: Maureen Eger, Umeå University Participants:
Immigration and Social Solidarity in a Time of Welfare State Crisis. David Abraham, University of Miami
The So-Called Failure of Multiculturalism: A Securitization Approach. Jocelyne Cesari, Harvard University
The Effects of Immigration on the Social Democratic Welfare State. Sarah Valdez, Juan March Institute
Discussant: Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam
073. No Brain? Mobility, Migration, and the Attraction of the Union
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Madalina Moraru, European University Institute Participants:
Is the ENP promoting regionalism of interest to the neighbours of the Union? Nikos Skoutaris, London School of Economics and Political Science
Erasmus doesn’t live here any longer: The impact of economic and political crises on the development of an EU strategy on mobility. Claudio Matera, T.M.C. Asser Institute (The Hague)
Virtual Returns: The Missing External Policy Regulation to Fight Brain Draining in Europe. Karolina Podstawa, European University Institute
Discussant: Bart van Vooren, Univeristy of Copenhagen
074. Researching The Relationship Between Trade Unions and Migrant Workers, Examples From Different Theoretical, and Methodological Perspectives (Roundtable)
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04Chair: Stefania Marino, Manchester Business School Participants:
Rinus Penninx, University of AmsterdamJohn Wrench, Norwegian University of Science and
TechnologyMiguel Martinez Lucio, Manchester Business SchoolMelanie Simms, Warwick Business School
075. Anti-Kantian Europe: The Anti-Enlightened Idea of Europe in French Thought (1750-1950)
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17Chair: Michael Wintle, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Conservative History Writing and the Idea of Europe. Matthijs Lok, University of Amsterdam
Joseph de Maistre’s antirevolutionary Europeanism. Carolina Armenteros, University of Cambridge
Tuesday, June 25
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Rightwing French Europeanist writers in the Interbellum. Marleen Rensen, University of Amsterdam
Europe and the Anti-Enlightenment Right in Post-Second World War France: The Case of the Fédération Des étudiants Nationalistes. Hugh McDonnell, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Annelien de Dijn, University of Amsterdam
076. Constitutional Projects in Times of Crisis 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14
Chair: Olav Velthuis, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Colonial subjects to citizens and suspects: Emergency and Identity in Israel and Cyprus. Yael Berda, Princeton University
“Constitutional Reason of State.” Defensive Democracy, and German Emigré Constitutional Scholars. Augustin Simard, Université de Montréal
Unstable Ontologies and Constitutional Failures: The Place of Constitutional Subjects in Early European Pro-Federalist Projects . Gregoire Mallard, Northwestern University
Writing minorities out: The French Constitution’s Republican Turn. Eleonore Lepinard, Université de Montréal
Discussant: Alessandra Arcuri, Erasmus University of Rotterdam
077. Europe in Crisis: Urban Performances of Capitalism and Resistance
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Eleftheria Ioannidou, University of Birmingham Participants:
‘Just angry people’: The Riots, haunted communities, and performing to understand.. Rachel Clements, University of Manchester
Right thinking at the National Theatre. Louise Owen, Birkbeck, University of London
‘It’s a Beautiful Thing, the Destruction of Wor(l)Ds’. Myrto Tsilimpounidi, The Ministry of Untold Stories; Aylwyn Walsh, University of Lincoln
Mind the Ruins: Crises and Performance in European Cities. Marilena Zaroulia, University of Winchester; Joel Anderson, Central School of Speech and Drama
Discussant: Philip Hager, Goldsmiths, University of London and University of Winchester
078. European Labour Markets and Social Inequality 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17
Chair: Johannes Giesecke, University of Bamberg Participants:
Employment regimes, labour market dualism and inequality in Europe. Paolo Barbieri, University of Trento; Giorgio Cutuli, University of Trento
Does deregulation help? The impact of employment protection reforms on youths’ non-employment and temporary employment risks in Europe. Michael Gebel, University of Mannheim; Johannes Giesecke, University of Bamberg
Occupational Closure and Wage Inequality in Germany and the United Kingdom. Thijs Bol, University of Amsterdam; Kim Weeden, Cornell University
Collective bargaining and the increase of wage inequality in Germany. Martin Groß, University of Tübingen
Non-standard workers trapped in low-paid employment? Findings for Austria within a European Context. Roland Teitzer, University of Vienna; Roland Verwiebe, University of Vienna; Nina-Sophie Fritsch, University of Vienna
Discussant: Jason Beckfield, Harvard University
079. Merits and Gaps of Process Tracing (Roundtable) 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23
Chair: Christine Trampusch, University of Cologne Participants:
Derek Beach, Aarhus University Tim Büthe, Duke University Tulia Falleti, University of Pennsylvania Markus Kreuzer, Villanova University Jonathan Zeitlin, University of Amsterdam
080. Old Recipes for Bad Times? Outsourcing the Welfare State At Home
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04Chair: Andrea Rea, Free University of Brussels (ULB) Participants:
Political Economy of Domestic Work: Past and Present. Margarita Estevez-Abe, Syracuse University
Privileging the Household: Policy and Academic Analyses in the EU. Eleonore Kofman, Middlesex University
The Political Economy of Domestic Work in France and Sweden in a European Perspective. Nathalie Morel, Centre d’Études Européennes, Sciences Po
The Politics of Tax Exemptions for Home Services: Beyond Sociodemographic Explanations. Clémence Ledoux, University of Nantes; Virginie Guiraudon, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
Belgian Policy Supporting Domestic Work. Who Get Benefits? Migrant Domestic Workers, Outsourcing Companies, Belgian and International Household in Brussels. Andrea Rea, Free University of Brussels (ULB); Marie Godin, Free University of Brussels (ULB); Beatriz Camargo, Free University of Brussels
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(ULB) Discussant: Franca van Hooren, University of Bremen
081. Past and Future of Prudential Regulation in Europe in the Aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis (Roundtable)
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23Chair: Yuri Biondi, CNRS Participants:
Jerome Haas, Autorité des Normes Comptables Matthias Thiemann, ESSEC Stephany Jones, Columbia University Hans Kotz, Goethe-Universitat
082. Politics and Culture in European Anti-Austerity Movements
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23Chair: Cristina Flesher Fominaya, University of Aberdeen Participants:
Alternative Moralities, Economies, Identities: Musicians’ Response to the Euro-Crisis. Sena Aydin, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
The Moderation of Alterantive Social Movements? The 15-M/Indignados Movement in Spain. Kerman Calvo, Universidad de Salamanca
Building Democratic Processes: Feminist Expressions in the Indignation Movement. Sandra Ezquerra, Universitat de Vic; Marta Cruells, Universitat de Vic & Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona
Re-Locating Public Sphere: The Modern Coffeehouse and Emergent Political Action in Athens, Greece. Othon Alexandrakis, York University
Pre-occupied: Italian anti-austerity protests and the failed diffusion of the indignados framework. Lorenzo Zamponi, European University Institute
Discussant: Nicole Doerr, Freie Universität Berlin
083. Post-Communist Judiciaries: Access, Independence, and Popular Trust
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03Chair: Aneta Spendzharova, Maastricht University Participants:
Global Models and Local Damages: A Critical Study in Effects of Judicial Councils in Central and Eastern European Judicial Reform. Michal Bobek, University of Oxford; David Kosar, Masaryk University, Faculty of Law
Explaining Trust in Legal Institutions: The Myth of Postcommunist Exceptionalism. Brad Epperly, European University Institute
Too Much of a Good Thing? Rethinking Access to Justice in Contemporary Russia. Kathryn Hendley, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Judicial Independence and Media Freedom: Defamation Litigation Trends in Russia, 2004-2010. Maria Popova, McGill University
Discussant: Aneta Spendzharova, Maastricht University
084. Romani Activism, Challenged Democracies, and
Contentious Politics 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis E0.02 (VOC Room)
Chair: Violetta Zentai, Central European University Participants:
Reclaiming Citizenship within Europe: Roma Youth Rights in Romania, Hungary, Serbia, and Italy. Sarah Dougherty, Harvard University
Roma Inclusion Policies Shaped in European Domestic Contexts. Violetta Zentai, Central European University
Roma women’s voices and silences on unjust power regimes. Eniko Vincze, Babes-Bolyai University
Zone of Invisibility: Engendered Transnational Romani Participation and Representation in the Time of Stringent Reforms and Austerity Measure. Angela Kóczé, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
085. Social Care Policies in Europe: Old Dilemmas, New Solutions
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22Chair: Tine Rostgaard, University of Aalborg Participants:
Long-Term Care Policies in EU Countries Before and During the Crisis. Costanzo Ranci, Polytechnic of Milan; Emmanuele Pavolini, Macerata University
Long-term Care Policies in Central Eastern Europe: Between Decentralization and Europeanization. August Oesterle, Vienna University of Economics and Business
Migrant labour and care for older people in ‘liberal’ welfare states: The case of England. Isabel Shutes, London School of Economics
Explaining transformations of care in European societies: Analytical and methodological challenges. Margarita León, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Discussant: Mary Daly, Queen’s University Belfast
086. Social Democratic Ideological Change in Times of Crisis
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08Chair: Pontus Odmalm, University of EdinburghParticipants:
The Swedish Social Democratic party and the double challenge of the “new” Conservatives and the global economic crisis. Malena Rosén Sundström, University of Lund
All Colours Under the Sun: British social democracy at time of crisis. Eric Shaw, Universiy of Stirling
Another crisis? Social democracy facing the populist challenge. Laurent Bouvet, Sciences Po
From Social Democracy to Social Liberalism? Jonas Hinnfors, University of Gothenburg; Yohann Aucante, EHESS
Discussant: Frans Becker, Wiardi Beckman Stichting
087. Societal Consequences of Political and Administrative Relations
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18B
Tuesday, June 25
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Chair: B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh Participants:
Re-assessing bureaucratic quality: Comparative evidence from “objective” and perception-based indicators. Klaus Brösamle, Hertie School of Government
Separated interests, integrated activities. Politicians, Bureaucrats and Good Government. Carl Dahlström, University of Gothenburg
The Administrative Foundations of Constitutionalism: Litigation, regulation, and limited government in Venice, 1050-1350. Yadira González de Lara, Universidad de Valencia
The United States Congress, Responsiveness, and Administrative Agency Performance. David Lewis, Vanderbilt University
Deliverers, Diplomats or Experts? The Evolution of Predominant Forms and Hybrids in Recent Reform Processes. Salvador Parrado, UNED, Spain
Discussant: Niamh Hardiman, University College Dublin
088. Territoriality in the National and Regional Vote in Central and Eastern Europe
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18DChair: Régis Dandoy, University of Zurich Participants:
Regional Elections in Croatia: From Third-Order County Elections to Genuine Regional Politics. Ivan Kopric, University of Zagreb; Daria Dubajic, University of Zagreb; Tijana Vukojicic Tomic, University of Zagreb
Regional Elections in the Czech Republic: Springboard for Regional Elites. Michael Pink, Masaryk University
Regional Elections in Hungary: Second-Order Elections or Not? Gábor Dobos, Hungarian Academy of Science / Corvinus University of Budapest; Réka Várnagy, Corvinus University of Budapest
Regional Elections in Poland: Beyond the Second-Order Elections Thesis. Wojciech Gagatek, University of Warsaw; Michal Kotnarowski, Polish Academy of Sciences
Regional Elections in Romania: Party System Change Versus Second-Order Election Effects. Istvan Szekely, Central European University
Regional Elections in Slovakia: Beyond the Second Order Election Hypothesis. Marek Rybar, Comenius University
Discussant: Arjan Schakel, Maastricht University 089. The EU as a Global Security Actor: Constitutional Aspects of the External Dimension of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18AChair: Valsamis Mitsilegas, Queen Mary University, London Participants:
The Area of Freedom, Security and Justice and the External Effect. Ester Herlin-Karnell, Free University Amsterdam
The relationship between security and European identity in the area of freedom, security, and justice. Massimo Fichera, University of Helsinki
The exporting of EU organized crime approaches in the context of the External Dimension of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice. Helena Carrapico, University of Coimbra; University of Strathclyde
Of ‘Mixing and Mingling’: International Cooperation in the context of the External Dimension of the Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice. Theodore Konstadinides, University of Surrey
The European Parliament and Parlementarians in Transatlantic Relations: Using Judicial Review to Alter Institutional Balance? Deirdre Curtin, University of Amsterdam; Elaine Fahey, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Marieke de Goede, University of Amsterdam
090. The Reformation of Identity: Processing European Nationality and Citizenship in the Wake of Total War, 1914-1962
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21Chair: Gary Marks, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Participants:
Republican Population Engineering on the Rhine: The French State in Alsace, 1918 - 1925. Shannon Monaghan, Boston College
Equality and Difference: Political Debates on “Gender Equality” in West Germany, 1949-1958. Alexandria Ruble, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The “Femme Musulmane” as Contested Category: Gender, Cultural, and National Difference in the Algerian War, 1954-1962. Elise Franklin, Boston College
The Dismantlement of the German Economic Orbit, East and West Social and Economic Restructuring in Alsace-Lorraine and Transylvania Following World War I, 1918-1928. Máté Rigó, Cornell University
Discussant: James Cronin, Boston College
091. The Security Governance of Migrant Integration: New Fields, New Actors
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55Chairs: Ariane Chebel d’Appollonia, Rutgers University; Romain Garbaye, Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3 Participants:
Political Polarization and logics of racialization surrounding immigrants in Arizona: Real and imagined security implications. Jim Cohen, Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3
The Securitization of Immigrant Integration in the UK Since 9/11. Vincent Latour, Universite de Toulouse II Le Mirail; Romain Garbaye, Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3
Migrant children in the UK: Official discourses and ambivalent policies on the protection of a vulnerable group . Catherine Puzzo, Université de Toulouse II Le Mirail
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From top-down securitization of Muslims to bottom-up desecuritization: The feedback effects of grassroot and think-tank mobilization in the prevention of terrorism in the UK. Claire Arenes, Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3
Towards the emergence of new modes of integration? Ariane Chebel d’Appollonia, Rutgers University
Discussant: Simon Reich, Rutgers University
092. The Struggle for Autonomy: European Women’s Movements and Body Politics
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chair: Ana Prata, California State University Participants:
The Struggle for Autonomy and Bodily Citizenship in Portugal. Ana Prata, California State University
Constructing bodily citizenship in the Czech Republic. Radka Dudová, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
Body politics, citizenship, and women’s movement contestation in the Netherlands. Joyce Outshoorn, University of Leiden
Discussant: Amy Denissen, California State University Northridge
093. Political Impact of the Crisis in Southern and Eastern Europe
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Christos Paraskevopoulos, Harvard University Participants:
What Lessons Do the Baltic Countries‘ Crisis Experience Provide for the Eurozone Periphery? Vytautas Kuokstis, Vilnius University; Ramūnas Vilpišauskas, Vilnius University
A Radical Change: For the Family, for the State, for the Nation: Analysis of Jobbik’s Discourse, Its Origins, Impact On Hungary, and Implications for Europe. Maja Nenadovic, Anne Frank House / University of Amsterdam; Swaan Van Iterson, Anne Frank House
Memory, Power, and Promise: The Eurozone Crisis and the Greek Case. Catherine Guisan, University of Minnesota
The Impact of Austerity Politics On Weak Democracies in Southeast Europe. Danijela Dolenec, University of Zagreb
Political Impacts of Crisis in the Balkans. Roger Schoenman, University of California, Santa Cruz
Discussant: Hilary Appel, Claremont McKenna College
094. Re-Shaping the State in EU Candidate Countries 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18C
Chair: TBAParticipants:
Similar Enlargement Conditionality and Differential Europeanization in Albania and Croatia: The Role of Past Legacies. Arolda Elbasani, Robert Schuman Center for Advanced Studies
Building Capacity: The Efficiency of Twinning Projects
in Southeastern Europe. Graeme Crouch, University of Victoria
Strategic Learning: How the Turkish National Police Used Twinning to Prepare Itself for the Planned New Border Agency. Alexander Bürgin, Izmir University of Economis
The Limits of External State-Building in New Democracies: The EU, Political Parties and Civil Service Reform in Croatia, 2000-2012. Lorenzo Cecchi, European University Institute
Diffusion, Contestation and Knowledge Gaps: EU Governance of Justice Sector Reforms in Kosovo. Maj Lervad Grasten, Copenhagen Business School
Discussant: Otto Holman, University of Amsterdam
095. European Democracy and the Financial Crises (Plenary)
6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17Chairs: Sebastien Chauvin, University of Amsterdam; Peter Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego Participants:
Wendy Carlin, University College London Cornelia Woll, Sciences Po Anton Hemerijck, VU University Amsterdam Wolfgang Streeck, Max-Planck-Institut Fuer Gesellschaftsforschung
095. Plenary Reception7:45 to 9:00 PM - The BazelVijzelstraat 32, Amsterdam
Wednesday, June 26
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Wednesday, June 26097. EU NGOs and Social Movements in an Era of European Financial Crisis
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23Chair: Justin Greenwood, Robert Gordon University Participants:
Forms of Europeanized Protests: A Comparative Study. Swen Hutter, European University Institute
Challengers to the crisis: Civil Society Organizations’ aims, strategies, and activities to revitalize the EU social dimension. Jayeon Lee, University of Lund; Hakan Johansson, University of Lund
Anti-Racism in a Time of Crisis. Carlo Ruzza, University of Trento
The Europeanization of domestic CSOs in times of crisis. Rosa Sanchez Salgado, University of Amsterdam
Political coordination among transnational civil society organizations. Ylva Stubbergaard, University of Lund, Sweden
Discussant: Luis Bouza Garcia, College of Europe
098. Notions of Revolution and Changing Images of Europe: The Twentieth Century (Part 1)
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Stefania Ecchia, University of Salerno Participants:
Constitutional Theory in the USSR 1917-1936: An Intersection of History and Progress. Samantha Lomb, University of Pittsburgh
Selective Embrace: Inter-War Balkan Agrarianism and Europe. Eric Halsey, Sofia University
Dynamics of Change in Times of Crisis: Perceptions of “Europe” in High Modernity (1914-1945). Florian Greiner, University of Augsburg
Revolutionary Pacifism and European Unity. Katherine Sorrels, University of Cincinnati
Revolution, the European war, and democracy in Guglielmo Ferrero. Francesco Mancuso, University of Salerno
Discussant: Jan Vermeiren, University of East Anglia
099. Understanding Migrant Deservingness: Logics and Mechanisms
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18CChair: Peo Hansen, Linköping University Participants:
Citizenship and the community of value: exclusion, tolerance, failure. Bridget Anderson, University of Oxford
EU migration governance: framing migrant deservingness, sustaining inequalities. Emma Carmel, University of Bath
The Moral Economy of Immigration. An Inquiry into the Changing Significance of the Body. Didier Fassin, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.
Civic Performance in the Moral Economy of Migrant Illegality. Sebastien Chauvin, University of Amsterdam; Blanca Garcés-Mascareñas, Universitat Pompeu-Fabra
Discussant: Regine Paul, University of Bath
100. Uneven Citizenship: Minorities and Migration in the Post-Yugoslav Space
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18AChair: Francesco Ragazzi, Leiden University Participants:
‘Perceived Co-Ethnics’ and Kin-State Citizenship in Southeastern Europe. Dejan Stjepanovic, University of Edinburgh
ROMA on the Margins of Citizenship: Romani Minorities in the Context of POST-Yugoslav Citizenship Regimes. Julija Sardelic, University of Edinburgh
Minorities, asymmetrical rights, and differentiated citizenship: The case of Kosovo. Gezim Krasniqi, University of Edinburgh
Inequality and Politics of Return in the post-Yugoslav Republics. Biljana Djordjevic, University of Belgrade
Refugee integration and citizenship policies: the case study of Croatian Serbs in Vojvodina. Viktor Koska, University of Zagreb
Discussant: Francesco Ragazzi, Leiden University
101. Comparative Advantage: Developing Better Research Strategies for the Politics of Migration and Integration in Europe
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Rogier Van Reekum, Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research Participants:
Beyond National Models. Christophe Bertossi, French Institute of International Relations
Citizenship Configurations: Analysing the Multiple Purposes of Citizenship Regimes in Europe. Maarten Vink, Maastricht University
Comparing what for who? Making new connections in the politics of migration and integration. Rogier Van Reekum, Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research; Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam
When guestworker migration turned into chain migration: Family reunification policies in Germany and the Netherlands, 1975-1985. Saskia Bonjour, Institute for History
102. Democracy in Hard Times: Politics and Policymaking in Southern Europe in the Crisis
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08Chair: Stefano Sacchi, University of Milan / Collegio Carlo Alberto Participants:
The “vincolo esterno” thesis revisited: Irresistible forces, movable “objects” in Italian pension reforms. Matteo
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Jessoula, University of MilanCracking under pressure? Greek welfare in hard times.
Manos Matsaganis, Athens University of Economics and Business
Austerity programmes, labor market reform, and the politics of immigration in Spain. Sofia Perez, Boston University
Policy without politics? Technocratic aspirations, international push, and domestic politics in Italy’s labor market reform. Stefano Sacchi, University of MilanCollegio Carlo Alberto
Discussants: Margarita Estevez-Abe, Collegio Carlo Alberto / Syracuse University; Anton Hemerijck, VU University Amsterdam
103. Does Populism Have a Gender? 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17
Chair: Andrej Zaslove, Radboud University Participants:
Männerparteien? The Populist Radical Right, Gender and Women Voters. Mieke Verloo, IWM, Institute for Human Sciences; Niels Spierings, Radboud University; Andrej Zaslove, Radboud University
Female charismatic leadership and gender: Comparing the experiences of The Danish People’s Party, the Progress Party and the Front National. Susi Meret, Aalborg University
Gender and the Radical Right in Western Europe. A united party-family? Tjitske Akkerman, University of Amsterdam
Gender and Radical Right-Wing Populism: Ideological Variations Across Parties and Time. Sarah de Lange, University of Amsterdam; Liza Mügge, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Ann-Catrine Jungar, Södertörns högskola, Sweden
104. European Integration as a Cause for Consensus or Conflict in Domestic Politics, 1950-2010
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chair: Michael Wintle, University of AmsterdamParticipants:
SPD and European integration: From opposition to bipartisanship? 1949-1982. Giovanni Bernardini, Italian-German Historical Institute - FBK, Trento; Gabrielle d'Ottavio, Italian-German Historical Institute - FBK, Trento
Postwar ideological convergence in Dutch politics as a form of Europeanisation. Robin de Bruin, University of Amsterdam
Dissidents and bystanders: Europe as a way of dealing with the communist past in the Czech Republic, 1980-2004. Carlos Reijnen, University of Amsterdam
Seeing Europe through the Nation: Dutch, English, and German Perceptions of the Treaty of Maastricht. Sven de Roode, University of Manchester
Discussant: James Kennedy, University of Amsterdam
105. European Quotas: Going Beyond Politics? 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04
Chair: Alison E. Woodward, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Participants:
Balance in Advisory Boards: The Use of Quota’s to Regulate Advisory Councils in the EU. Alison E. Woodward, Institute for European StudiesVrije Universiteit Brussel
Gender Quotas in Scientific Decision-Making. Liisa Husu, Örebro Universiteit / GEXcel Centre of Gender Excellence
Complying with Second-Generation Quotas: Evidence From Finland. Anne Maria Holli, University of FinlandAcademy of Finland
Gender Quotas for Boards of Directors: Gendering Economic Governance in a Time of Financial Crisis. Sylvia Walby, Lancaster University
Making Markets Efficient: In Defence of Regulation of the Gender Composition of Corporate Boards in Europe. Maria Menédez Gonzalez, University of Oviedo; Colette Fagan, University of Manchester
Beyond Politics: The Spread of Gender Quota to Corporate Boards. Mari Teigen, Institute For Social Research, Oslo
Discussant: Christina Xydias, Clarkson University
106. Process Tracing in Practice: How Process Tracing is Implemented, and What Theoretical Contribution it Makes
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55Chair: Markus Kreuzer, Villanova University Participants:
Who Shapes Institutional Reform: A Process-Tracing Approach to the Politics of Financial Reform in the United States, 2008-2010. J. Nicholas Ziegler, Univ. of California, Berkeley
Meaningful comparisons: Different explanatory approaches in case study research and the analysis of political reforms. Patrick Emmenegger, University of St. Gallen
Partisan politics, economic coordination, and the politics of education and training reform in Western Europe. Marius Busemeyer, University of Konstanz
The Political Economy of Rating in Germany: A Systematic Process Analysis. Christine Trampusch, University of Cologne
Process Tracing: Mind the Gap between Theory and Practice. Bruno Palier, Centre d’Études Européennes, Sciences Po; Christine Trampusch, University of Cologne
Discussant: Markus Kreuzer, Villanova University
107. Recognition of Rights and Restorative Justice: Post-Cold War Europe in Comparison
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.21Chair: Christiane Lemke, New York University Participants:
Social Mobilization for Memorials as Forms of Symbolic
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Wednesday, June 26
Reparations. Angelika von Wahl, Lafayette CollegeStruggles over Moral Rehabilitation: Historic
Sterilization Policies and the Politics of Redress in Germany, Norway and the Czech Republic. Kathrin Braun, University of Hanover
Transitional Justice, Democracy, and Rule of Law in Postcommunist Europe: The Contested Issue of Rights. Helga Welsh, Wake Forest University
Discussant: Kundai Sithole, University of Oxford
108. The Contingency of the EU’s Crisis Management Operations
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.04Chair: Nicola Chelotti, University College London Participants:
Analytic eclecticism and EU foreign policy (in-)action. Benjamin Pohl, University of Aberdeen
Deploying Military Force under CSDP: The Case of EUFOR Althea. Niklas Novaky, University of Aberdeen
EU Grand Strategy and the Ethics of Military Force: The Case of Eunavfor-Atalanta. Michael E. Smith, University of Aberdeen
Bounded Rationality in Brussels: elements of an EU foreign policy. Nicola Chelotti, University College London
Discussant: Adam Chalmers, Leiden University
109. The Future of Democratic Capitalism I: Structural Change and the Politics of Adjustment
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17Chair: Silja Häusermann, University of Zurich Participants:
The politics of post-industrial capitalism: a synthesis. Pablo Beramendi, Duke University; Silja Häusermann, University of Zurich; Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University; Hanspeter Kriesi, European University Institute
Changing household structures and implications for post-industrial capitalism. Gøsta Esping-Andersen, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Trade Unions and the Future of Democratic Capitalism. Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance
Discussant: Hanspeter Kriesi, European University Institute
110. The Party Politics of Immigration Policy in Contemporary Europe
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chair: James Hampshire, University of Sussex Participants:
Ministers or Ministries? The Impact and Interplay of Parties and Government Departments On Immigration Policy: A Case Study of the UK Coalition Government. Tim Bale, Queen Mary, University of London; James Hampshire, University of Sussex
A Faustian Bargain: Italian Immigration Policy During Berlusconi’s Second Term. Joao Carvalho, University
of AveiroGetting the balance right: Conflicting ideological ‘pulls’
and party competition on immigration in Britain and Sweden. Pontus Odmalm, University of Edinburgh
Campaigning in poetry, governing in prose? The development of post-war Conservative Party immigration policy in government and in opposition. Rebecca Partos, University of Sussex
Discussant: Jonas Hinnfors, University of Gothenburg
111. Transformations in Public Policy and Governance in Turkey in Comparative Pre-Accession Perspective
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23Chair: Paolo Graziano, Bocconi University Participants:
Political Economy of Public Policy Reform in Pre-Accession States: The Case of Budgetary Policy and Governance in Turkey. H. Tolga Bolukbasi, Bilkent University
Employment Policy Reforms in Pre-Accession Countries: Examining Turkey’s National Employment Strategy. Cem Duyulmus, Université de Montréal
Politics of Redistributive Policy Reform in Pre-Accession States: The Case of Regional Policy and Governance in Turkey. Ebru Ertugal, Izmir University of Economics
Europeanization is what domestic actors make of it: Immigration Policy in Turkey in Comparative Pre-Accession Perspective. Saime Ozcurumez, Bilkent University
Why Is There Still Europeanization in Turkey? Putting Fight Against Corruption Reforms Under Spot? Digdem Soyaltin, Freie Universität Berlin
Discussant: Paolo Graziano, Bocconi University
112. Who’s the Most Legitimate to Protest? Immigration vs. Native Minority Claims in an Extended Europe
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oost-Indisch Huis E0.02 (VOC Room)Chair: Tariq Modood, Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship Participants:
The ‘Muslim Vote’ in 2010. Misrecognition and Political Agency. Jan Dobbernack, University of Lincoln
Muslim Mobilisation in France and the Concept of Laïcité. Angéline Escafré-Dublet, CERI Sciences Po
The Swedish Sámi Parliament: A Challenged Recognition? Andreas Gottardis, Stockholm University
Winning ground through transnationalization of cultural-political claims: Circassian Diaspora in Turkey. Ayhan Kaya, Istanbul Bilgi University
Negotiating Limits of Tolerance in Denmark: The Case of Public Meetings arranged by ‘Radical’ Muslim Actors. Lasse Lindekilde, Aarhus University
Discussant: Jon Fox, University of BristolCentre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship
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113. Creative Cultures in Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.03
Chair: Alvaro Santana-Acuña, Harvard University Participants:
Theodor W. Adorno the Music Critic: Adorno, Berg, and the Beginning of Dialectical Music Criticism. Morgan Rich, University of Florida
Voting Bias in the Eurovision Song Contest: Friendship, Impartiality, and Diasporas. Nicholas Charron, University of Gothenburg
Music, Television, and the Commodification of Nationhood in the Bulgarian Postsocialist Program Slavi Show. Plamena Kourtova, Independant Scholar
Art Biennials and the Rise of the Creative Economy in Europe. John Zarobell, University of San Francisco
Discussant: Keith Holz, Western Illinois University
114. Crisis, Fiscal Policy, and Partisanship 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23
Chair: Jan Teorell, Lund University Participants:
Partisan Politics and Fiscal Policy in Times of Boosts and Busts (1980-2011). Damian Raess, University of Geneva; Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva
The Economic Crisis, Partisanship, and the Welfare State. Mariely Lopez-Santana, George Mason University
The Icelandic “Big Bang”? Evolution of Domestic Politics and Public Opinion Between 2008 and 2012. Benjamin Leruth, University of Edinburgh
The Politics of Fiscal Consolidations: Evidence From Panel Data. Zbigniew Truchlewski, Central European University
The Design of National Fiscal Frameworks and Their Budgetary Impact. Carolin Nerlich, European Central Bank; Wolf Heinrich Reuter, Vienna University of Economics and Business
Discussant: Helen Callaghan, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies
115. Debates on the Euro Crisis: Origins and Solutions 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17
Chair: Klaus Armingeon, University of Bern Participants:
Is the German Rule-Based Ordoliberalism the Solution to the Euro Crisis? Rdoliber. Brigitte Young, University of Muenster, Germany
The Sovereign Deb Crisis and Fiscal Coordination in the European Union: Policy Advances in Ccctb. Hilary Appel, Claremont McKenna College
Germany in the Eurozone Crisis: Paradoxes of a Stealth Hegemon. Kurt Huebner, University of British Columbia
Overcoming the Institutional Mismatch of the Euro Zone. Robert Boyer, Institut des ameriques
Stumbling Toward Fiscal Union: The Eurozone Debt Crisis. David Cameron, Yale University
Discussant: Kaija Schilde, Boston University
116. European Trade in the Global Context 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18B
Chair: Anna van Der Vleuten, Radboud University Nijmegen Participants:
Trading Out of the Crisis: Sino-European Changing Dependence and Competition. Maria Garcia, University of Canterbury
Power Relations Between the European Union and Africa: Aid, Trade, and Migration. Tine van Criekinge, London School of Economics and Political Science
Trading with Asia: Import-Dependent Firms and the EU-South Korea Free Trade Agreement. Jappe Eckhardt, University of Bern; Arlo Poletti, University of Antwerp
EU, USA, China: Economic Balancing Through Free Trade Agreements? Maria Garcia, NCRE, University of Canterbury
Discussant: Jette Knudsen, Copenhagen Business School
117. Legislative Coalitions: Causes and Consequences 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18D
Chair: Wouter van der Brug, University of Amsterdam Participants:
The Trouble of Explaining Conflict Lines in the European Parliament. Christoph Raiser, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Electoral Institutions, Credible Commitment, and Redistribution. Michael Becher, Princeton University
Prime Ministers, Early Elections, and Legislative Bargaining in Parliamentary Governments: Evidence From Denmark. Michael Becher, Princeton University; Flemming Christiansen, Roskilde University
Partisan Impact in Coalition Governments. Evelyne Hübscher, Central European University
Where Are Coalition Agreements Located? Albert Falcó-Gimeno, University of Barcelona; Joan-Josep Vallbé, University of Barcelona
Discussant: Dragomir Stoyanov, Sofia University
118. Migration Policy in the EU and Its Consequences 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.22
Chair: Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam Participants:
The Faster, the Better? Speed of Naturalisation and Socio-Economic Integration of Immigrants in Europe. Tijana Prokic-Breuer, Maastricht University
Political Identity and Economic Behavior: How Does Minority Status Affect Savings and Investment. Vera Mironova, University of Maryland; Yegor Lazarev, Columbia University
EU Migration Policy - What Does It Mean After the Crisis? Agnieszka Weinar, European University Institute
The So Called Failure of Multiculturalism : A Securitization Approach. Jocelyne Cesari, Harvard University
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Treatment of Migrants in Turkey: Europeanization At Last? Mine Eder, Bogazici University
Discussant: Alexander Bürgin, Izmir University of Economis
119. Assessing Inequalities in South Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22
Chair: Miguel Glatzer, La Salle University Participants:
Inequality and poverty in Southern Europe. Manos Matsaganis, Athens University of Economics and Business
The channels of transmission of intergenerational inequalities in four EU regimes. Michele Raitano, Sapienza University of Rome
Employment crisis and risk of poverty. Rodolfo Gutiérrez, University of Oviedo
On the theoretical and empiriacal problems of the social exclusion concept. A ‘functional-structural’ view. José María García Blanco, University of Oviedo
Discussant: Costanzo Ranci, Polytechnic of Milan
120. Citizenship After Yugoslavia (Book Panel) 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18A
Chair: Jo Shaw, University of Edinburgh Participants:
Peter Vermeersch, University of Leuven Rainer Baubock, European University Institute Igor Stiks, University of Edinburgh Arolda Elbasani, Robert Schuman Center for Advanced Studies
121. Constructions of Migrant Deservingness: Policies and Practices
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18CChair: Emma Carmel, University of Bath Participants:
Migration as new social risk? Deservingness in integration policies. Tiziana Caponio, University of Turin; Francesca Campomori, University of Venice
Labor, Legality and the Public/Private divide in Dutch and European Migration Law. Sarah Van Walsum, Free University, Amsterdam
Deserving of what? Utility, ‘demographic colonialism,’ and circular migration in the EU’s managed migration approach. Peo Hansen, Linköping University
Ambiguous Stratification, Ambiguous Principles of Deservingness: European Union Governance of Migrant Rights and Statuses. Regine Paul, University of Bath
Discussant: Sebastien Chauvin, University of Amsterdam
122. EU NGOs and the Challenge of Social Movements 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23
Chair: Carlo Ruzza, University of Trento Participants:
The European Social Platform: Strategic Coalition or Social Movement Organizational Community?
Pauline Cullen, National University of Ireland Maynooth
Article 11 TUE as a gateway for the participation of grassroots organisations in European policy-making. Luis Bouza Garcia, College of Europe
How are the ‘civil dialogue’ advocacy NGOs adjusting to the European Citizens Initiative? Justin Greenwood, Robert Gordon University
The EU and social protest. A case of counter- Europeanization? Rosa Sanchez Salgado, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Hakan Johansson, University of Lund, Sweden
123. Issues in Historical Institutionalism and the Study of Europe (Roundtable)
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis E0.02 (VOC Room)Chair: Orfeo Fioretos, Temple University, Philadelphia Participants:
Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford Tulia Falleti, University of Pennsylvania Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University
124. Media Attention and Policy Dynamics 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21
Chair: Laura Chaqués, University of Barcelona Participants:
All News Is Bad News. Newspaper Coverage of Political Parties in Spain. Frank Baumgartner, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Laura Chaqués-Bonafont, University of Barcelona and IBEI
Media Attention and Political Sense of Urgency in the Netherlands. Gerard Breeman, Wageningen University; Arco Timmermans, Montesquieu Institute and Leiden University
From Light Breeze to Hurricane: The Political Contingency of Media Storms. Gunnar Thesen, International Research Institute of Stavanger (IRIS), Norway; Christoffer Green-Pedersen, Aarhus University; Peter Mortensen, University of Aarhus
The Interaction between Media Coverage and Parliamentary Questions - A Cross-National Comparison. Laura Chaqués, University of Barcelona; Peter Mortensen, University of Aarhus; Pascal Sciarini, University of Geneve; Anke Tresch, University of Geneve; Stefaan Walgrave, University of Antwerp
Discussant: Anke Tresch, University of Geneve
125. Notions of Revolution and Changing Images of Europe: The Twentieth Century (Part 2)
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Giuseppe Foscari, University of Salerno Participants:
A Permanent Revolution? Sombart on the Origins and Developments of Modern Capitalism. Federico Trocini, Univeristy of Turin
Allusions and influences of the French Revolution on
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1920s ideas of Europe. Richard Deswarte, University of Essex
The fascist and anti-Europeanist revolution . Annamaria Amato, University of Salerno
From the “necessity” to the “elusiveness” of Revolution: Leo Strauss and Raymond Aron on Europe and progress. Giulio De Ligio, EHESS – Paris
Return to Europe and the Question of Progress: The End of the Communist Revolutionary Project and European Modernity. Ferenc Laczó, Friedrich Schiller University of Jena
Discussant: Matthew D’Auria, University of Salerno
126. Populist Parties as “Normal” Parties: Survey on Territorial Representation and Organization of Populist Parties.
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chairs: Reinhard Heinisch, University of Salzburg; Susi Meret, Aalborg University Participants:
Party Organization and Representative Roles in the Post-Haider Austrian Freedom Party. Reinhard Heinisch, University of Salzburg
Not So Different After All? The Party Organization of the Norwegian Progress Party in a Comparative Perspective.. Anders Jupskas, University of Oslo
The Lega Nord: Organization and representative roles in a personalized populist party. Duncan McDonnell, European University Institute
The Swiss People Party: Between the leader and the organisation. Oscar Mazzoleni, University of Lausanne
‘Not going away’: Inside the Danish People’s Party. Party organization, representation and role of the party leadership. Susi Meret, Aalborg University
The organizational developments inside the populist radical right Vlaams Belang: Dealing with electoral decline. Teun Pauwels, Université Libre de Bruxelles
Discussant: Sarah de Lange, University of Amsterdam
127. Citizenship, State, and Gender: The Minority Politics in the Netherlands and Germany
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chair: Halleh Ghorashi, University of Amsterdam Participants:
State Responsibility and Collective Civic Participation: Honor Killing Debates in Germany and the Netherlands. Anna Korteweg, University of Toronto
Intersectional Substantive Representation: Ethnic Minority Women’s Interests in Dutch Parliament. Liza Mügge, University of Amsterdam
After the Ritual Male Circumcision Debate: Jews, Turks, and the Accommodation of Minorities in Germany. Gokce Yurdakul, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Well-Intentioned Yet Ill-Implemented: Migrant Women of Turkish and Moroccan Descent and Their Take On Integration Courses in the Netherlands. Melanie Eijberts, Amsterdam University College
Discussant: Halleh Ghorashi, University of Amsterdam
128. Continuity and Change in European Finance and Its Governance
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55Chair: Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Pensions, houses, and fertility in the new normal: What has changed since the financial crisis? Herman Schwartz, University of Virgina
The Resilience of Neoliberal Ideas in EU Financial Regulation. Daniel Mügge, University of Amsterdam
Is the German Rule-Based Ordoliberalism the Solution to the Euro-crisis? Brigitte Young, University of Muenster, Germany
Banks in, states out: Banking union and new member states. Zdenek Kudrna, University of Vienna - Institute for European Integration Research
European Interest Groups in Global Financial Governance: What Role for an Evolving Interest Ecology? Kevin Young, University of Massachussets at Amherst
Discussant: Richard Deeg, Temple University
129. Crisis as a Chance for European Integration? 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04
Chairs: Monika Eigmüller, Leipzig University; Stefanie Börner, University of Leipzig Participants:
Towards a Sociology of the European Union. Virginie Guiraudon, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
European Identity Through Social Practices: Insights From the Eucross Project. Ettore Recchi, University of Chieti-Pescara
A Failure of Imagination? The Eurocrisis and the EU’s Imagined Community. Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University
European debt crisis: Do Europeans support EU’s fiscal solidarity measures? Holger Lengfeld, University of Hamburg
Discussant: Adrian Favell, Sciences Po
130. Gender Equality in the Labour Market from an European and Comparative Perspective
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17Chair: Kea Tijdens, University of AmsterdamParticipants:
Feminization of Employment Precariousness. Klara Boonstra, Free University of Amsterdam
Labour Markets Transitions from a Gender Perspective: Reintegration Policies and Opportunities in the Framework of the European Social Fund. Minna van Gerven, University of Twente
Positive Action in EU Gender Equality Law and Policy: Women in Decision Making Positions. Nuria
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Elena Ramos Martin, University of Amsterdam, The NetherlandsUniversity of Amsterdam
Some Remarks On the Spanish Law 3/2007 for Real Equality of Women and Men in the Labour Field. Antonio García-Munoz Alhambra, University of Castilla-La Mancha
Discussant: Bart Vanhercke, Observatoire Social Européen
131. Generations in Crisis? Resources, Reciprocity and Exchange (Roundtable)
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08Chair: Susana Narotzky, University of Barcelona Participants:
Frances Pine, Goldsmiths, University of London Tatjana Thelen, University of Vienna Haldis Haukanes, University of Bergen Victoria Goddard, Goldsmiths, University of London Niko Besnier, University of Amsterdam
132. Interwar Turkey: (A) Modern? Authoritarian? Secular? Nation?
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23Chair: Ugur Ungor, Utrecht University Participants:
Turkey, the Single-Party State, and a Global Moment for Authoritarian Nationalism. Howard Eissenstat, St. Lawrence University
How Secular was Turkish Secularism? Religious Symbolism and Discourse in the Early 1920s. Nurullah Ardic, Istanbul Sehir University
Istanbul Latitude: Transnational Jazz and the Construction of Difference in the 1920s. Carole Woodall, University of Colorado Colorado Springs
Politics of Exclusion in the Early Turkish Republic: The Case of Non-Muslim Citizens. Lerna Ekmekcioglu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Discussant: Christine Philliou, Columbia University
133. Northern Europe and the Success of Anti-Corruption Practices (Roundtable)
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04Chair: Mark Rutgers, Universiteit van Amsterdam Participants:
Bo Rothstein, University of Gothenburg Sanne Deckwitz, Universiteit van Amsterdam Mette Jensen, Aarhus University James Kennedy, Universiteit van Amsterdam
Discussant: Mark Rutgers, Universiteit van Amsterdam
134. Place, Nation, and Politics in Oskar Kokoschka’s Art, Writings, and Career, 1934-1953
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03Chair: Keith Holz, Western Illinois University Participants:
You Have Been Lost for the Home Country: Kokoschka and Austrian Cultural Policy After 1945. Bernadette Reinhold, Universität für angewandte Kunst Wien, Kunstsammlung und Archiv
Kokoschka and the Art Scene in Prague. Agnes Tieze, Kunstforum Ostdeutsche Galerie Regensburg
Oskar Kokoschka - Portraitist of the Powerful. Régine Bonnefoit, Université de Neuchatel
Oskar Kokoschka and His English Collector Edward Beddington-Behrens: A European Friendship. Anna Müller-Härlin, Independent Scholar, Berlin
Discussant: Régine Bonnefoit, Université de Neuchatel
135. The Future of Democratic Capitalism II: Inequality, Macro-Economic Policy, and Distributive Outcomes
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17Chair: Pablo Beramendi, Duke University Participants:
Macroeconomic policy changes in contemporary capitalism. David Soskice, Duke University; Torben Iversen, Harvard University
Varieties of Capitalism in the Financial Crisis and Great Recession of 2007-10. Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva
Inequality, Taxation, and Sovereignty. Pablo Beramendi, Duke University
The Distributive Origins and Consequences of Dualization. David Rueda, University of Oxford; Erik Wibbels, Duke University
Decommodification and the Political Economy of Subjective Well-Being. Chris Anderson, Cornell University; Jason Hecht, Cornell University
Discussant: Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University
136. The Politics of Identity: Ethnic Voters and Ethnic Parties in Europe
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Maria Spirova, Leiden University Participants:
Is There Life After Voting? the Political Participation of Ethnic Minorities in Europe. Sergiu Gherghina, GESIS Cologne
Counting Heads? Ethnic Voting in Europe. Femke Avtalyon, Leiden University
Voting of First and Second Generation Immigrant Groups in the Netherlands. Senna Maatoug, Utrecht University
Patrons or Champions? The Organizational Strategies of Ethnic Parties. Maria Spirova, Leiden University; Petr Kopecky, Leiden University
Discussant: Petr Kopecky, Leiden University
137. The Welfare State as Crisis Manager / The Politics of the New Welfare State (Book Panel)
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Klaus Armingeon, University of Bern Participants:
Anton Hemerijck, VU University Amsterdam Barbara Vis, VU University Amsterdam Patrick Emmenegger, University of St. Gallen Rianne Mahon, Balsillie School of International Affairs, Waterloo
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Giuliano Bonoli, Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration David Natali, University of Bologna Peter Starke, University of Bremen Franca van Hooren, University of Bremen Alexandra Kaasch, University of Sheffield
138. ‘Divided We Stand’: The Political Economy of Dualised European Labour Markets
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18BChair: Paul Marx, University of Southern Denmark Participants:
Preferences for dismissal protection and the insider/outsider divide. Elvire Guillaud, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
Political economy of wage inequality: Disentangling power resources, wage coordination and egalitarianism. Timothee Vlandas, London of School of Economics and Political Sciences
The Political Economy of Degressive Unemployment Benefits. Michaël Zemmour, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne; Baptiste Françon, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne
Re-defining Core and Periphery: The Case of the German Automotive Sector. Chiara Benassi, London School of Economics and Political Science
Discussant: Hanna Schwander, University of Bremen
139. Anti-Immigration Sentiment: Causes and Consequences For Party and Policy
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14Chair: Agnieszka Weinar, European University Institute Participants:
Social Distance, Symbolic Boundaries and Anti-Immigrant Attitudes in Europe: Explaining Exclusionary Policy Preferences. Boris Heizmann, Universitaet Hamburg
No Strong Anti-Immigrant Party Despite the Saliency of Immigration Issues: Explaining the British and the Spanish Case. Malisa Zobel, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB)
The New Minority: Anti-Immigration Politics Among White Working Class Communities in East London. Justin Gest, Harvard University
When Is Cultural Diversity a Threat? The Determinants of Mainstream Political Parties’ Use of Exclusionary Appeals. Jennifer Miller-Gonzalez, University of Michigan
The Threat Is Real: Labor-Market Competition, Recession and Anti-Immigrant Sentiments in Europe. Javier Polavieja, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Discussant: Pontus Odmalm, University of Edinburgh
140. Identity and the Economic Crisis 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18D
Chair: Michael Shalev, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Participants:
Europeanization, Nationalist-Populist Parties, and Euroscepticism (comparisons between selected countries in Western and Eastern Europe). Philip Dandolov, University of Bath
The European Identity and the Long Shadow of the Economic Crisis. A Multi-Level Analysis. Valeria Bello, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI)
Leveraging Ideational Legacies: Partisan Labor Market Policies in Crisis-Ridden Europe. J. Timo Weishaupt, University of Mannheim; Tobias Schulze-Cleven, Rutgers University
Take One for the Team? A Study of the Individual Bases for European Solidarity in Times of Crisis. Laurie Beaudonnet, Universite de Montreal / McGill University
National Narratives of Economic Security and the Contesting of German and American Economic Governance in a Transatlantic Context. Crister Garrett, Universität Leipzig
Discussant: Catherine Guisan, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
141. Trust, Social Capital, and Cohesion in the EU 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23
Chair: Anne Wren, Trinity College Dublin Participants:
The Rise and Fall of Social Cohesion. the Construction and De-Construction of Social Trust in the US, UK, Sweden, and Denmark. Christian Larsen, Aalborg University
Visible Hands: Government Policies On Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in Denmark and the UK. Jette Knudsen, Copenhagen Business School
Social Capital and Social Cohesion in Times of Economic Crisis: The Portuguese Case. Jorge Almeida, Lisbon University Institute
Economic Crisis and EU Integration: Lack of Trust and Solidarity Among Europeans? Livia Garcia Faroldi, University of Malaga, Spain
Does National Social Capital Make Individual Citizens Better Democrats? Katerina Vrablikova, University of Mannheim; Jan van Deth, University of Mannheim
Discussant: Patricia McManus, Indiana University, Bloomington
142. Research Network Luncheon: Historical Study Of States and Regimes
12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21
143. Research Network Luncheon: Immigration 12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03
144. Research Network Luncheon: Territorial Politics and Federalism
12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04
145. A Fiscal Centered Perspective to Welfare State
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Development 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60
Chair: Kimberly Morgan, George Washington University Participants:
The Use and Abuse of National Insurance in the UK. Jochen Clasen, University of Edinburgh
Social Security Trust Funds as Fiscal and Economics Tools: An Historical and Political Comparison of the United States and Canada. Daniel Béland, Johnson-Shoyama School
Coordinated Capitalism, Corporate Finance, and the Pension System as a Source for Patient Capital: Germany and Japan compared. Philip Manow, University of Bremen
The fiscal politics of social insurance and welfare state expansion: The case of the Israeli welfare state 1970-1976 . Michal Koreh, Haifa University
Discussant: Kimberly Morgan, George Washington University
146. Historical Institutionalism and European Politics 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis E0.02 (VOC Room)
Chair: Tulia Falleti, University of Pennsylvania Participants:
Religion. Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of MichiganBusiness. Pepper Culpepper, European University
InstituteRegulation. Mark Thatcher, London School of
Economics and Political Science; Cornelia Woll, Sciences Po
Finance. Richard Deeg, Temple UniversitySupranationalism. Tim Büthe, Duke University
Discussant: Orfeo Fioretos, Temple University, Philadelphia
147. Migration Policy in Multilevel Agenda-Setting 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21
Chair: Marcello Carammia, University of Malta Participants:
Agenda-Setting Dynamics in EU Migration Policy. Marcello Carammia, University of Malta
Immigration, Political Parties, and the Mass Media in Italy: Framing Strategies in Electoral Competition At the Local Level. Pietro Castelli Gattinara, European University Institute, Florence
From Promises to Decisions: Analyzing Immigration Policy in Spain. Laura Chaqués-Bonafont, University of Barcelona; Anna Palau, University of Malta; Laura Morales, University of Leicester; Virginia Ros, University of Manchester
The Multi-Level Dynamics of Migrant Integration Policies: Agenda Dynamics and the Multi-Level Governance of Migrant Integration in the Netherlands, France and the UK. Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Discussant: Christina Boswell, University of Edinburgh
148. Politics, Policies, and Governance in South European Welfare States
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22Chair: Ana Guillen, University of OviedoParticipants:
Reassessing South-European pensions: Evidence from two decades of reform. David Natali, University of Bologna; Furio Stamati, European University Institute
Threats and challenges to South European health care systems in the time of crisis. Maria Petmesidou, Democritus University of Thrace; Emmanuele Pavolini, Macerata University; Ana Guillen, University of Oviedo, Spain
Civil Society, the Welfare Mix, and Southern European Welfare States: What has been happening in the last decade? Ugo Ascoli, Università Politecnica delle Marche; Miguel Glatzer, La Salle University
Patterns of government organization and administration traditions in Southern Europe. Dimitrios Sotiropoulos, University of Athens
Discussant: Berta Álvarez-Miranda, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
149. Choice and Solidarity: Comparative Perspectives On Pension Reform in Europe
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23Chair: Natascha Van der Zwan, University of Amsterdam Participants:
From Countries to Sectors: The Explanatory Power of Employees’ Skills and Trade Unions’ Power for Sector Differences in Occupational Pensions. Tobias Wiss, Johannes Kepler University Linz
Reforming Pensions Before or in the Middle of the Crisis: Does It Make a Difference in Policies and Public Discourse? Evidence From Spain and Portugal. Elisa Chuliá, Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia
The Politics of Choice in Occupational Pensions. Karen Anderson, Radboud University Nijmegen
Free to choose what by whom? Freedom of choice in occupational pension provision. Johan De Deken, University of Amsterdam
Reforming Pension Fund Governance in the Netherlands: Finding a Collective Voice. Natascha Van der Zwan, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Deborah Mabbett, Birkbeck College
150. Climate Change and Social Policy: New Research Synergies
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17Chair: Sabina Stiller, Wageningen University Participants:
Welfare States and Environmental States: A Comparative Analysis. Ian Gough, London School of Economics and Political Science
Social Welfare Generosity and Public Opinion about Climate Change. Lyle Scruggs, University of Connecticut
Poverty and Climate Change in Developed Nations: New models, new agendas. Tony Fitzpatrick,
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University of Nottingham Discussant: Philippe Pochet, Université catholique de Louvain
151. Disability Policy in Crisis: Legal, Public Policy, and Practical Approaches
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14Chair: Mark Davis, University of Leeds Participants:
Austerity measures in Greece: Do they violate the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities? Stelios Charitakis, Maastricht University
Disability.eu – The impact of the crisis on the participation of persons with disabilities on the web. Anthony G. Giannoumis, NOVA
Accessible Private Market for Disabled People? Crisis in Policy and Market Practices. Ieva Eskyte, University of Leeds
Discussant: Thomas Campbell, University of Leeds
152. Experiments in European Political Science 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18D
Chairs: Barbara Vis, VU University Amsterdam; Paul Marx, University of Southern Denmark Participants:
Relative Income Perception and Taxation Preferences. Alexander Kuo, Cornell University; José Fernández-Albertos, Institute of Public Goods And Policies
Political Expectations and Responsibility Attribution. Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Reimut Zohlnhöfer, Universität Heidelberg
Disentangling the effect of the economy on vote choice: A survey experiment. Gijs Schumacher, University of Southern DenmarkVU University Amsterdam
Strategic Voting, Proportional Representation, and Coalition Governments: A Laboratory Experiment. Michael Meffert, Leiden University
One Cue but with Diverging Effects: Individual Differences in Sophistication, Cognitive Abilities and Ideology. Bert Bakker, University of Southern Denmark
Discussant: Bernhard Kittel, University of Vienna
153. Immigrants and Incorporation: Are There Winners and Losers?
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18AParticipants:
Symbolic Exclusion and Cultural Citizenship: The Case of the Middle-Class North African Second Generation in France. Jean Beaman, European University Institute
Social and Spatial Mobility of the Highly Skilled Chinese Migrants in the EU. Joanna Jasiewicz, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI)
Marital Assimilation and the Economic Well-Being of Immigrants in Germany, UK, and the US. Patricia McManus, Indiana University, Bloomington
Discussant: Elyas Bakhtiari, Boston University
154. Immigration, Welfare States, and Labour Markets: Exploring the Nexus
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18CChair: Bonnie Meguid, University of Rochester Participants:
Attitudes towards Immigration, Occupational Groups and Welfare Regimes: Comparative Evidence From Europe. Sofia Perez, Boston University
Immigrant Women’s Employment and Immigrant Family Poverty: Comparative Evidence From Europe. Christel Kesler, Barnard College
Politics of Labour Migration Policy Design in Austria and Sweden. Georg Menz, Goldsmiths College, University of London
Immigration and the Labour/Welfare Nexus in Norway. Grete Brochmann, University of Oslo
Immigration and the Spanish Welfare Regime. From Boom to Gloom. Francisco Moreno-Fuentes, Spanish National Research Council; Maria Bruquetas Callejo, University of Amsterdam
Discussants: Bonnie Meguid, University of Rochester; Anthony Messina, Trinity College
155. Inside the European Commission: The Dynamics of Institutional Change (Book Panel)
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Morten Egeberg, University of Oslo Participants:
Anchrit Wille, University of Leiden Hussein Kassim, University of East Anglia Carolyn Ban, University of Pittsburgh Didier Georgakakis, Université Panthéon-Sorbonne
Discussants: Michelle Cini, University of Bristol; Edward Page, London School of Economics and Political Science
156. Sexual and National Belonging in Europe and the US 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13
Chair: Bruno Perreau, Massachusetts Institute of Technology / Harvard University / University of Cambridge Participants:
Discourses on Sexual Difference and Anticommunitarianism in France. Camille Robcis, Cornell University
Queer Movements in Europe: The Rise of a Transnational Movement. Konstantinos Eleftheriadis, European University Institute
Internal Representations of the Gay Community in France and in the US: The Impact of Legal Recognition. Michael Stambolis-Ruhstorfer, University of California, Los Angeles
On Attachment and Belonging: Or Why Queers Mourn Homophobic President? The Polish Case. Roberto Kulpa, University of London. Birkbeck College
Discussant: David Paternotte, Free University of Brussels
157. The Euro Crisis and European Integration Theory: Some Critical Questions
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2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04Chair: Regine Paul, University of BathUniversity of Bremen Participants:
The Emergence of Critical Orders in the European Crisis: A Comparative Study. Claes Belfrage, University of Liverpool; Eirikur Bergmann, Bifrost University; David Berry, Swansea University
Accumulation, Combination, and the Right to the State in the Wake of the Euro Crisis. Cédric Durand, Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales
From Transnational Governance to Supranational Government: Back to the Future in Times of Eurocrisis and German Hegemony. Otto Holman, University of Amsterdam
Knowledge Production and the European Crisis: The Case of the European Commission. Alan Cafruny, Hamilton College
Discussant: Owen Parker, University of Sheffield
158. The Impact of the First World War on European Transnationalism: Catalyst or Impediment?
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Vincent Lagendijk, Maastricht University Participants:
‘No effective tool during wartime, but an effective tool for peace’: The Second International and the Great War. Daniel Laqua, Northumbria University
Neutrality and the development of the European movement in the Netherlands. Anne-Isabelle Richard, Utrecht University
Scandinavian internationalist networks, the First World War and the political reorganisation of Europe 1914-20. Karen Gram-Skjoldager, Aarhus University
Keeping the Transnational Moment: The Wartime Endeavours of European Municipal Reformers. Stefan Couperus, Utrecht University
World War I Mobilities: The governance of transnational infrastructures in dire times. Frank Schipper, Leiden University
Discussant: Kiran Patel, Maastricht University
159. Communicating in the EU 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03
Chair: Jessica Bain, University of Leicester Participants:
Who Framed the F-35? the Role of Political Communication in Defence Procurement. Srdjan Vucetic, University of Ottawa
Communicating Europe in Times of Crisis: The EU in the Eyes of Asia Pacific. Natalia Chaban, University of Canterbury; Martin Holland, University of Canterbury
A Too Complicated Europe? Lack of Information and Parties’ Cues in Citizens’ Europeanism. A Heuristic Process. Roberto Pannico, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
When Europe Hits Parliament: Explaining Variation in the Communicative Responses of Four EU Member
State Legislatures to European Integration. Frank Wendler, University of Washington
Perceptions of the European Union in a Time of Crisis: Interests and Identity. Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary
Discussant: Rens Vliegenthart, University of Amsterdam
160. Ethnicity, Politics, and Policing 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04
Chair: Helena Carrapico, University of Strathclyde Participants:
Two Strikes, You’re Out: Ethnic and Religious Boundaries On Turkish-German Identity. Elisabeth Becker, Yale University
‘Harmful Cultural Practices’ in Central Europe: Adolescent Brides (and Grooms) Among Slovak Roma. David Scheffel, Thompson Rivers University
Imagining the Way Home: Negotiating the Cultural and Political Geography of Belonging in Northern Ireland’s Minority Ethnic Communities. Devashree Gupta, Carleton College
Mp’s of Migrant Origin in the Netherlands and the UK: Powerful Representatives or Display Figures? Nermin Aydemir, Bilkent University
How to Perform Non-Racism? Colorblind Speech Norms and Race-Conscious Policies Among French Security Personnel. Francois Bonnet, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Jason Xidias, King’s College London
161. EU Courts in a Global Context 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17
Chair: Marie-Laure Basilien-Gainche, Institut Universitaire de France Participants:
The Legalization of Global Migration Governance?: Technocratic Shepherding of Migrant Labor Standards. Leila Kawar, Bowling Green State University
Playing Tug-of-War in the European Union After Lisbon? Human Rights Policy, Law-Making and Judicial Interpretation. Egle Dagilyte, Buckinghamshire New University / King’s College London
Balancing Economic and Social Rights: Courts, Coordination and New Governance. Kenneth Armstrong, Queen Mary, University of London
Discussant: Elaine Fahey, University of Amsterdam
162. Islam and Politics 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23
Chair: Claus Hofhansel, Rhode Island College Participants:
The Local Politics of Muslim Immigration. Janna Bray, University of Michigan
Institutional Constraints and Change in Church-State Relations in Europe. Claus Hofhansel, Rhode Island College
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Islamophobia in Western Europe: Opposing Muslims or the Muslim Headscarf? Marc Helbling, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB)
Islamophobia, Euro-Islam, Islamism and Post-Islamism: Changing Patterns of Secularism in Europe. Peter O'Brien, Trinity University
Muslims’ Support for European Integration: The Role of Organizational Capacities. Arolda Elbasani, Robert Schuman Center for Advanced Studies; Beken Saatcioglu, Institut Fuer Europaeische Integrationsforschung Oesterreich
Discussant: Jocelyne Cesari, Harvard University
163. Political Challenges of Corruption, Crime, and Electoral Fraud
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23Chair: Benjamin Leruth, University of Edinburgh Participants:
The European Quality of Government Index: Data and Correlates. Nicholas Charron, University of Gothenburg; Victor Lapuente, University of Gothenburg
The Evolution of Corruption in Italy: Politicians and the Judiciary in the Aftermath of “Mani Pulite”. Raffaele Asquer, University of California, Los Angeles
How and Why Election Fraud Was Abolished in Established Western Democracies. Jan Teorell, Lund University
Organized Crime and the State: A Comparison of Illicit Business-Government Relations. Kendra Koivu, University of New Mexico
Unexpected Expectations? Comparative Analysis of the Resurgence of Political Clientelism in Europe and Asia. Takeshi Ito, Senshu University; Masako Suginohara, University of Tokyo
Discussant: Sanja Badanjak, University of Wisconsin - Madison
164. Politics of Memory, Past and Present 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18B
Chair: Frances Pine, Goldsmiths, University of London Participants:
“Finding Space for New Graves”: The Baltic Memory Policies in the European Parliament and Its Impact On the National / International Levels. Philippe Perchoc, Université Catholique de Louvain
Building a European Memory: Have Germans Led the Way? Jenny Wustenberg, Free University of Berlin
Gender, Nostalgia, and Memory: Women Writers in a Twentieth-Century Russian Émigré Community in France. Natalia Starostina, Young Harris College
Between Mythology and Memory: French Railways in the Remembrance of the Great War. Natalia Starostina, Young Harris College
Re(en)Gendering Motherhood in Linda Lê’s “A L’enfant Que Je N’aurai Pas” and Cécile Wajsbrot’s “Mémorial”: Crises of Maternity and Gender in Two Contemporary French Novels. Nathalie Segeral,
Virginia TechVirginia Tech Discussant: Natalia Starostina, Young Harris College
165. Strategic Electoral Behavior In Crisis Situations 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55
Participants:Learning When to Run and How to Vote: Strategic
Electoral Behavior in Post-Communist Countries. Pablo Barberá, New York University
International Population Displacement and Long-Term Electoral Behavior: The Greek-Turkish Population Exchange in Comparative Perspective. Sener Akturk, Koc University, Istanbul; Evangelos Liaras, George Washington University
Voting Against the Government in Times of Economic Crisis. Marian Bohl, University of Zurich; Hanspeter Kriesi, European University Institute
Elections Under the Shadow of Force. Adam Przeworski, New York University; Gonzalo Rivero, New York University; Tianyang Xi, New York University
Discussant: Jan Erk, Leiden University
166. The Far Right In Europe I: Contemporary Patterns 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17
Participants:The Rising Tide: Determinants of Regional Variation in
the Support of the Extreme Right in Western Europe. Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa
Unemployment Risk, Social Policy, and Populist Right Parties. Dominik Geering, University of Zurich
To Moderate or Not to Moderate: Radical Right Parties and Immigration Policies. Tjitske Akkerman, University of Amsterdam
The New Punching Bag of the Far Right? The European Union As an All-Encompassing Political Bogeyman and the NPD in Germany - A Case Study. Benjamin Rayder, University of Bamberg
Discussant: Tjitske Akkerman, University of Amsterdam
167. Editorial Meeting4:00 to 5:45 PM Meet-up at the registration desk.
168. Fiscal and Economic Functions of Social Insurance and Its Repercussions for Social Policy
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chair: Michael Shalev, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Participants:
The Politics of Shifting Burdens: The German Fiscal Welfare Corporatism. Christine Trampusch, University of Cologne
From national financiers to international portfolio managers: the curious financialization of the Finnish earnings-related pension system. Sorsa Ville-pekka, University of Helsinki
The Hidden Side of Pension Reforms: Telling a different story about the ‘Italian pension state’. David Natali,
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University of BolognaThe Swedish pension system: From building a nation to
building financial markets? Joakim Palme, Uppsala Univesrity
Discussant: Michael Shalev, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
169. South European Actors: Changing Roles and Strategies in Times of Crisis
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22Chair: Manos Matsaganis, Athens University of Economics and Business Participants:
Sergio González Begega, University of Oviedo Ugo Ascoli, Università Politecnica delle Marche Valeria Fargion, University of Florence Ana Guillen, University of Oviedo Berta Álvarez-Miranda, Universidad Complutense de Madrid Maria Petmesidou, Democritus University of Thrace
170. Migrants and Staffing Agencies in the European Union
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23Chair: Bridget Anderson, University of Oxford Participants:
The political economy of recruitment agencies and migrant workers in Europe and beyond. Robert MacKenzie, Leeds University Business School; Chris Forde, Leeds University Business School; Zyama Ciupijus, University of Oxford; Gabriella Alberti, Leeds University Business School
Temporariness and precarity in London’s hotels. Gabriella Alberti, Leeds University Business School
Colonising strategies of employment agencies and their effects on A8 labour migration to the UK. Barbara Samaluk, Queen Mary, University of London
EU migration legislation, temporary agencies and (undocumented) migrant workers in the Netherlands. Tesseltje de Lange, University of Amsterdam
Too Precarious for Legality? Undocumented migrants and temporary staffing agencies in France and the United States. Anne Bory, University of Lille; Sebastien Chauvin, University of Amsterdam; Nicolas Jounin, Université Paris 8
Discussant: Johannes (Jan) Cremers, University of Amsterdam
171. Brussels Paradiplomats: Regional Presence, Impact, and Activities At the Heart of Europe
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55Chairs: Justin Greenwood, Robert Gordon University; Michael Tatham, University of Bergen Participants:
The more the merrier: accounting for sub-state paradiplomats in Brussels. Michael Tatham, University of Bergen; Mads Thau, Aarhus University
East vs. West? The Differential History and Longitudinal Footprint of Regional Representations in Brussels. Heather Mbaye, University of West Georgia; Cassie McDonald, University of West Georgia
The Collective Action of Regions in Brussels: Analyzing Increased Niche Behavior. Jan Beyers, University of Antwerp; Tom Donas, University of Antwerp
Decentralization and Regional Economic Performance under the EU Structural Funds Program, 2000-2013. Lisa Dellmuth, Stockholm University
Discussant: Jonathan Bradbury, University of Swansea
172. Changing Welfare States 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08
Chair: Jonathan Zeitlin, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Anton Hemerijck, VU University Amsterdam Stephan Leibfried, University of Bremen Bruno Palier, Centre d’Études Européennes, Sciences Po Stefano Sacchi, University of Milan Maurizio Ferrera, University of Milan Silja Häusermann, University of Zurich, Switzerland
173. Crafting Citizenship: Negotiating Tensions in Modern Society (Book Panel)
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18AChair: Sarah de Lange, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Ido De Haan, Utrecht University James Kennedy, Universiteit van Amsterdam Menno Hurenkamp, University of Amsterdam Evelien Tonkens, University of Amsterdam Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam
174. Determinants and Effects of Labor Market Liberalization Reforms
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva Participants:
Determinants of Labor Market Liberalization in Europe. Marco Simoni, London School of Economics and Political Science; Timothee Vlandas, London of School of Economics And Political Sciences
Political Institutions and Labor Market Reform: The Case of Unemployment Benefit Duration. Carlo Knotz, University of Lund; Johannes Lindvall, University of Lund, Sweden
Is Deregulation Necessary? Re-Assessing the Effects of Employment Protection. Sabina Avdagic, University of Sussex
In What Circumstances Does Labor Market Liberalization Work? Klaus Armingeon, University of Bern; Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva
Discussant: David Rueda, University of Oxford
175. Domestic and European Responses to the Euro Crisis: Lessons For Governance
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04
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Chair: Madeleine Hosli, Leiden University Participants:
Intergovernmentalism and its Outcomes: The Implications of the Euro Crisis on the European Union . Sergio Fabbrini, Luiss Guido Carli Rome
Changes in the Multilevel Bureaucratic Politics of the EU semester? Adriaan Schout, Institute Clingendael; Arnout Mijs, Clingendael European Studies Programme
Did the Euro Promote European Identity Tal Sadeh. Tal Sadeh, Tel Aviv University
Euro Adoption in the Mid of the Crises The Baltic States in Comparative Perspective . Assem Dandashly, Maastricht University; Amy Verdun, University of Victoria
Spain as a proxy for the survival of the Eurozone. Sebastián Royo, Suffolk University
Discussant: Waltraud Schelkle, London School of Economics
176. EU External Relations Following the Arab Spring: Change and Continuity
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23Chairs: Sarah Wolff, Queen Mary, University of London; Edith Drieskens, Leuven University Participants:
New Diplomacy? Contrasting the EU’s strategies in the Levant and Gulf countries. Jamal Shahin, University of Amsterdam
A renewed Euro-Arab Dialogue? EU and Arab League in a changing international security environment. Elisabeth Johansson-Nogues, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals
The Challenge of Change in North Africa: The litmus test for EU Structural Diplomacy. Patrick Holden, School of Management, Portsmouth University
Spring is a new beginning? EU sanctions following the Arab Spring. Clara Portela, Singapore Management University; Edith Drieskens, Leuven University
EU security practices in the Mediterranean region, Redux? Sarah Wolff, Queen Mary, University of London
Discussant: Louise Van Schaik, Netherlands Institute for International Relations, Clingendael
177. Intra-European Migration: Diverse Causes, Forms, and Consequences
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17Chairs: Sören Carlson, Freie Universität BerlinHumboldt-Universität zu Berlin; Roland Verwiebe, University of Vienna Participants:
“Leaving the worst behind” – an analysis of Italian graduates’ migratory decision-making processes. Francesca Conti, The American University of Rome
Who profits from Germany’s culture of welcome? The impact of changing opportunity structures on labour market integration of new immigrants. Andreas Ette, Federal Institute for Population Research; Rabea Mundil-Schwarz, Federal Statistical Office; Lenore
Sauer, Federal Institute for Population ResearchMobility trajectories of German students after
graduating abroad. Sören Carlson, Freie Universität BerlinHumboldt-Universität zu Berlin
The influence of European student mobility on European identity formation. Christof Van Mol, Universiteit Antwerpen
Discussants: Roland Verwiebe, University of Vienna; Adrian Favell, Sciences Po
178. Labor and the State in Historical Perspective 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59
Chairs: Amel Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania Participants:
State and Labor in Post-Communist Europe: What Difference Did Democracy Make? Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania
Political Entrepreneurship, Institutional Innovation, and State Capacity: The Case of the 1847 Ten Hour Act in Britain. Frieda Fuchs, Oberlin College
Imagine ALL the People: Parties, Labor Market Institutions and the Evolution of Tax Regimes. Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University
The Consequences of Electoral Systems in Early Democracies: The Case of Smp. Amel Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
179. LGBTQ Challenges Across Europe 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21
Chair: David Paternotte, Free University of Brussels Participants:
Hate Crime Laws Versus Freedom of Speech in Estonia. Kari Käsper, Tallinn University of Technology; Marianne Meiorg, Tallinn University of Technology
Contesting Gender Equality in Europe: Gender Identity and Gender Expression. Mieke Verloo, IWM, Institute for Human Sciences; Anna van Der Vleuten, Radboud University Nijmegen
The EU Enlargement: A Boost or Hindrance for LGBT Rights in Central and Eastern Europe? Koen Slootmaeckers, University of Leuven; Heleen Touquet, University of Leuven
Claiming an Identity They Told Me to Deconstruct: The Struggles of a Trans Movement. Joz Motmans, University of Antwerp; Janneke van der Ros, Lillehammer University College
European Attitudes on Adoption by Same-Sex Couples. Judit Takács, Institute of Sociology of The Hungarian Academy of Sciences; Ivett Szalma, Corvinus University of Budapest
Discussant: Isabelle Engeli, University of Ottawa
180. Old Winners in New Bottles? The Politics of Adjustment in Southern Europe
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14Chair: Kenneth Dubin, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Participants:
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Adjustment in Really Hard Times: The Structural Reform Agenda in Southern Europe. Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics and Political Science
Varieties of Statism: Economic regulation and Economic redistribution in Southern Europe. Victor Lapuente, University of Gothenburg
Redefining insiders: labor market and pension reform in Spain. Kenneth Dubin, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Partial access: Undermining universality and its consequences in Spanish health care. Scott Greer, University of Michigan School of Public Health
Multiple crises? Strategies in Dismantling Public Policies in Spain. Jacint Jordana, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Discussant: Daniel Clegg, University of Edinburgh
181. The “Battle for the Brains”: Selective Migration Policies, Practices, and Outcomes
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chair: Dietrich Thraenhardt, Universitaet Muenster Participants:
High-skilled immigration and coalitions: competition for ‘the best and brightest’. Lucie Cerna, University of Oxford
Selective Migration Policy Models and Changing Realities of Implementation. Rey Koslowski, University at Albany
Gender, skilled migration, and skilled migrants: some European developments. Eleonore Kofman, Middlesex University
Doing the Business: Variegation, Migration, and the Cultural Dimensions of Business Praxis – The Experiences of the French Highly-Skilled in London. Jon Mulholland, Middlesex University; Louise Ryan, Middlesex University
Discussant: Jeroen Doomernik, University of Amsterdam
182. Institutions and Processes in EU Decision-Making 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23
Participants:Early Reflections On the Early Warning Mechanism:
Assessing National Parliaments’ Influence On EU Legislation After Lisbon. Ian Cooper, University of Oslo
Why the EU Does Not Learn: Cases From the Eurocrisis. Claire Dunlop, University of Exeter; Claudio Radaelli, University of Exeter; Jonathan Kamkhaji, University of Exeter
Domestic Parliamentary Control Over the European Council and Eurozone Summits: The Case of Portugal. Davor Jancic, London School of Economics and Political Science
Salience, Path Dependency, and the Advocacy Coalition Between the European Commission and the Danish Council Presidency: Why the EU Opened a Visa Liberalization Process with Turkey. Alexander
Bürgin, Izmir University of EconomisConsensus As Implicit Dissent in the EU Council of
Ministers (1986-2010). Stephanie Novak, Hertie School of Governance
Discussant: Tina Freyburg, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich
183. Interest, Expertise, and Representation in the EU 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03
Chair: Rosa Sanchez Salgado, University of Amsterdam Participants:
A Politics of Expertise? The Lobbying Dimension of Expert Groups in the European Union. Adam Chalmers, Leiden University
How Do They Do It? Members of the European Parliament’ Practices of Democratic Representation. Yoav shemer Kunz, University of Strasbourg / Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
The Politics of Expertise in the Case of the EU’s Governance of Medical Biotechnologies. Annabelle Littoz-Monnet, Graduate Institute of International Relations
How Civil Society Organizations Engage in Representation in the EU. Sandra Kröger, University of Exeter
Bulgarian Political Parties and EU: Organizational Change and Intra-Party Relations. Dragomir Stoyanov, Sofia University / City College
Discussant: Marco Calaresu, University of Sassari
184. Learning from Episodes in Health Policy 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18C
Chair: Patrick Brown, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Transnational Social Learning As a Driver of Health Policy Reform in Turkey. Tuba Agartan, Providence College
“The Great Budapest Rat Massacre”: The Politics of Urban Public Health. Virag Molnar, New School for Social Research
Agent-Based Modeling for Policy-Making: A Case for Studying Health Systems Efficiency. Javier Alvarez-Galvez, Universidad Loyola Andalucia
Autonomia Alla Italiana: Aging in Uncertain Times for Italian Women in Mid-Life. Laura Vares, Brown University
Discussant: Sigrun Olafsdottir, Boston University
185. National and EU Courts in the New European System 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis E0.02 (VOC Room)
Participants:Red Lights: Understanding National Courts’
Declarations of Unonstitutionality of European Union Treaties. Pablo Castillo Ortiz, Spanish National Council for Scientific Research
Domestic Judicial Defiance in the European Union. Arthur Dyevre, Max Planck Institute for International and Comparative Law
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A Comprehensive Analysis of the Enforcement and Application of European Union Law. Brooke Luetgert, Sabanci University; Tanja Dannwolf, University of Mannheim
Discussant: Marie-Laure Basilien-Gainche, Institut Universitaire de France
186. Roma: Politics and Protest 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04
Chair: Tatjana Thelen, University of Vienna Participants:
Law As Weapon of the Weak? A Comparative Analysis of Roma and Women’s Groups Legal Mobilisation At the EU Level. Sophie Jacquot, Université catholique de Louvain; Tommaso Vitale, Sciences Po
Roma Women’s Voices and Silences On Unjust Power Regimes. Eniko Vincze, Babes-Bolyai University
Citizens Like No Other. Contextual and Individual Explanations of Attitudes towards Roma Population in the EU. Barbulescu Roxana, European University Institute; Laurie Beaudonnet, Universite de Montreal
Slovak Roma in Municipal Politics. David Scheffel, Thompson Rivers University
The “Roma Question”: Exclusion and Threat in the Making of European Identity. Volha Charnysh, Harvard University; Ruxandra Paul, Harvard University
187. The Far Right In Europe II: Country Cases and Membership
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17Chair: Donald Kalb, Central European University Participants:
Who Are the Members of Front National? Evidence From Interview Research. Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa
The Normalisation of the Extreme Right and the Crisis of Democracy: The French Case. Aurelien Mondon, University of Bath
Post-Colonial Social Segmentation, Association Membership and Far-Right Support. John Veugelers, University of Toronto; Gabriel Menard, University of Toronto; Pierre Permingeat, McGill University
The Life and Death of a “Populist” Party: Understanding the Trajectory of the Samoobrona Movement in Contemporary Poland. Cédric Pellen, CEVIPOL - Université Libre de Bruxelles
Becoming an Extremist: Lifestyles, Scenes, and Right-Wing Radicalization in Germany. Daniel Koehler, EXIT Germany; Cynthia Miller-Idriss, New York University
Discussant: Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford
188. The Role of Media in Contemporary European Politics
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18DChair: Sophie Lecheler, University of Amsterdam Participants:
The Transformative Power of Alternative Media: The Case of Taraf in Turkey. Gozde Yilmaz, Middle East Technical University
The Dynamics of Political Decentralization: Analyzing the Interrelation Between Political Parties and the Media in Spain. Laura Chaqués-Bonafont, University of Barcelona and IBEI
Mediatization, Crisis and Self-Determination: The Pragmatic Framing in the Context of the Political Conflict Between Spain and Catalonia. Enric Castelló, Universitat Rovira i Virgili
(N)Euro(tics): A Rhetorical Analysis of Dutch and American Media Coverage of Euro Anxiety and the Rise of the “Neuro.” Daphne Desser, University of Hawaii
Representation of Turkey’s EU Bid in European Media: The Role of National Policies and Critical Junctures. Saime Ozcurumez, Bilkent University; Nermin Aydemir, Bilkent University
189. Welfare State Restructuring and Decentralization 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18B
Chair: J. Timo Weishaupt, University of Mannheim Participants:
The Emergence (and Crisis?) of Welfare Regions in Italy (1981-2011). A Quantitative Analysis. Davide Vampa, European University Institute
Between Equity and Flexibility? Understanding Divergences in the Territorial Organizations of Active Welfare States. Mariely Lopez-Santana, George Mason University
Extending and Standardising Care: Healthcare Reform in France and Italy. Anthony Kevins, McGill University
Decentralization and the Welfare State: Territorial Disparities, Regional Governments and Political Parties. Hanna Kleider, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Discussant: Jon Kvist, University of Southern Denmark
190. Nationalism, Populism and Democracy in Europe (Presidential Plenary)
6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: John Bowen, Washington University in St. Louis Participants:
Genevieve Zubrzycki, University of Michigan Rogers Brubaker, University of California, Los Angeles Donatella Della Porta, European University Institute Joep Leerssen, University of Amsterdam
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Thursday, June 27of Luxembourg; Patrick Dumont, University of Luxembourg
Does Europeanization Change Executive–Legislative Relations? Executive Dominance and Parliamentary Responses in Germany. Lars Maeder, University of Mannheim
Discussant: Christine Arnold, Maastricht University
195. Tolerant Europe: The Philosophers’ Tolerance 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55
Chair: Fernanda Gallo, University of Lugano Participants:
The cautious path of European freedom of consciousness: John Locke’s idea of tolerance. Giuseppe Foscari, University of Salerno
Tolerance as an icon: Fénelon’s Telemachus and morality in eighteenth-century European iconography. Francesco Ruvolo, University of Pavia
Montesquieu’s notion of toleration: On the opposition between Europe and the Islamic world. Matthew D’Auria, University of Salerno
Voltaire and the Quakers: The non-dangerousness of tolerance. Silvana Sciarrotta, University of Salerno
Voltaire’s Europe between religious tolerance and the rule of law. Laura Lanzillo, University of Bologna
Discussant: Adriano Vinale, University of Salerno
196. Changing Nordic Welfare States? Crisis, Change, and Consequences
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Jon Kvist, University of Southern Denmark Participants:
Development or dismantlement of the Nordic welfare model? Using fsQCA to study policy and regime change in seven European countries. Olli Kangas, Social Insurance Institution of Finland
The Nordic labour market models: Adjustment in turbulent times. Jon Erik Dølvik, Fafo Institute For Labour and Social Research
Jeopardizing the future of welfare in spite of economic sustainability: Political Changes of the Danish Welfare State in the Wake of the Economic Crisis. Jørgen Andersen, Aalborg University
Labour market security and insecurity: Changes in Swedish labour market. Tomas Berglund, University of Gothenburg
Reinvigorating the Nordic Welfare Model as a way out of the Crisis. Stefan Olafsson, University of Iceland
Discussant: Bruno Palier, Centre d’Études Européennes, Sciences Po
197. Dividing United Europe. Stereotypes, Prejudices, and the European (Economic) Crisis
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.04Chair: Aline Sierp, Maastricht University Participants:
Framing PIGS to clean their own stable. Jonas Van Vossole, Coimbra University
191. Presidential Plenary Reception 7:45 to 9:00 PM - The ZuiderkerkZuiderkerkhof 72, Amsterdam
192. Challenging Male-Normed Austerity Programs 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59
Chair: Christina Xydias, Clarkson University Participants:
Ruling in a Crisis: Female Leaders and Intersectionality in Public Policy Reform. Angelika von Wahl, Lafayette College; Annette Henninger, Phillips University Marburg
Ode to the schwäbische Hausfrau: Reflections on Gender Budgeting versus Money-Management among EU Member States. Joyce Marie Mushaben, University of Missouri-St. Louis
Saving the Euro, securing child care: The Fiscal Pact and its unintended gender impact in Germany. Gabriele Abels, University of Tuebingen; Julia Lepperhoff, Evangelische Hochschule Berlin
Discussant: Waltraud Schelkle, London School of Economics
193. Frozen Formations I: Performance and Popular Culture
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18CChair: Herman Roodenburg, Meertens Institute Participants:
African by Design: Self-styling and authentication among Afro-Dutch youth in Amsterdam. Marleen de Witte, VU University Amsterdam
Ordinary People: Performing Dutchness in a popular sing-along culture.. Irene Stengs, Meertens Institute
Branding Dutchness? Dutchness and the creative industry. Sophie Elpers, Meertens Institute
Discussant: Francio Guadeloupe, University of Amsterdam
194. The Europeanization of National Parliamentary Agendas
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.21Chairs: Lars Maeder, University of Mannheim; Arco Timmermans, Montesquieu Institute and Leiden University Participants:
Parliamentary Warfare and European Integration: Dealing with a Subject That Voters Dislike. Marcelo Jenny, University of Vienna; Wolfgang Müller, University of Vienna
Parliamentary Attention to EU Issues in Spain. Anna Maria Palau, University of Barcelona
Europeanization of the Italian Parliament: Beyond the First Evidence. Marco Giuliani, University of Milan; Enrico Borghetto, University of Milan
How the Legislature in Luxembourg Deals with Europeanization. Astrid Spreitzer, University
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Pictorial stereotypes in the Euro crisis. Horst-Alfred Heinrich, University of Passau; Bernhard Stahl, University of Passau
From pro-Europeanism to euro-scepticism. The transformation of the Greek society: 2008-2012. Anna Elisabeth Tsakona, ETH Zurich
‘The good, the bad and the ugly’: stereotypes, prejudices and emotions on media representation of the EU financial crisis. Theofanis Exadaktylos, University of Surrey; Tereza Capelos, University of Surrey
The Long Road to Europe: Media Wars and Wariness in Serbia. Alexander Chaplin, VU University Amsterdam
Discussant: Christian Karner, University of Nottingham
198. Does Memory Matter to the European Union’s Future? (Book Panel)
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 4.04Chair: Stella Ghervas, Maison des Sciences de l’Homme de l’Aquitaine (MSHA) Participants:
Gerard Van der Ree, University College Utrecht Jane Gingrich, University of Minnesota Catherine Guisan, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
Discussant: Francesco Maiolo, University College Utrecht
199. Governance of East-West Migration within Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08
Chairs: Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam; Erik Snel, Erasmus University Rotterdam Participants:
Labour Market Central Europe: Czechs, Hungarians, Poles and Slovaks in Austria. Ursula Reeger, Austrian Academy of Sciences; Heinz Fassman, University of Vienna; Josef Kohlbacher, University of Vienna
Migration or mobility? Patterns of post-accession migration flows from Poland.. Pawel Kaczmarczyk, University of Warsaw
The multi-level governance of CEE migration in the Netherlands. . Godfried Engbersen, Erasmus University Rotterdam; Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam; Erik Snel, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Discussant: Han Entzinger, Erasmus University Rotterdam
200. Immigration and Social Systems: Collected Essays of Michael Bommes (Book Panel)
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17Participants:
Christina Boswell, University of Edinburgh Gianni D’Amato, University of Neuchatel Andrew Geddes, University of Sheffield Giuseppe Sciortino, University of Trento
201. Islam in Europe Reconsidered: Comparative Approaches
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18AChair: Jonathan Laurence, Boston College
Participants:Still Resilient or Adaptable Islam? Multiculturalism,
Religion, and Migrants’ Claims-Making for Group Demands in Britain, the Netherlands and France. Paul Statham, University of Sussex
A struggle over religious rights? How Muslim minorities and natives view the accommodation of religion in six European countries. Sarah Carol, Social Science Center Berlin (WZB); Ines Michalowski, Social Science Research Center Berlin
Religious fundamentalism and outgroup hostility among Muslims and Christians in six European countries. Ruud Koopmans, Social Science Research Center Berlin
Western Muslims and Alienation: Connecting Religiosity with Sociopolitical Engagement . Justin Gest, Harvard University
Discussant: Jonathan Laurence, Boston College
202. Pathways to Crisis: The Political Mediation of Economic Pressures in the Eurozone Periphery
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14Chair: John Stephens, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Participants:
European Armaments: Dependence and Austerity. Kaija Schilde, Boston University
Portugal. Spyros Blavoukos, Athens University of Economics And Business
Spain. Sebastian Dellepiane, University of StrathclydeIreland. Niamh Hardiman, University College DublinGreece. George Pagoulatos, Athens University of
Economics And Business Discussant: Dorothee Bohle, Central European University
203. Remembering Albert Hirschman: From Euorpean To Universal Intellectual, 1915 - 2012 (Roundtable)
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Peter Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego Participants:
Claus Offe, Hertie School of Governance Marion Fourcade, University of California, Berkeley Emma Rothschild, Harvard University Marcello De Cecco, LUISS University
204. Understanding Contemporary Waves of Protest (Roundtable)
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chair: Cristina Flesher Fominaya, University of Aberdeen Participants:
Laurence Cox, National University of Ireland, Maynooth Claire Saunders, University of Southampton Andrea Teti, University of Aberdeen Vittorio Sergi, University of Urbino Markos Vogiatzoglou, European University Institute
Discussant: Alice Mattoni, University of Pittsburgh
205. The Netherlands in Comparative Context: Reverting
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to Consociation or Building Toward a New Normal? (Roundtable)
9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chair: Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Participants:
Hans Daalder, Leiden University Sarah de Lange, University of Amsterdam Wouter van der Brug, University of Amsterdam Steven Wolinetz, Memorial University of Newfoundland Hans Goslinga, Trouw
206. The Transformation of Industrial Relations in Coordinated Market Economies
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17Chair: Chris Howell, Oberlin College Participants:
Coordinating Liberalization: The Trajectory of Swedish Industrial Relations. Chris Howell, Oberlin College
German Industrial Relations: Softening Institutions, Hardening Growth Model. Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva; Chiara Benassi, London School of Economics and Political Science
No way to escape imbalances in the Eurozone? Three sources for Germany’s export dependency: Fiscal federalism, social insurance, and industrial relations. Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance
The Never-Ending and Possibly Counterproductive Search for Flexibility in Italian Industrial Relations. Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva
Discussant: Kathleen Thelen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
207. War and the Welfare State: Conditions, Mechanisms, Effects
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23Chairs: Klaus Petersen, University of Southern Denmark; Herbert Obinger, University of Bremen Participants:
Military as social policy actors. Peter Starke, University of Bremen
War and social policy in Finland. Pauli Kettunen, University of Helsinki
Total war and welfare state development. Herbert Obinger, University of Bremen
Guns and/or butter? The case of Denmark. Klaus Petersen, University of Southern Denmark
Discussant: Matthieu Leimgruber, University of Geneva
208. Democracy Challenged: Cases From Eastern Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.22
Chair: Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University Participants:
Ethnic Minorities and Left Party Response: Explaining Party Competition in Eastern Europe. Jan Rovny, University of Gothenburg
The C.I.A. Prison in Poland. Fault, Responsibility and the Europeanization of Justice. Karolina Follis, Lancaster University
The Anti-Politics of Organized Civil Society in Post-Communist Poland. Katarzyna Jezierska, Gothenburg University, Center for European Research
War of Words: Securitizing Democracy in Romanian Politics. Mihaela Racovita, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Roxana Mihaila, University of Sussex, Sussex European Institute; Cosmina Tanasoiu, American University In Bulgaria
A case of mechanical democratization – Of coup d’état, dormant civil society and the politicization of justice in Romania, five years after its EU accession. Corina Folescu, Durham University
Discussant: Andreas von Staden, University of St. Gallen
209. European and National Identity 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis 2.03
Chair: Emmanuelle Saada, Columbia University Participants:
Who Are the Europeans? Reassessing Fligstein’s “Class Project” Paradigm. Jan Delhey, Jacobs University; Emanuel Deutschmann, Jacobs University / Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences
Citizens’ Identities: The Ties That Bind? Florian Stoeckel, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Rethinking European Identity in the Transnational Migration within Europe: A Sociological Analysis of Neapolitans in Barcelona. Marco Rossano, University of Barcelona
The European Identity and the Public Support for European Integration, a Critical Perspective. Cyril Jayet, EHESS
Studying European Citizens’ Attitudes: Potential and Limits of Secondary Qualitative Data Analysis. Virginie Van Ingelgom, Université catholique de Louvain
Discussant: Philippe Perchoc, Université Catholique de Louvain
210. Issues In EU Trade 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18B
Chair: Cornelia Woll, Sciences Po Participants:
Competition Versus Cooperation: Supply Chain Organization and the Construction of Luxury in French and Italian Wine Markets. Betsy Carter, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies / University of California, Berkeley
Economic Openness and Preferences for Spending: The Role of Regional Concentration. Irene Menendez, Oxford University
Special Relations, Special Foreign Policy? the Franco-German Friendship, French and German Trade Preferences, and the EU Position in Gatt/WTO Negotiations. Gerry Alons, Radboud University Nijmegen
Intergovernmental or Supranational? A Quantitative Inquiry Into the Drivers of the European Union’s
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Bilateral Tariff Concessions. Bart Kerremans, KU Leuven; Johan Adriaensen, KU Leuven; Yf Reykers, KU Leuven
Going Beyond Trade? an Inquiry Into the Role of the Lead Ministry in Trade Policy. Johan Adriaensen, KU Leuven
Discussant: Bart Kerremans, KU Leuven
211. The Financial Crisis, Transnational Governance, and National Systems
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23Chair: Crister Garrett, Universität Leipzig Participants:
Multinational Firms in Bilateral Institutions: Transatlantic Regulatory Cooperation. Hans Diels, University of Antwerp
EU Financial Reform: Between globalization and parliamentarization. Christilla Roederer-Rynning, University of Southern Denmark; Justin Greenwood, Robert Gordon University
Pyrrhic Victory or Just Bad Timing? the Influence of ‘Uploading’ EU Social Standards On the Ratification of Ilo Conventions. Guido Schwellnus, University of Vienna
Improving Compliance with Global Rules: The Role of the EU Regional Tier of Governance. Sarah McLaughlin, Harvard University
Discussant: Gabriel Siles-Brugge, University of Manchester
212. Understanding Individual Preferences in Partisanship and Policy
9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18DParticipants:
Territory, Identity, and Federalist Preferences: Survey and Experimental Evidence. Alexander Kuo, Cornell University; José Fernández-Albertos, Institute of Public Goods And Policies; Laia Balcells, Duke University
Union Membership and Preferences for Redistribution in Europe. Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva; Nadja Mosimann, University of Geneva
The Boundaries of Solidarity. How the Territorial Level of Redistribution Influences Tax Compliance. Theresa Kuhn, University of Oxford
The Origins and Limits of Red and Green Consumerism in Europe. Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam; Luc Fransen, Leiden University
Using Survey Experiments to Understand Individuals’ Trade Preferences. Gabriele Spilker, ETH Zurich; Lena Schaffer, ETH Zurich
Discussant: Lucy Barnes, University of Oxford
213. Frozen Formations II: The National, Everyday Life, and Affect
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18CChair: Irene Stengs, Meertens Institute Participants:
Secularism, autochthony and Christian nostalgia: the ambiguous quest for ‘Dutchness’ seen through
the lens of religion. Daan Beekers, VU University Amsterdam
The National Thing: Fabricating a German Essence in Multikulti Berlin. Nitzan Shoshan, El Colegio de Mexico
The Problem of Dutchness. Articulating autochthony in everyday discourse. Paul Mepschen, University of Amsterdam
Dutchness and the aesthetics of persuasion. Herman Roodenburg, Meertens Institute
Discussant: Oscar Verlaaik, University of Amsterdam
214. Recent Changes in Policies and Institutions of Family Policies
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04Chair: Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg Participants:
Maternal Employment and the State: Varieties of Familialism in Post-Socialist Countries. Jana Javornik, Umeå University and University of Leeds
Conceptualising Contemporary Family Policy. Mary Daly, Oxford University
The New Politics of Family Policy in Hungary, Poland and Romania Since the EU Accession: Domestic Vs. International Influences. Tomasz Inglot, Minnesota State University, Mankato; Dorottya Szikra, ELTE University; Cristina Rat, Babes-Bolayi University, Cluj-Napoca
Path Dependence Regained: Crisis and Family Policies in Spain. Ana Guillen, University of Oviedo; Margarita León, ‘Rmón y Cajal’, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona
Determinants of a Silent (R)Evolution: Understanding the Expansion of Family Policy in Rich OECD Countries. Martin Seeleib-Kaiser, University of Oxford; Emmanuele Ferragina, Oxford University
Discussant: Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg
215. The Evolution of Policy Issues in Comparative Perspective
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21Chair: Frank Baumgartner, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Participants:
Cohabiting on the European Council’s Agenda: Expounding the Evolution of Issue Linkages. Petya Alexandrova, Montesquieu Institute / Leiden University
Law and Order Policy and Politics in a Cross-National Perspective. Lisa Miller, Rutgers University
Organized Crime as a Travelling Problem: Agenda Setting in the European Council and the European Commission. Leticia Elias, Montesquieu Institute /Leiden University
A Party Competition Theory of Governing Party Agendas: Evidence from the U.S. and U.K.. Will Jennings, University of Southampton; Jane Green, University of Manchester
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Discussant: Gerard Breeman, Wageningen University
216. Tolerant Europe: Policies and Practices (Part I) 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55
Chair: Giuseppe Foscari, University of Salerno Participants:
Ambiguities in the history of toleration in eighteenth-century Europe. Ernst Wangermann, University of Salzburg
The tolerant policy of the Habsburg authorities towards the Orthodox People of South-eastern Europe: The formation of a new European Idea (18th-early 19th century). Olga Katsiardi-Hering, University of Athens; Ikaros Mantouvalos, Democritus University of Thrace
Discussant: Jan Vermeiren, University of East Anglia
217. Transnational Practices and Identification in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17
Participants:Doing Europe, Feeling European: Which Transnational
Experiences Strengthen European Identity? Jan Delhey, Jacobs University; Jessica Hotze, Universität Bremen; Steffen Mau, University of Bremen
European Identification in the Face of 2008 Economic Crisis: new challenges and prospects. Fulya Apaydin, IBEI; Irina Ciornei, IBEI
Socialization, Transnational adult practices, and identification.. Juan Díez Medrano, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid; Teresa Castro Martín, Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales (CISC); Clara Cortina, Universidad Pompeu Fabra
Discussant: Helga de Valk, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
218. Which “Women” Are Represented in a Period of Crisis? Intersectionality and Representation
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Angelika von Wahl, Lafayette College Participants:
Which “Women” Are Represented in a Period of Crisis? Intersectionality and Representation in Germany. Louise Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami
Intersectionality, Gender and Media Coverage of Political Campaigns for German Minister President. Sarah Wiliarty, Wesleyan University
German Citizenship Legislation As An Intersectional Process. Christina Xydias, Clarkson University
Migration, Gender, and the Politics of Integration in Germany . Barbara Donovan, Wesleyan College
Discussant: Annette Henninger, Phillips University Marburg
219. EU Policies In a Global Perspective: Shaping Or Taking International Regimes?
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23Chair: Gerda Falkner, University of Vienna Participants:
The EU as a Policy Exporter: A Conceptual Framework. Patrick Müller, Institute For European Integration
ResearchSocial Rights: The EU and the International Labour
Organization. Guido Schwellnus, University of Vienna
Preventing Unwanted Imports: the EU Role in Global Banking and Accounting Regulation. Zdenek Kudrna, University of Vienna - Institute for European Integration Research
EU Policy Export: Cross-comparative Conclusions. Gerda Falkner, University of Vienna
Discussants: Liesbet Hooghe, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Michael Zürn, WZB – Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung
220. Europeanization, Legal Reform, and the Politics of Tolerance in Turkey
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04Chair: Lale Yalcin-Heckmann, University of Pardubice, the Czech Republic Participants:
Paradoxes of Tolerance: Good Minorities, Bad Minorities and Constitution Making in Turkey. Ceren Ozgul, CUNY Graduate Center
“Europeanization” and undocumented migrants’ rights in/through spaces of informal labor. Ayse Parla, Sabanc University
Limits of the ‘Tolerable’: Europeanization, Multiculturalism, and Freedom of the Arts in Turkey. Banu Karaca, Sabanci University
Dialectics of tolerance and exclusion: The rise and collapse of Ottomanism from above and Ottomanism from below. Yektan Turkyilmaz, Duke University
Discussant: Lami Tokuzlu, Bilgi University
221. Health, Politics, and Inequalities in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17
Chairs: Jason Beckfield, Harvard University; Sigrun Olafsdottir, Boston University Participants:
Migrant Health in Europe: A Cross-National Analysis of the ‘Healthy Immigrant Effect’. Elyas Bakhtiari, Boston University
Population mental health and education-labour market misfit. Piet Bracke, Ghent University; Sarah Missinne, Ghent University; Elise Pattyn, Ghent University
Winners and losers in contrasting labour markets? Socio-economic and spatial inequalities in the population health effects of economic recession and economic growth. Clare Bambra, Durham University
The Health Consequences of a Collapsed Economy: Evaluating the Impact of the Economic Crisis in Iceland on Health and Health Inequalities. Asa Asgeirsdottir, University of Iceland; Sigrun Olafsdottir, Boston University; Stefan Jonsson, University of Iceland
Discussant: Jason Beckfield, Harvard University
222. Identifying Slave-Ownership in European Cities:
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Tracing the Presence and Legacy of Trans-Atlantic Slavery ‘At Home’ in Europe
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08Chair: Dienke Hondius, VU University Amsterdam Participants:
The Memorial Culture of Slavery in Cities in France. Myriam Cottias, Myriam Cottias, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris
Junior Partners? Investment, profit, and ownership in the German lands. Eve Rosenhaft, University of Liverpool
The Spanish Merchant Class and the Slave Trade. Martin Rodrigo y Alharilla, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona
New research on slavery and slave-ownership in Spain. Aurélia Martín Casares, Universidad de Granada, Spain
Cultural Historical analysis of British Slave Owners. Catherine Hall, University College London
Economic Historical analysis of London Slave Owners. Nicholas Draper, University College London
Presenting a Database of British Slave-Owners. Keith McClelland, University College London
Discussant: Susan Legêne, VU University Amsterdam
223. Looking For Europe: How The Immigration and Asylum Policies Construct (or Not) the EU Identity
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chair: Marie-Laure Basilien-Gainche, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3Institut Universitaire de France Participants:
Is There Solidarity On Asylum and Migration in the EU? Iris Goldner, University of Zagreb
The Competitive Application of the National and European Laws to the Third Country Nationals. Héloïse Gicquel, Université Montesquieu Bordeaux IV
The Principle of Mutual Confidence in the Immigration and Asylum Policy of the EU. Tania Racho, University Paris II - Panthéon-Assas
EU Techniques of Immigration Management and Immigrants’ Legal Identity Building. an Empirical Enquiry. Ounia Doukouré, University of California, Berkeley / Stanford University / European University Institute
European Asylum Support Office: An Effective Answer to Europeanization of Asylum Policy? Ilaria Vianello, European University Institute
How Shall the Strengthening the EU Borders From within Be Understood? Is It Yet Again about Consolidating Identity Based On Exclusion? Karolina Podstawa, European University Institute
Discussant: Flora Goudappel, Erasmus School of Law
224. Multi-Jurisdictional Embeddedness: Sub-State Authorities in Global Governance
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18BChairs: Lisa Dellmuth, Stockholm University; Michael Tatham, University of Bergen
Participants:Out of Many, One? The Policy Portfolio of Brussels’
Based Regional Interests. Tom Donas, University of Antwerp; Jan Beyers, University of Antwerp
The home view on regional paradiplomacy: Exploring Brussels regional office usefulness. Michael Tatham, University of Bergen; Michael Bauer, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Subnational Government and Compliance with European Human Rights Law. Theresa Squatrito, Stockholm University; Lisa Dellmuth, Stockholm University
Overlapping states and the scalar politics of millionaire’s taxes in contemporary America. Darel Paul, Willians University
Discussant: Sarah McLaughlin, Harvard University
225. New Migrants, Old Responses? Ethnicity and Social Capital in the Experiences of East European Migrants in Britain
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18AChair: Paul Statham, University of Sussex Participants:
Denying discrimination: East European migrant workers in the UK. Jon Fox, University of Bristol; Laura Morosanu, University of Sussex; Eszter Szilassy, University of Bristol
‘We stick to ourselves’: The interaction between social and human capitals amongst post-accession Poles in Southampton. Derek McGhee, University of Southampton
‘No smoke without fire’: Strategies of coping with stigmatised migrant identities. Laura Morosanu, University of Sussex; Jon Fox, University of Bristol
Polish migrants, bridging and bonding networks: accessing resources and constructing relationships post-migration. Louise Ryan, Middlesex University
Discussant: Jan Grill, University of Manchester
226. Old and New Challenges of European Multilingualism 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13
Chair: László Marácz, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Urban multilingualisms compared: How language ideologies in late Habsburg cities differed from their current counterparts. Susan Gal, University of Chicago
The use and impact of English and migrant languages in Brussels. Rudi Janssens, Vrije Universiteit Brussel / BRIO
Can minority language rights be a model for the integration of migrant languages in Europe? László Marácz, University of Amsterdam
Globalization and Europeanization as challenges to linguistic homogeneity and homogenization . Virginie Mamadouh, University of Amsterdam
LPP selection and design: reassessing the links between. François Grin, University of Geneva
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Discussant: François Grin, University of Geneva
227. The European Research Area – Issues and Approaches 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14
Chairs: Liudvika Leisyte, University of Twente; Michael Dobbins, Universität Konstanz Participants:
The European Research Area and a Competitive European Knowledge. Lucie Cerna, Leiden University / University of Oxford; Meng-Hsuan Chou, Stanford University
Research Evaluation and Its Implications for Academic Research in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. Liudvika Leisyte, University of Twente; Don Westerheijden, University of Twente
French Research Governance After Shanghai: More State, More Market and More Humboldt. Michael Dobbins, Universität Konstanz
The New Finnish Research Funding Model and Its Implications for Academic Research. Jani Ursin, University of Jyväskylä; Terhi Nokalla, University of Jyväskylä
Higher Education in Europe and the European Commission. Katharina Krug, European Commission, DG EAC
The Impact of Academic Inbreeding On Academic Research – Implications for European Research Area. Hugo Horta, Instituto Superior Technico
Discussant: Don Westerheijden, University of Twente
228. The EU’s Crisis Governance: Shifts in Governance Mechanisms and Implications for Welfare State Reform
11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chair: Caroline de la Porte, University of Southern Denmark, Odense Participants:
The Economic Crisis, the EU, and National Welfare State Reforms in the 21st Century. Jon Kvist, University of Southern Denmark
Still committed to beating the heat? Analyzing the implications of the EU crisis strategy for its ‘sustainable growth’ agenda. Sabina Stiller, Wageningen University
The European Commission’s ‘Social’ Agenda: an analysis of changing policy attention of the European Commission 1995 – 2012. Minna van Gerven, University of Twente
The EU’s new social agenda: an analysis. Philippe Pochet, Université catholique de Louvain
Discussant: David Natali, University of Bologna
229. The Sources and Mechanisms of Long-Run Persistence: Imperial Legacies and Political Development
11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03Chair: Grzegorz Ekiert, Harvard University Participants:
Long-Run Persistence of Political Attitudes and Behavior: A Focus on Mechanisms. Leonid
Peisakhin, Juan March InstituteA Missing Historical Variable? Long Run Effects of
Landholding Inequality in Elections in Germany and Poland, 1895-2009. Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University; Konstantin Kashin, Harvard University
Communist Legacies and post-communist political participation. Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University; Joshua Tucker, New York University
Irrigation and Inequality: Canal Colonisation in the British Punjab, 1880-1940. Adeel Malik, Oxford University
Discussant: Grzegorz Ekiert, Harvard
230. Wage Relations 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23
Chair: Chris Howell, Oberlin College Participants:
Wage Relativities, Welfare State Development, and the Labor Union Support for Wage Restraint. Dennie Oude Nijhuis, Leiden University
Wage Bargaining Institutions and the Euro-Crisis. Jelle Visser, University of Amsterdam
Competitive Disadvantage? The Dutch Wage Bargaining Model Under the Single Currency. Ivan Dumka, University of Victoria
Varieties of Labour Markets: Structural Unemployment and Tax Rates At the Minimum Wage. Pierce O'Reilly, Columbia University
Discussant: Chris Howell, Oberlin College
231. Crisis Breakdown & Recovery in 20th-Century Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22
Chair: Marco Simoni, London School of Economics and Political Science Participants:
Economic Crisis and the Breakdown of Democracy in the Interwar Years: A Reassessment. Svend-Erik Skaaning, Aarhus University; Jørgen Møller, Aarhus University
The European Gap: What We Can Learn From the Films of the Marshall Plan to Overcome the European Crisis. Frank Mehring, Radboud University Nijmegen
Politics by Default: Debt Crisis Bargaining and the Lessons of the 1930s for the Present. Robert Shum, SUNY at Brockport; Zsofia Barta, European University Institute
Rethinking the Effects of Neoliberal Retrenchment and Deeply Divided Societies On Welfare States: The Politics of “Loyalty Benefits” in Israel. Michael Shalev, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Alon Yakter, University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Exploring the Liberal Origin of European Integration: The Historical Politics of the European Recovery Program in Postwar Political Economy. Takeshi Ito, Senshu University
Discussant: Laurent Warlouzet, Université d’Arras / London School of Economics
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Chair: Sophie Meunier, Princeton University Participants:
Bi-Lateral Disputes and the Politics of EU Enlargement. Andrew Taylor, University of Sheffield; Andrew Geddes, University of Sheffield
Sixty Years of the European Parliament’s Institutional Development: From Ecsc Common Assembly to Co-Legislator and Beyond. Robert Cutler, Carleton University; Alexander von Lingen, Equip Europa
Is Europe Approaching Its Philadelphia? Krzysztof Iszkowski, Warsaw School of Social Sciences and Humanities
Discussant: Stephanie Novak, Hertie School of Governance
233. Electoral Politics and Party Competition 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18D
Chair: Matthijs Rooduijn, University of Amsterdam Participants:
How Socially Liberal Are European Left Voters On Issues That Concern Muslims? Janna Bray, University of Michigan
Blurring the Issue: Competing Through Positional Ambiguity in Multiparty Democracies. Jan Rovny, University of Gothenburg; Andre Krouwel, VU Amsterdam
Politicizing Europe in the National Electoral Arena. A Comparative Study, 1970-2010. Swen Hutter, European University Institute; Edgar Grande, University of Munich
Parties of the Left and the Burqa Ban: An Electoral Competition Model. Barbara Kinsey, University of Central Florida; Anca Turcu, University of Central Florida
The Other Dimension: Unpacking the Contents and Connections of the Socio-Cultural Dimension of Party Competition in Europe. Jonathan Polk, University of Gothenburg; Jan Rovny, University of Gothenburg
Discussant: Philip Manow, University of Bremen
234. Neighbors and EU External Relations 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17
Chair: Maria Garcia, NCRE, University of Canterbury Participants:
Learning Democratic Governance: A Comparative Analysis of the Democratizing Potential of EU Functional Cooperation in Arab Liberalized Autocracies. Tina Freyburg, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule ZürichUniversity of Warwick
Anchoring Hegemons: The Role of Russia and the EU in Structuring Post-Communist Politics. George Soroka, Harvard University
The Foreign Policy of the European Union: An Anchor of (In)Stability in the Neighborhood? Federiga Bindi, University of Rome Tor Vergata; Irina Angelescu, University of Rome Tor Vergata
Power Shifts in Ukraine: The Question of Eu’s Malaise Vs. Russian Energetic Influence. Morena Skalamera, Harvard University
The EU Unified Patent Court and the Demand for European Governance. Kaija Schilde, Boston University
Discussant: Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary
235. Research Network Luncheon: Gender and Sexuality 12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03
236. Research Network Luncheon: Social Movements 12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21
237. Executive Committee Meeting 12:45 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.04
238. European Populism in Times of Crisis: Parties and Parliaments
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17Chair: Sarah de Lange, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Pushing towards exit: Euro-rejection as a ‘populist common denominator’. Stijn van Kessel, Loughborough University; Andrea L. P. Pirro, University of Siena
Populism and Euroscepticism: An Enduring and Happy Marriage of Convenience? Duncan McDonnell, European University Institute
Successful Welfare-Chauvinism? The Transformation of the Front National’s Economic Programme (1984-2012). Gilles Ivaldi, University of Nice
Populist Parties and Cleavage Politics in Times of Crisis: The Case of the Danish People’s Party. Susi Meret, Aalborg University
Discussant: Andrej Zaslove, Radboud University
239. Eurozone Governance: States, Institutions, Markets 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17
Chair: Cornelia Woll, Sciences Po Participants:
Rescue and Control: The Rise of the European Consolidation State. Wolfgang Streeck, Max-Planck-Institut Fuer Gesellschaftsforschung
Policymaking in times of crisis. Mareike Kleine, London School of Economics and Political Science
“There is no alternative to the Euro”: Member statehood and Eurozone governance. Christopher Bickerton, Sciences Po, Paris
Discussant: Uwe Puetter, Central European University
240. Frozen Formations III: Political Discourses After the Cold War
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18CChair: Markus Balkenhol, VU University Amsterdam Participants:
(Un)reconcilable nation: Slovenian memory politics
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after 1991. Tanja Petrovic, Scientific Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Imperatives of national imagination: Debate, dissensus, and reiteration in Dutch elite discourses after 1989. Rogier Van Reekum, Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research
Rebirth of “Czechness” after 1989? National myths and stereotypes in cultural memory in the Czech Republic. Markete Spiritova, University of Munich
Discovering new and old forms of the national after 1989: Lessons from Germany and other European cases. Irene Götz, University of Munich
Discussant: Willem Schinkel, Erasmus University Rotterdam
241. Making the Migrant City: Flows to Cities / Flows Between Cities
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis A0.08Chair: Olga Sezneva, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Transnational migration, translocal governance. Luis Guarnizo, University of California, Davis
Double Dualities in the Transitory Social Migrant City: Changing Spatial Distributions of Class and Migrants in the Early-21st Century. Sako Musterd, University of Amsterdam; Wouter van Gent, University of Amsterdam
The mixed embeddedness of ethnic entrepreneurs in urban contexts. Robert Kloosterman, University of Amsterdam; Jan Rath, University of Amsterdam; Katja Rusinovic, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Roger Waldinger, University of California, Los Angeles
242. Negotiating Cultural and Political Boundaries of Europe and Its Other(s) (Part 1)
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chair: Luiza Bialasiewicz, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Practicing uniqueness: Iceland and EU membership. Alun Jones, University College Dublin; Julian Clark, University of Birmingham
Between the Arctic and the Mediterranean: Integrating northern and southern seas into the European neighborhood. Phil Steinberg, Florida State University,
The view from the other shore: An uprooted geography of Europe . Luiza Bialasiewicz, University of Amsterdam
The EU and its American Other: The uses of Anti-Americanism and Anti-Europeanism. Virginie Mamadouh, University of Amsterdam
Discussants: Elena dell’Agnese, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca; Jamal Shahin, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
243. New Family Policies Towards Parental Care and Children
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04Chair: Tomasz Inglot, Minnesota State University, Mankato,
USA Participants:
Nordic Fathers and Family Policies- the Quest for the Caring Father. Gudny Eydal, University of Iceland; Tine Rostgaard, University of Aalborg
Varieties of Parenthood Leave in European Welfare States. Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg; Steven Saxonberg, Masaryk University of Brno
New Parenting Support Policies in European Welfare States. Mary Daly, Oxford University; Trudie Knijn, University of Utrecht; Claude Martin, University Rennes 1, Science-Po, France; Ilona Ostner, Georg-August University, Göttingen
Public Attitudes Toward Family Policies In Welfare Regimes. Neil Gilbert, University of California-Berkeley; Jing Guo, University of Hawai’i at Manoa
Discussant: Karin Wall, University of Lisbon
244. Sectoral Dynamics of EU Regulatory Compliance 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14
Chair: Eva Heidbreder, University of Dusseldorf Participants:
Assessing National Patterns of EU Implementation: EU Environmental Policy Implementation in the Netherlands. Duncan Liefferink, Radboud University Nijmegen; Mark Wiering, Radboud University Nijmegen
Going Dutch. the Impact of the Water Framework Directive On Collective-Choice Rules for Integrated River Basin Management. Leo Santbergen, Brabantse Delta
The Organized Anarchy of Implementing EU Law: The Test Case of the Patient Rights Directive. Dorte Martinsen, University of Copenhagen; Hans Vollaard, Leiden University
Public-Private Cooperation in Plant Health Inspections. Pieter Zwaan, Radboud University Nijmegen
Politicizing Transposition in Times of Crisis? Ellen Mastenbroek, Radboud University Nijmegen; Aneta Spendzharova, Maastricht University; Esther Versluis, Maastricht University
Discussant: Josine Polak, Maastricht University
245. Tolerant Europe: Policies and Practices (Part II) 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.55
Chair: Giulio De Ligio, EHESS – Paris Participants:
“In Europe there are many oppressed for Conscience sake and here there are those oppressed which are of a Black Colour!”: European Experiences in Pennsylvania’s First Manifest against Slavery (1688). Ralf-Peter Fuchs, Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich
Ambivalent tolerance in XVII century and the role of verdraagzaamheid in the construction of European religious pluralism. Rosa Ricci, University of Leipzig
The logic of the Enlightenment discourse of Jewish emancipation. Diego Lucci, American University in
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BulgariaGerman Philanthropism as a tolerant Cosmopolitan
Pedagogy. Johann Reusch, University of Washington Discussant: Danilo Breschi, LUSPIO - Rome
246. Complex, Contingent, or Austere? Representing Migrants in European Print Media in 2000s
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60Chair: Saime Ozcurumez, Bilkent University Participants:
Everything old is new again: The (Re)Turn of Communitarianism-Cosmopolitanism Debate in Migrant Media Representation. Christina Hamer, Bilkent University
Country of Origin versus Religion in Migrant Framing: Moroccans and Turks in the Dutch print Media. Nermin Aydemir, Bilkent University
Does Voice Improve Image? Studying the Link between Migrant Voice and Migrant Representation in the Media. Kerem Oktem, Bilkent University
Print Media as Townhall Meeting: Patterns of Debating the Islamic Practices and Muslim Migrants’ Representation in Europe. Saime Ozcurumez, Bilkent University
Discussant: Rens Vliegenthart, University of Amsterdam
247. Economic and Political Governance of EMU 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.23
Chair: Johannes Lindner, European Central Bank Participants:
Banking Union: an ‘accidental’ institutional revolution? Gabriel Glöckler, European Central Bank; Marion Salines, European Central Bank
Accountability for financial sector supervision in EMU. Demos Ioannou, European Central Bank; Micheal O’Keeffe, London School of Economics and Political Science; Marion Salines, European Central Bank
The ECB as a supranational institution: archetype or outlier? Johannes Lindner, European Central Bank; Marion Salines, European Central Bank; Marta Wieczorek, European Central Bank
The IMF in a post-Westphalian world – the European challenge. Wouter Coussens, European Central Bank
Discussant: Dermot Hodson, Birkbeck College, University of London
248. Reasonable Accommodation of Religious Claims in Workplaces in Europe? Basic Tensions, Socio-Legal Debates, and Decisions
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18DChair: Julien Jeandesboz, Unievrsity of Amsterdam Participants:
Letting go of formal equal treatment? Discources and practices of religious accommodations in European workplaces. Katayoun Alidadi, University of Leuven
Changing opinions of committees of equal treatment and legal decisions on religious civil servants in
the Netherlands. Floris Vermeulen, University of Amsterdam
Reasonable accommodation of religious claims in workplaces in Europe? Basic Tensions, Limitations, Possibilities, and Trends. A comparison between different European countries. Veit Bader, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Marcel Maussen, University of Amsterdam
249. Recent Trends in Research On Subnational Authority 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23
Chair: Michael Bauer, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin Participants:
Does municipal consolidation affect competitiveness and candidate quality? A Quasi-experimental study.. David Dreyer-Lassen, University of Copenhagen; Soren Serritzlew, University of Aarhus
Using sub-national authority: A research agenda on territorial policy variation in decentralised states. Charlie Jeffery, University of Edinburgh
Crossregional Trends in Regional Authority. Gary Marks, VU University Amsterdam / University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Liesbet Hooghe, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill / VU University Amsterdam; Sandra Chapman, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Measuring Regional Authority across the World. Arjan Schakel, Maastricht University; Gary Marks, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Sara Niedzwiecki, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Sarah Shair-Rosenfield, Arizona State University
Discussants: Michael Tatham, University of Bergen; Michael Bauer, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
250. Ruin by Design? The Aesthetics of Creativity in European Material Cultures
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18BChair: Melissa Caldwell, University of California, Santa Cruz Participants:
Kurdish and Turkish Music Activism and the Ruins of Hasankeyf in Turkey. Ozan Aksoy, CUNY Graduate Center
What goes up must come down, what gets tossed will be found. Elana Resnick, University of Michigan
Fragments of a Liturgical World: Secularism, Religious Allochthony, and Middle Eastern Christianity in the Netherlands. Sarah Bakker, University of California, Santa Cruz
Charles Van den Borren’s Elastic Belgium: Nostalgia for a Distant Musical Past. Catherine Hughes, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Discussant: Melissa Caldwell, University of California, Santa Cruz
251. Social Scientic Approaches to European Historical Development: The Role of Origins and Legacies.
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.03Chair: Stephen Hanson, College of William and Mary
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Participants:Institutional Syncretism and the Limits of Path
Dependence: A Theory of Regime Instability. Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
Historical Memories, Political Attitudes and Electoral Behavior: Evidence from Post-War Germany. Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford; Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University
The Consequences of Tamed Conservatism in Britain: The Case of the Reform Act of 1884. Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University
Taxation and the Coercive Origins of Consent and Representation. Deborah Boucoyannis, University of Virginia
Taxation As Political Insurance. Isabela Mares, Columbia University; Didac Queralt, Juan March Institute
Discussant: Yitzhak Brudny, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
252. Territorial Dynamics in Comparative-Historical Perspective
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.59Chair: Bettina Petersohn, University of Konstanz Participants:
The Contemporary Significance of Historical Legacies in Federal Systems: Conceptual and Empirical Perspectives. César Colino, UNED, Madrid; Michael Burgess, University of Kent
Dynamics of Change and Continuity: Federation Building in Democratic Brazil, South Africa, and Spain. Helder do Vale, Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales
Dynamics of Territorial Restructuring in Western Europe. Critical Junctures, Reactive Sequences, and the Development of Regional Government. Simon Toubeau, Centro de Estudios Politicios y Constitucionales
Re-negotiating power-sharing arrangements in multinational contexts: Trajectories of negotiation patterns and their impact on territorial dynamics. Bettina Petersohn, University of Konstanz
Feeding or Alleviating Historical Grievances? the Contemporary Significance of Historical Legacies in the Spanish State of Autonomies. Angustias Hombrado Martos, University of Kent
Discussant: César Colino, UNED, Madrid
253. The Challenge for Political Representation in Economic and Social Policy Making
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Silja Häusermann, University of Zurich, Switzerland Participants:
The New Working Class Party? The Radical Right and Its Socio-Economic Agenda. Dominik Geering, University of Zurich
Between Political and Economic Inequality: How Western Democracies Represent the Policy Interest of the Affluent Rather Than the Whole Population.
Nathalie Giger, University of Mannheim; Julian Bernauer, University of Konstanz; Jan Rosset, University of Lausanne
Electoral Rules and the Party Composition of Governments: Why Are There Social Democratic and Liberal Welfare States? Philip Manow, University of Bremen; Holger Döring, University of Bremen
New Risks, New Representation? New Social Risk Groups in Multidimensional Party Competition. Allison Rovny, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Jan Rovny, University of Gothenburg
Are Social Democratic Parties Insider-Parties? Electoral Strategies of Social Democratic Parties in Western Europe. Hanna Schwander, University of Bremen
Discussant: David Rueda, University of Oxford
254. The Challenges of High Unemployment in (Western) Europe
2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.15Chairs: Regula Haenggli, University of Amsterdam; Laurent Bernhard, University of Zurich Participants:
Economic Crises, Policy Learning, and Institutional Change: Unemployment Policy in Small European States, 1973-2012. Alexandre Alfonso, King’s College London
Three levels of labour law: The European, national, and sectoral regulation of nonstandard employment in France, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom. Patrick Emmenegger, University of St. Gallen; Caroline de la Porte, University of Southern Denmark, Odense
The political conflict structure in labour market policy in six West European countries compared. Flavia Fossati, University of Zurich
Job Insecurity and Political Behavior in Europe. Paul Marx, University of Southern Denmark
Discussants: Laurent Bernhard, University of Zurich; Flavia Fossati, University of Zurich
255. Dynamics Of Minority Politics 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22
Chair: Liza Mügge, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Reframing Activist Experiences in a Migration Context: Collective Reactions to the Crisis by Moroccan Workers in Catalonia. Montserrat Emperador, Université Lumière-Lyon 2
Is the Nation Obsolete? Religion and National Identity in Globalizing Times. Annette Schnabel, Bergische Universität Wuppertal; Florian Grötsch, Bergische Universität Wuppertal
“Good” and “Bad” Quartiers: Explaining Variation in Rioting in French Banlieues. Michalis Moutselos, Princeton University
Manufacturing a Black Minority in 21st Century France. Abdoulaye Gueye, University of Ottawa
Discussant: Jennifer Miller-Gonzalez, University of Michigan
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256. Education in a Changing Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort D1.18A
Chair: Martha Montero-Sieburth, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Education: The Contours of a New Cleavage? Comparing 23 Countries. Anchrit Wille, University of Leiden; Mark Bovens, Utrecht University
Inequality Among Second-Generation Immigrants. School Success and Social Inequality in Spain. Albert Arcarons, European University Institute
How Social Class and Gender Explain Success in Reaching Higher Education. Albert Arcarons, European University Institute; Jesús de Miguel, University of California, Berkeley / University of Barcelona
Comparing National Reforms of Knowledge Transfer Regimes in Innovation Systems: Making Sense of Institutional Competitiveness in Europe. Susana Borras, Copenhagen Business School
Discussant: Jesús de Miguel, University of California, Berkeley
257. Environmental and Resource Policy 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23
Chair: Jaume Franquesa, SUNY University at Buffalo Participants:
EU External Environmental Governance - Policy Promotion, Learning, Emulation and Adjustment. Katja Biedenkopf, University of Amsterdam
Explaining the Regulatory Shift in the European Natural Gas Market Through the Multiple Streams Lens. Nicole Herweg, University of Heidelberg
The French Cadastre As the European Blueprint for the Valuation of Nature. Alvaro Santana-Acuna, Harvard University
Fracking in a Reluctant Europe. Elizabeth Bomberg, University of Edinburgh
On the Other Side of the Mountain: Scientific Communities in the South East Europe. Dusan Djordjevic, University of Geneva
Discussant: Katja Biedenkopf, University of Amsterdam
258. National Identity in the European Past and Present 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.21
Chair: Gerd Baumann, University of Amsterdam Participants:
From Tragedy to Farce: The Political Use of Memory in Post-Communist Romania. Constanta Hogea, Temple University
Comparative Values of European Identity in Four EU Regions’ European Policies and Programmes. Julie Anna Vogt, London School of Economics and Political Science
Looking up to Brussels? National Imaginaries and Their Relation to Political Europe. Stella Ghervas, Sciences-Po Bordeaux / Maison des Sciences de l’Homme de l’Aquitaine (MSHA)
Ethnic and Civic National Consciousness in Pre-
Modern Spain. Maxim Tabachnik, University of California, Santa Cruz
Remembering the Second Empire: Building National Identity in Third Republic France. Christina Carroll, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Discussant: Ayelet Banai, Goethe-Universitat 259. European Populism in Times of Crisis: Campaigns and the Media
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.17Chairs: Linda Bos, University of Amsterdam; Penny Sheets, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Right-Wing Populism and the Media. Linda Bos, University of Amsterdam
Populism in the Mass Media across Europe. Hajo Boomgaarden, University of Amsterdam
Blaming the Elite, the Government, or the Global Economy? Blame Frames as a Cause of Populist Voting. Matthijs Rooduijn, University of Amsterdam; Gijs Schumacher, VU University Amsterdam; Bert Bakker, University of Southern Denmark
Immigration and Anti-Politics: Media Cues, Political Attitudes, and Support for Far-Right Parties. Penny Sheets, University of Amsterdam
Discussant: Peter Van Aelst, University of Antwerp
260. Frozen Formations IV: Race, Racism, and Coloniality 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18C
Chair: Sophie Elpers, Meertens Institute Participants:
Postracial silences and the othering of race in Europe. Alana Lentin, University of Western Sydney
Cosmopolitanism via Gentrification?: Global Subjects in Berlin. Damani Partridge, University of Michigan
Feeling grounded: Race, affect, and the soil in the Netherlands.. Markus Balkenhol, Meertens Institute
Discussant: Dienke Hondius, VU University Amsterdam
261. Governing in Crisis: Institutional Change and Policy Developments
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17Chair: Christopher Bickerton, Sciences Po, Paris Participants:
Reconfirming the new intergovernmentalism – EU economic governance and institutional change in the wake of the crisis. Uwe Puetter, Central European University
EU financial regulatory reforms after the euro-crisis: double down or watered down? Daniel Mügge, University of Amsterdam
The Barroso Commission as a Supranational Entrepreneur: Strategy and Agency following the Global Financial Crisis. Dermot Hodson, Birkbeck College, University of London
Discussant: Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University
262. Living and Believing in the Migrant City 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis A0.08
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Chair: Walter Nicholls, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Mosques and the changing urban landscapes of immigrant belonging in German and U.S. cities. Patricia Ehrkamp, University of Kentucky
Safe haven or site of repression? Urban areas and the complexities of local social control of otherness. Joanne van der Leun, University of Leiden
Rescaling migrant lives: Beyond nested identities. Ayse Caglar, University of Vienna
Discussant: Steve Vertovec, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen
263. Negotiating Cultural and Political Boundaries of Europe and Its Other(s) (Part 2)
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.13Chairs: Luiza Bialasiewicz, University of Amsterdam; Virginie Mamadouh, University of Amsterdam Participants:
Critical and functional approaches in geopolitics: Geopolitical vision of Europe in the world and the space of flows. Vladimir Kolossov, Russian Academy of Sciences
Eastern discoveries: The old East and the invention of Europe’s new East. Carlos Reijnen, University of Amsterdam
Beyond European Union’s ‘transformative power’. Ievgenii Rovnyi, Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main
Speaking truth for power? East European Studies in the 21st century. Ian Klinke, University College London
Discussants: Veit Bachmann, Institut für Humangeographie, Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main; Jamal Shahin, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
264. New Tools and Dynamics in EU Regulatory Compliance
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 1.14Chair: Esther Versluis, Maastricht University Participants:
Horizontal Capacity Pooling: “Administrative Crowd Sourcing” As New Compliance Strategy. Eva Heidbreder, University of Dusseldorf
Implementation Between Formal Hierarchy and Practical Agency: The Case of the Safa Directive. Josine Polak, Maastricht University
Enforcing and managing practical application in the European Union: The role of transnational networks in dispute settlements. Dorte Martinsen, University of Copenhagen; Mogens Hobolth, London School of Economics and Political Science
Policy Coordination and Social Policy: From Voluntary and Progressive to Coercive Austerity. Caroline de la Porte, University of Southern Denmark, Odense
Discussant: Ellen Mastenbroek, Radboud University Nijmegen
265. Transnational and Non-Governmental Actors In
European Family Policy: Opportunities and Limits On Policy Adaptation and Change.
4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 4.04Chair: Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg Participants:
Rianne Mahon, Balsillie School of International Affairs, WaterlooAnne-Marie Paraskevas, European Commission, Brussels Agnes Uhereczky, COFACE, Brussels Karin Wall, University of Lisbon
Discussant: Tomasz Inglot, Minnesota State University, Mankato
266. Transnational Practices, Identification, and Types of Capital
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C1.23Chair: Juan Díez Medrano, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Participants:
Europe’s Cosmopolitans of the Future? Social Disposition, Distinction, and Ideas of Belonging Among International High School Students in Aarhus, Denmark. Janne Jensen, Aarhus University
Identifications and Cosmopolitan vs. Communitarian Ideologies Underlying Support and Opposition of the EU. Céline Teney, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB); Onawa Lacewell, Social Science Research Centre Berlin (WZB); Pieter de Wilde, Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB)
Marriages Across Borders? Comparing Origin and Embeddedness of Uni-National and Bi-National Couples in Belgium. Suzana Koelet, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Helga de Valk, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Transnational Social Relations and Cultural Cosmopolitism. Jörg Rössel, Universität Zürich; Julia Schroedter, University of Zurich
Virtual transnationalisation: Comparing EU citizens’ participation in a transnational European public sphere . Jürgen Gerhards, Freie Universität Berlin; Silke Hans, Freie University Berlin
Discussant: Mabel Berezin, Cornell University
267. International Organisations and Environmental Protection: Europe in a Global World
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort 1.15Chair: Carine Germond, University of Portsmouth / Maastricht University Participants:
From Health in the Workplace to Water and Air Pollution: IOs and Heavy Industry. Wolfram Kaiser, University of Portsmouth
Threatened Animals and Strong Borders: The International Office for the Protection of Nature between National, European and Global Nature Conservation. Raf Bont, Maastricht University
“Me, Too!” The Emergence of a European Environmental Policy and the Role of International Organizations. Jan-Henrik Meyer, Aarhus
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UniversityUniversity of MunichExternal Federator? OPEC and the Community’s
Environmental Policy in the 1970s. Giuliano Garavini, University of Padua
Discussant: Katja Biedenkopf, University of Amsterdam
268. Race, Rights, and the Law: A Multi-Disciplinary Examination of the Politics of Immigration and Citizenship in Western Europe
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C0.17Chair: Mina Barahimi, University of California, Berkeley Participants:
The Potential Implications of EU citizenship Case Law for Third-Country Nationals. Anja Wiesbrock, University of Oslo
Race, History, and Spatial Politics: Making a Case for Broadening the Membership Rights of Long-Term Resident Moroccan Immigrants in Spain. Mina Barahimi, University of California, Berkeley
The Political Mechanisms Behind Variation With the Entrenchment of Anti-Immigration Parties in Western Europe and Its Consequences. Timo Lochocki, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin
Attitudes to Immigration and the Construction of National Identity. Clara Sandelind, University of Sheffield
Discussant: Oliver Schmidtke, University of Victoria
269. Science-Society Dialogues On Migrant Integration in Europe
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A1.18DChair: Alistair Hunter, University of Edinburgh Participants:
Beyond speaking truth to power: Science-society dialogues on migrant integration in Europe. Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam; Stijn Verbeek, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Independent commissions as a venue for science-society dialogues: The case of migrant integration policy in the UK. Christina Boswell, University of Edinburgh; Alistair Hunter, University of Edinburgh
Science-Society Dialogues in an Emergent Immigration Country: The Case of Italy. Tiziana Caponio, University of Turin
The EU’s role in science-society dialogues on migrant integration in Europe. Andrew Geddes, University of Sheffield; Marthe Achtnich, University of Oxford
Discussant: Virginie Guiraudon, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
270. The Politics of Hosting Chinese Investment in Europe 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis 5.60
Chair: Sophie Meunier, Princeton University Participants:
The Politics of Hosting Chinese Investment in Europe. Sophie Meunier, Princeton University
China’s Direct Investment in Europe: Is There a Need for European Regulation? Haiyan Zhang, Antwerp
Management School; Daniel Van den Bulcke, University of Antwerp
Chinese Investment and European Labor: Should (and Do) Workers fear Chinese FDI? Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam; Damian Raess, University of Geneva
Different Places, Different Faces: Chinese Investment in Central and Eastern Europe. Wade Jacoby, Brigham Young University
Discussant: Yves Tiberghien, University of British Columbia
271. The Practical Challenges Of Engaged Research In Social Movements (Workshop)
4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis 2.22Presenter: Laurence Cox, National University of Ireland, Maynooth
272. The EU and Development Policy Around The World 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C3.23
Chair: TBAParticipants:
The Value of Gender and Water: An Assessment of the Eu’s Ability to Implement Its Own Legal Obligations. Annick Masselot, University of Canterbury; Robert Brears, University of Canterbury
EU Trade and Development Policy After the Crisis: Subordinating Developmental to Commercial Imperatives. Gabriel Siles-Brugge, University of Manchester
Refocusing Development Co-Operation in Africa: The EU As a Global Health Champion? Valeria Fargion, University of Florence
The External Dimension of Europeanization: Social Conditionality and the Generalised System of Preferences. Eleni Xiarchogiannopoulou, Universite Libre de Bruxelles
Discussant: Christos Paraskevopoulos, University of Macedonia, Thessaloniki
273. Understanding European Movements: New Social Movements, Global Justice Struggles, Anti-Austerity Protest With James Jasper (Semi-Plenary Book Launch)
6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort A0.08
274. Gender, Sexuality and the Politics of Borders (Semi-Plenary)
6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort C2.17Chair: Virginie Guiraudon, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) Participants:
Leah Bassel, University of Leicester Nicholas Boston, CUNY Lehman College Thomas Spijkerboer, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Sarah Van Walsum, Free University, Amsterdam Eric Fassin, University of Paris 8
275. Semi-Plenary Reception Sponsored By the Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies and the Amsterdam
53
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54
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001. Civil Society and Democratization I: Transitions in Southern and Eastern Europe Compared Tuesday, June 25, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.17
024. Civil Society and Democratization II: Consolidation in Southern and Eastern Europe Compared Tuesday, June 25, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.17
❧
002. Introduction to the Symposium ‘no Money – No Teeth – No Brain?’: The Eu’s Role in Global Governance: The Legal Dimension (OUP 2013) Tuesday, June 25, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.15
027. No Money? Economic Governance and the International Credibility of the Union in Times of Crisis Tuesday, June 25, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.15
053. No Teeth? On How to ‘Afford’ a Foreign and Security Policy for the EU Tuesday, June 25, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.15
073. No Brain? Mobility, Migration and the Attraction of the Union Tuesday, June 25, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.15
❧
003. Transformations of Gender, Sexuality and Citizenship in South-East Europe Tuesday, June 25, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
029. The ‘Invisible Hand’ of Europeanisation in Reconceptualising the ‘citizenship - Rule of Law’ Nexus in the New States in South Eastern Europe Tuesday, June 25, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
100. Uneven Citizenship: Minorities and Migration in the Post-Yugoslav Space Wednesday, June 26, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18A
120. Citizenship After Yugoslavia (Book Panel) Wednesday, June 26, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18A
Mini-Symposia ❧
025. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel I: The Effect of Institutions On Immigrants, Case Studies Tuesday, June 25, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
051. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel II: The Effect of Institutions On Immigration, Comparative Studies Tuesday, June 25, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
072. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel III: The Effect of Immigration On Institutions Tuesday, June 25, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
❧
026. Including Migrant Workers Voice, Representing Migrant Workers Rights: Between Trade Union Action and Self Organization Tuesday, June 25, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
052. Mobilizing Against Inequality: Immigrant Workers, Unions, and Crisis of Capitalism Tuesday, June 25, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
074. Researching The Relationship Between Trade Unions and Migrant Workers, Examples From Different Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives Tuesday, June 25, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
❧
028. Notions of Revolution and Changing Images of Europe: Theories of Revolution and Conceptions of Europe Tuesday, June 25, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
054. Notions of Revolution and Changing Images of Europe: From the Eighteenth to the Nineteenth Century Tuesday, June 25, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
098. Notions of Revolution and Changing Images of Europe: The Twentieth Century (part 1) Wednesday, June 26, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
125. Notions of Revolution and Changing Images of Europe: The Twentieth Century (part 2)
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Wednesday, June 26, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
❧
050. Agenda-Setting and Policy Change in the European Union Tuesday, June 25, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18B
124. Media Attention and Policy Dynamics Wednesday, June 26, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.21
147. Migration Policy in Multilevel Agenda-Setting Wednesday, June 26, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.21
194. The Europeanization of National Parliamentary Agendas Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis - 2.21
215. The Evolution of Policy Issues in Comparative Perspective Thursday, June 27, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.21
❧
097. EU NGOs and Social Movements in an Era of European Financial Crisis Wednesday, June 26, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.23
122. EU NGOs and the Challenge of Social Movements Wednesday, June 26, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.23
❧
099. Understanding Migrant Deservingness: Logics and Mechanisms Wednesday, June 26, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
121. Constructions of Migrant Deservingness: Policies and Practices Wednesday, June 26, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
❧
119. Assessing Inequalities in South Europe Wednesday, June 26, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.22
148. Politics, Policies and Governance in South European Welfare States Wednesday, June 26, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.22
169. South European Actors: Changing Roles and Strategies in Times of Crisis Wednesday, June 26, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.22
❧
123. Issues in Historical Institutionalism and the Study of Europe Wednesday, June 26, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis - E0.02 (VOC Room)
146. Historical Institutionalism and European Politics Wednesday, June 26, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis - E0.02 (VOC Room)
❧
126. Populist Parties As “Normal” Parties: Survey On Territorial Representation and Organization of Populist Parties. Wednesday, June 26, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
238. European Populism in Times of Crisis: Parties and Parliaments Thursday, June 27, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.17
259. European Populism in Times of Crisis: Campaigns and the Media Thursday, June 27, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.17
❧
145. A Fiscal Centered Perspective to Welfare State Development Wednesday, June 26, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
168. Fiscal and Economic Functions of Social Insurance and Its Repercussions for Social Policy Wednesday, June 26, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
❧
192. Challenging Male-Normed Austerity Programs Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
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218. Which “Women” Are Represented in a Period of Crisis? Intersectionality and Representation Thursday, June 27, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
❧
193. Frozen Formations I: Performance and Popular Culture Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
213. Frozen Formations II: The National, Everyday Life, and Affect Thursday, June 27, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
240. Frozen Formations III: Political Discourses After the Cold War Thursday, June 27, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
260. Frozen Formations IV: Race, Racism, and Coloniality Thursday, June 27, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
❧
195. Tolerant Europe: The Philosophers’ Tolerance Thursday, June 27, 2013 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
216. Tolerant Europe: Policies and Practices (part I) Thursday, June 27, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
245. Tolerant Europe: Policies and Practices (part II) Thursday, June 27, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
❧
214. Recent Changes in Policies and Institutions of Family Policies Thursday, June 27, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
243. New Family Policies towards Parental Care and Children Thursday, June 27, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
265. Transnational and Non-Governmental Actors In European Family Policy: Opportunities and Limits On Policy Adaptation and Change. Thursday, June 27, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
❧
217. Transnational Practices and Identification in Europe Thursday, June 27, 2013 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.17
266. Transnational Practices, Identification, and Types of Capital Thursday, June 27, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C1.23
❧
239. Eurozone Governance: States, Institutions, Markets Thursday, June 27, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C2.17
261. Governing in Crisis: Institutional Change and Policy Developments Thursday, June 27, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C2.17
❧
241. Making the Migrant City: Flows to Cities / Flows Between Cities Thursday, June 27, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - A0.08
262. Living and Believing in the Migrant City Thursday, June 27, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - A0.08
❧
242. Negotiating Cultural and Political Boundaries of Europe and Its Other(s) (part 1) Thursday, June 27, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.13
263. Negotiating Cultural and Political Boundaries of Europe and Its Other(s) (part 2) Thursday, June 27, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.13
❧
244. Sectoral Dynamics of EU Regulatory Compliance Thursday, June 27, 2013 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.14
264. New Tools and Dynamics in EU Regulatory Compliance Thursday, June 27, 2013 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.14
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Plenaries & Meetings
Plenaries & Meetings
❧ Tuesday, June 25
047. Research Network Luncheon: European Integration and The Global Political Economy - New Directions
12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis
048. Research Network Luncheon: Industrial Relations, Skill Formation and Welfare State Policies
12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis
049. Semi-Plenary Session: The Euro Crisis and Questions Of Legitimacy
2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis
095. Plenary Session: European Democracy and the Financial Crises
6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort
096. Plenary Reception 7:45 to 9:00 PM - The Bazel
❧ Wednesday, June 26
142. Research Network Luncheon: Historical Study of States and Regimes
12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis
143. Research Network Luncheon: Immigration 12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis
144. Research Network Luncheon: Territorial Politics and Federalism
12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis
167. Editorial Meeting4:00 to 5:45 PM
190. Plenary Session: Nationalism, Populism and Democracy in Europe
6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort
191. Presidential Plenary Reception 7:45 to 9:00 PM - The Zuiderkerk
❧ Thursday, June 27
235. Research Network Luncheon: Gender and Sexuality 12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis
236. Research Network Luncheon: Social Movements 12:45 to 2:00 PM - Binnengasthuis
237. Executive Committee Meeting 12:45 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis
273. Plenary Session: Book Launch: Understanding European Movements: New Social Movements, Global Justice Struggles, Anti-Austerity Protest With James Jasper
6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort
274. Plenary Session: Gender, Sexuality and The Politics Of Borders
6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort
275. Semi-Plenary Reception Sponsored By the Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies and the Amsterdam Research Center for Gender and Sexuality
7:45 to 9:00 PM - Oudemanhuispoort
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Research Network Sessions
❧ European Integration and Global Political Economy
005. Corporate Welfare in Europe: A Changing Role for Social Partners? Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oost-Indisch Huis - E0.02 (VOC Room)
018. The Euro Problem: What Went Wrong with the Single Currency? Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - A0.08
031. Borrowing, Lending and Regulating: The Origins and Evolution of the European Sovereign Debt Crisis Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A0.08
040. Secrecy and Technology in European Security Integration Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.04
049. The Euro Crisis and Questions Of Legitimacy Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis - E0.02 (VOC Room)
055. Beyond the Economic: Ethnographic Approaches to the European Crisis-Reflections Upon the Greek Case Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
061. Representation and Adjudication of Interests in the Supra-National European Legal Order Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
064. Understanding European Political Communication: Content & Effects Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.04
081. Past and Future of Prudential Regulation in Europe in the Aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C1.23
085. Social Care Policies in Europe: Old Dilemmas, New Solutions Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.22
089. The EU As a Global Security Actor: Constitutional
Aspects of the External Dimension of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice. Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives. Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18A
099. Understanding Migrant Deservingness: Logics and Mechanisms Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
102. Democracy in Hard Times. Politics and Policymaking in Southern Europe in the Crisis Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - A0.08
111. Transformations in Public Policy and Governance in Turkey in Comparative Pre-Accession Perspective Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C1.23
121. Constructions of Migrant Deservingness: Policies and Practices Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
128. Continuity and Change in European Finance and Its Governance Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
155. Inside the European Commission: The Dynamics of Institutional Change Wednesday, June 26 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.15
157. The Euro Crisis and European Integration Theory: Some Critical Questions Wednesday, June 26 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
175. Domestic and European Responses To The Euro Crisis: Lessons For Governance Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
198. Does Memory Matter to the European Union’s Future? Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis - 4.04
202. Pathways to Crisis: The Political Mediation of Economic Pressures in the Eurozone Periphery Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.14
227. The European Research Area – Issues and Approaches Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.14
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228. The EU’s Crisis Governance: Shifts in Governance Mechanisms and Implications for Welfare State Reform Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.15
244. Sectoral Dynamics of EU Regulatory Compliance Thursday, June 27 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.14
254. The Challenges of High Unemployment in (Western) Europe Thursday, June 27 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.15
264. New Tools and Dynamics in EU Regulatory Compliance Thursday, June 27 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.14
267. International Organisations and Environmental Protection: Europe in a Global World Thursday, June 27 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - 1.15
270. The Politics of Hosting Chinese Investment in Europe Thursday, June 27 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
❧ Gender and Sexuality
008. Gender and Party Politics Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.17
034. Intersectional Struggles in Europe and Beyond: Race, Religion, Migration and Gender in Public Debates and Social Movements Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.17
092. The Struggle for Autonomy: European Women’s Movements and Body Politics Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.13
105. European Quota’s: Going Beyond Politics? Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
130. Gender Equality in the Labour Market from an European and Comparative Perspective Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.17
156. Sexual and National Belonging in Europe and the US Wednesday, June 26 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.13
179. LGBTQ Challenges Across Europe Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.21
192. Challenging Male-Normed Austerity Programs Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
218. Which “Women” Are Represented in a Period of Crisis? Intersectionality and Representation Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
274. Gender, Sexuality and The Politics Of Borders Thursday, June 27 6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C2.17
❧ Historical Study of States and Regimes (History of Democratization)
001. Civil Society and Democratization I: Transitions in Southern and Eastern Europe Compared Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.17
024. Civil Society and Democratization II: Consolidation in Southern and Eastern Europe Compared Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.17
076. Constitutional Projects in Times of Crisis Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.14
104. European Integration As a Cause For Consensus Or Conflict In Domestic Politics, 1950-2010 Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
133. Northern Europe and The Success Of Anti-Corruption Practices Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.04
178. Labor and the State in Historical Perspective Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
229. The Sources and Mechanisms of Long-Run Persistence: Imperial Legacies and Political Development Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.03
251. Social Scientic Approaches to European Historical Development: The Role of Origins and Legacies. Thursday, June 27 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.03
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❧ Immigration
010. Naturalization, Dual Citizenship and Immigrant Integration Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
013. Practices and Discourses of European External Migration Policies: Beyond a Eurocentric Analysis of European External Action. Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.59
014. Socio-Ethnic Leveraging: How Status Majorities Elevate One Minority to Downgrade Another Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
025. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel I: The Effect of Institutions On Immigrants, Case Studies Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
036. Managing Migration and Integration in Europe’s Multi-Level Context Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.14
051. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel II: The Effect of Institutions On Immigration, Comparative Studies Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
072. Immigrants & Institutions in Multiethnic Societies, Panel III: The Effect of Immigration On Institutions Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
091. The Security Governance of Migrant Integration: New Fields, New Actors Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
101. Comparative Advantage: Developing Better Research Strategies for the Politics of Migration and Integration in Europe Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 1.15
110. The Party Politics of Immigration Policy in Contemporary Europe Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis - 2.13
112. Who’s the Most Legitimate to Protest? Immigration Vs. Native Minority Claims in an Extended Europe
Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oost-Indisch Huis - E0.02 (VOC Room)
127. Citizenship, State and Gender: The Minority Politics in the Netherlands and Germany Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.13
153. Immigrants and Incorporation: Are There Winners and Losers? Wednesday, June 26 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18A
154. Immigration, Welfare States and Labour Markets: Exploring the Nexus Wednesday, June 26 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18C
170. Migrants and Staffing Agencies in the European Union Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.23
181. The “Battle for the Brains:” Selective Migration Policies, Practices and Outcomes Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.13
199. Governance of East-West Migration within Europe Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - A0.08
200. Immigration and Social Systems: Collected Essays of Michael Bommes Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.17
201. Islam in Europe Reconsidered: Comparative Approaches Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18A
223. Looking For Europe: How The Immigration and Asylum Policies Construct (or not) The EU Identity Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
225. New Migrants, Old Responses? Ethnicity and Social Capital in the Experiences of East European Migrants in Britain Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18A
241. Making the Migrant City: Flows to Cities / Flows Between Cities Thursday, June 27 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - A0.08
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246. Complex, Contingent or Austere?: Representing Migrants in European Print Media in 2000s Thursday, June 27 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
248. Reasonable Accommodation of Religious Claims in Workplaces in Europe? Basic Tensions, Socio-Legal Debates and Decisions Thursday, June 27 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18D
262. Living and Believing in the Migrant City Thursday, June 27 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - A0.08
268. Race, Rights, and the Law: A Multi-Disciplinary Examination of the Politics of Immigration and Citizenship in Western Europe Thursday, June 27 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.17
269. Science-Society Dialogues On Migrant Integration in Europe Thursday, June 27 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18D
274. Gender, Sexuality and The Politics Of Borders Thursday, June 27 6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C2.17
❧ Industrial Relations, Skill Formation & Welfare State
019. Welfare States in Comparative Perspective I Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis - 2.22
043. Welfare States in Comparative Perspective II Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.22
049. The Euro Crisis and Questions Of Legitimacy Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis - E0.02 (VOC Room)
062. State Transformation in the Advanced Capitalist World Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.17
079. Merits and Gaps of Process Tracing Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.23
106. Process Tracing in Practice : How Process Tracing Is Implemented, and What Theoretical Contribution It Makes
Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
109. The Future of Democratic Capitalism I: Structural Change and the Politics of Adjustment Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C2.17
129. Crisis As a Chance for European Integration? Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
135. The Future of Democratic Capitalism II: Inequality, Macro-Economic Policy and Distributive Outcomes Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C2.17
137. The Welfare State As Crisis Manager/the Politics of the New Welfare State Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.17
145. A Fiscal Centered Perspective to Welfare State Development Wednesday, June 26 2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
168. Fiscal and Economic Functions of Social Insurance and Its Repercussions for Social Policy Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.60
172. Changing Welfare States Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A0.08
206. The Transformation of Industrial Relations in Coordinated Market Economies Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C2.17
207. War and the Welfare State: Conditions, Mechanisms, Effects Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C1.23
214. Recent Changes in Policies and Institutions of Family Policies Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
230. Wage Relations Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.23
243. New Family Policies towards Parental Care and Children Thursday, June 27
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2:00 to 3:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04
253. The Challenge for Political Representation in Economic and Social Policy Making Thursday, June 27 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.17
265. Transnational and Non-Governmental Actors In European Family Policy: Opportunities and Limits On Policy Adaptation and Change. Thursday, June 27 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 4.04 ❧ Social Movements
041. Street Politics in the Age of Austerity: Comparative Perspectives Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C2.17
057. Democratization, De-Democratization, and Political Activism in Contemporary East-Central Europe Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.23
082. Politics and Culture in European Anti-Austerity Movements Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.23
084. Romani Activism, Challenged Democracies, and Contentious Politics Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oost-Indisch Huis - E0.02 (VOC Room)
097. EU NGOs and Social Movements in an Era of European Financial Crisis Wednesday, June 26 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.23
122. EU NGOs and the Challenge of Social Movements Wednesday, June 26 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C0.23
173. Crafting Citizenship Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18A
204. Roundtable: Understanding Contemporary Waves of Protest Thursday, June 27 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis - 2.13
271. Workshop: The Practical Challenges Of Engaged Research In Social Movements Thursday, June 27 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.22
273. Book Launch: Understanding European Movements: New Social Movements, Global Justice Struggles, Anti-Austerity Protest With James Jasper Thursday, June 27 6:00 to 7:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A0.08
❧ Territorial Politics and Federalism
006. Crisis and Austerity From a Sub-National Perspective (Part I): Transnational Activities of Sub-National Authorities in Times of Crisis Tuesday, June 25 9:00 to 10:45 AM - Binnengasthuis - 2.03
032. Crisis and Austerity From a Sub-National Perspective (Part II): The Effects of the Crisis On EU Cohesion Policy and Their Implications for Regional Governance Tuesday, June 25 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.03
060. Regionalist Parties in Multilevel States Tuesday, June 25 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Binnengasthuis - 2.03
088. Territoriality in the National and Regional Vote in Central and Eastern Europe Tuesday, June 25 4:00 to 5:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - A1.18D
171. Brussels Paradiplomats: Regional Presence, Impact and Activities At the Heart of Europe Wednesday, June 26 4:00 to 5:45 PM - PC Hoofthuis - 5.55
224. Multi-Jurisdictional Embeddedness: Sub-State Authorities in Global Governance Thursday, June 27 11:00 to 12:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - D1.18B
249. Recent Trends in Research On Subnational Authority Thursday, June 27 2:00 to 3:45 PM - Oudemanhuispoort - C3.23
63
For more information visit our website:www.councilforeuropeanstudies.org
21st International Conference of Europeanists
Resurrections
All submissions must be received by October 1, 2013. Submitters will be notified of the status of their proposals no later than De-cember 10, 2013.
Call for PapersWashington, D.C., USA
March 14-16, 2014
Council for European Studies
In the wake of crisis in Europe, bits and pieces of the past are being resurrected as a means of understand-ing the present and imagining the future. Historical figures are re-evaluated and held out as models, once-dismissed ideologies reappear as possibilities or as bogeymen, myths and symbols from the past crop up in new productions, and old political and economic institutions are revived as alter-natives for action. But resurrections are not simply about nostalgia, and they aren’t just a restoration of the past in unchanged form. Resurrections necessitate fundamental transformations: inserting old things into new contexts, changing their natures, and assigning them new meanings and values.
Thus, for its 2014 conference the Council for Euro-pean Studies (CES) invites proposals for panels and papers that relate to the theme of “resurrections.” What elements of Europe’s past and present are amenable to reanima-tion? How do they work in contemporary debate, and how is their relevance to the present disputed? What is the process through which they are revived and how are they changed as they are brought back to life or combined with new elements?
Deadlines
About CESThe Council for European Studies is the leading international organi-zation for the study of Europe. The Council’s mission is to produce, support, and recognize multi-disciplinary research on Europe through a wide range of programs and initiatives.
About the conference
The conference will bring together the world’s premier scholars and policy researchers working on Eu-rope. It will also offer numerous opportunities to connect with old friends and new colleagues.
2014 Conference Ad for ASN-cfb.indd 1 3/19/2013 9:59:28 AM
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Subject IndexArt and Literature: 077, 113, 134 Comparative Politics: 001, 003, 006, 008, 009, 012, 014, 016, 017, 020, 021, 023, 024, 029, 031, 032, 037, 041, 044, 051, 057, 058, 060, 064, 070, 079, 080, 083, 085, 086, 087, 091, 092, 097, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 114, 115, 117, 120, 122, 123, 124, 126, 133, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 146, 147, 148, 149, 151, 152, 155, 159, 163, 165, 166, 169, 171, 174, 175, 176, 180, 183, 185, 188, 189, 194, 202, 205, 206, 207, 209, 210, 212, 215, 223, 224, 238, 244, 246, 249, 251, 252, 253, 254, 258, 259, 264, 269 Cultural Theory: 011, 055, 059, 134, 156, 217, 220, 266 Eastern Europe: 003, 009, 011, 029, 038, 057, 083, 084, 088, 093, 094, 100, 107, 120, 186, 199, 208, 225, 229, 234 Economics: 006, 018, 019, 023, 027, 039, 043, 050, 053, 067, 081, 095, 114, 115, 128, 131, 141, 145, 165, 168, 175, 203, 211, 222, 228, 229, 230, 232, 239, 247, 254, 261, 273 Education: 046, 065, 153, 256 Elections and Electoral Politics: 020, 021, 088, 095, 103, 117, 126, 136, 152, 163, 165, 187, 190, 205, 233, 238, 253, 259 Environment: 016, 022, 150, 244, 250, 257, 267 Foreign and International Relations: 002, 004, 013, 027, 033, 042, 044, 053, 089, 094, 107, 108, 116, 123, 128, 146, 158, 159, 161, 176, 182, 185, 210, 211, 219, 231, 234, 242, 263, 267, 272 Gender: 003, 008, 034, 035, 068, 069, 080, 092, 103, 105, 127, 130, 156, 164, 179, 192, 218, 243, 274
Globalization: 002, 004, 013, 031, 046, 056, 081, 104, 116, 172, 196, 210, 212, 217, 219, 224, 228, 242, 260, 263, 266, 267, 270 Health: 015, 033, 058, 184, 221, 244, 272 History: 016, 028, 054, 059, 071, 075, 087, 090, 098, 104, 125, 132, 133, 158, 164, 178, 195, 197, 198, 207, 216, 222, 229, 231, 232, 240, 245, 250, 251, 252, 258 Identity: 004, 010, 011, 014, 025, 028, 054, 055, 056, 061, 068, 076, 077, 090, 091, 093, 098, 100, 120, 125, 129, 131, 132, 136, 139, 140, 156, 159, 160, 164, 173, 184, 186, 190, 193, 195, 197, 201, 209, 213, 216, 217, 225, 226, 240, 242, 245, 250, 255, 258, 260, 263, 266 Immigration: 010, 013, 014, 017, 025, 026, 034, 035, 036, 051, 052, 070, 072, 073, 074, 091, 099, 100, 101, 110, 112, 118, 121, 127, 139, 147, 153, 154, 160, 161, 162, 166, 170, 173, 177, 181, 199, 200, 201, 213, 218, 223, 225, 226, 233, 238, 241, 246, 248, 255, 259, 262, 268, 269, 274 Inequality: 007, 025, 030, 035, 052, 058, 065, 078, 084, 105, 118, 119, 150, 151, 153, 180, 192, 204, 220, 221, 222, 256 Labor: 005, 010, 012, 017, 026, 049, 052, 065, 066, 074, 078, 086, 099, 102, 130, 138, 170, 174, 178, 181, 196, 206, 230, 254 Law: 002, 027, 029, 037, 038, 042, 053, 061, 073, 076, 081, 083, 089, 130, 161, 185, 220, 223, 268 Philosophy: 028, 054, 075, 098, 125, 195, 198
Politics: 007, 008, 009, 020, 021, 030, 033, 036, 037, 038, 039, 040, 041, 044, 045, 049, 050, 051, 055, 060, 061, 064, 069, 071, 072, 076, 077, 086, 090, 093, 094, 099, 101, 108, 110, 111, 113, 114, 117, 121, 126, 127, 131, 133, 134, 137, 141, 155, 157, 160, 162, 171, 175, 176, 178, 182, 183, 186, 192, 197, 198, 199, 202, 204, 208, 213, 216, 218, 221, 226, 232, 234, 239, 240, 245, 247, 249, 255, 257, 261, 264, 268, 273, 274 Regionalism: 006, 018, 022, 032, 060, 073, 088, 116, 171, 188, 189, 190, 193, 224, 249, 252 Religion and Secularism: 132, 162, 233, 248 Science and Technology: 040, 046, 184, 188, 227, 257, 269 Social Movements: 001, 012, 022, 024, 041, 045, 056, 057, 068, 082, 084, 092, 097, 122, 158, 170, 187, 201, 204, 271, 273 Social Systems: 019, 085, 129, 163, 200, 251 Sports and Entertainment: 059, 113, 193, 260 Theory: 034, 039, 145, 157, 168, 200, 261, 272 Varieties of Capitalism: 005, 007, 018, 023, 031, 062, 066, 067, 079, 106, 109, 115, 128, 135, 138, 149, 154, 180, 202, 206, 227 Welfare State: 005, 019, 030, 043, 045, 049, 062, 063, 066, 070, 072, 079, 080, 085, 102, 106, 119, 121, 129, 137, 140, 145, 148, 149, 150, 151, 154, 157, 168, 169, 172, 173, 174, 189, 196, 207, 214, 228, 230, 239, 243, 253, 265
Participant Index
Participant Index
65
Aalberts, Tanja, 061 Abazi, Vigjilenca, 040 Abels, Gabriele, 192 Abraham, David, 023, 072 Ackrill, Robert, 050 Adam, Christian, 037 Adinolfi, Adelina, 002 Adriaensen, Johan, 210 Agartan, Tuba, 058, 184 Ahmed, Amel, 142, 178 Akkerman, Tjitske, 103, 166 Aksoy, Ozan, 250 Akturk, Sener, 165 Alberti, Gabriella, 052, 170 Alexandrakis, Othon, 082 Alexandrova, Petya, 215 Alexiadou, Despina, 046 Alfonso, Alexandre, 254 Alidadi, Katayoun, 248 Almeida, Jorge, 141 Alons, Gerry, 210 Alonso, Sonia, 060 Alvarez-Galvez, Javier, 184 Álvarez-Miranda, Berta, 148, 169 Amable, Bruno, 066 Amato, Annamaria, 054, 125 Amato, Giuliano, 039 Ancelovici, Marcos, 041, 056 Andersen, Jørgen, 196 Anderson, Bridget, 099, 170 Anderson, Chris, 135 Anderson, Joel, 077 Anderson, Karen, 030, 149 Angelescu, Irina, 234 Ankersmit, Laurens, 061 Apaydin, Fulya, 217 Appel, Hilary, 093, 115 Aramburu, Mikel, 007 Arcarons, Albert, 256 Arcuri, Alessandra, 076 Ardic, Nurullah, 132 Arenes, Claire, 091 Armenteros, Carolina, 075 Armingeon, Klaus, 115, 137, 174 Armstrong, Kenneth, 161 Arnold, Christine, 050, 194 Ascoli, Ugo, 148, 169 Asderaki, Foteini, 046 Asgeirsdottir, Asa, 221 Asquer, Raffaele, 163 Avci, Gamze, 044 Avdagic, Sabina, 012, 174 Avtalyon, Femke, 136 Aydemir, Nermin, 160, 246
Aydin, Sena, 082
Baccaro, Lucio, 174, 206 Bachmann, Veit, 263 Backstrom, Arvid, 019 Badanjak, Sanja, 021, 163 Bader, Veit, 248 Bain, Jessica, 159 Bakhtiari, Elyas, 015, 153, 221 Bakir, Caner, 067 Bakker, Bert, 152 Bakker, Sarah, 250 Balcells, Laia, 212 Baldi, Gregory, 070 Bale, Tim, 110 Balkenhol, Markus, 014, 240, 260 Bambra, Clare, 221 Ban, Carolyn, 155 Banai, Ayelet, 258 Banens, Maks, 068 Barahimi, Mina, 268 Barberá, Pablo, 165 Barbieri, Paolo, 078 Barnes, Lucy, 023, 212 Barta, Zsofia, 231 Basilien-Gainche, Marie-Laure, 161, 185, 223 Bassel, Leah, 034, 274 Baubock, Rainer, 010, 056, 120 Bauer, Michael, 144, 249 Baumann, Gerd, 258 Baumgartner, Frank, 124, 215 Bayram, Ismail, 023 Beach, Derek, 079 Beaman, Jean, 153 Beaudonnet, Laurie, 140, 186 Becher, Michael, 117 Becker, Elisabeth, 160 Becker, Frans, 086 Beckfield, Jason, 035, 078, 221, 237 Beekers, Daan, 213 Beissinger, Mark, 001, 024 Béland, Daniel, 145 Belfrage, Claes, 047, 049, 157 Bello, Valeria, 140 Benassi, Chiara, 138, 206 Beramendi, Pablo, 109, 135 Berda, Yael, 076 Berdak, Oliwia, 003 Berezin, Mabel, 266 Berg, Linda, 036 Berglund, Tomas, 196 Bermeo, Nancy, 024 Bernardini, Giovanni, 104 Bernhard, Laurent, 254
Bernhard, Michael, 001, 142, 251 Bertossi, Christophe, 014, 025, 101 Besnier, Niko, 131 Bevelander, Pieter, 010 Beyers, Jan, 171 Bezuijen, Jeanine, 042 Bialasiewicz, Luiza, 242, 263 Bickerton, Christopher, 239, 261 Biedenkopf, Katja, 257, 267 Bindi, Federiga, 234 Biondi, Yuri, 081 Blatter, Joachim, 010 Blavoukos, Spyros, 202 Bleich, Erik, 014, 143 Blockmans, Steven, 002 Bobek, Michal, 083 Bohl, Marian, 165 Bohle, Dorothee, 202 Bol, Thijs, 078 Bolukbasi, H. Tolga, 066, 111 Bomberg, Elizabeth, 257 Bonfiglioli, Chiara, 003 Bonjour, Saskia, 101 Bonneau, Nicholas, 004 Bonnefoit, Régine, 134 Bonnet, Francois, 160 Bonoli, Giuliano, 137 Bont, Raf, 267 Boomgaarden, Hajo, 259 Boonstra, Klara, 130 Borras, Susana, 256 Bory, Anne, 170 Bos, Linda, 259 Boss, Adam, 004 Boston, Nicholas, 068, 274 Boswell, Christina, 013, 147, 200, 269 Boucoyannis, Deborah, 251 Bouvet, Laurent, 086 Bouza Garcia, Luis, 097, 122 Bowen, John, 034, 167, 190, 237 Boyer, Dominic, 237 Boyer, Robert, 115 Bracke, Piet, 221 Bradbury, Jonathan, 171 Braun, Kathrin, 107 Bray, Janna, 162, 233 Breeman, Gerard, 124, 215 Breschi, Danilo, 054, 245 Brochmann, Grete, 154 Brown, Patrick, 184 Brubaker, Rogers, 190 Brudny, Yitzhak, 251 Bruquetas Callejo, Maria, 154 Brösamle, Klaus, 087 Buckley, Noah, 020
66
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Burgoon, Brian, 128, 212, 270 Busemeyer, Marius, 043, 048, 049, 106 Busuioc, Madalina, 033 Bürgin, Alexander, 094, 118, 182 Büthe, Tim, 079, 146 Börner, Stefanie, 129
Cafruny, Alan, 157 Caglar, Ayse, 044, 262 Calaresu, Marco, 183 Caldwell, Melissa, 250 Callaghan, Helen, 023, 114 Calvo, Kerman, 082 Cameron, David, 023, 115 Campbell, Rosie, 008 Campbell, Thomas, 151 Campomori, Francesca, 036, 121 Capelos, Tereza, 197 Capoccia, Giovanni, 123, 187, 251 Caponio, Tiziana, 036, 121, 269 Carammia, Marcello, 050, 147 Carkoglu, Ali, 044 Carlin, Wendy, 095 Carlson, Sören, 177 Carmel, Emma, 099, 121 Carol, Sarah, 201 Carrapico, Helena, 089, 160 Carroll, Christina, 258 Carstensen, Martin, 067 Carter, Betsy, 210 Carvalho, Joao, 110 Casal Bértoa, Fernando, 009, 038 Casey, Terrence, 067 Castelli Gattinara, Pietro, 147 Castelló, Enric, 188 Castillo Ortiz, Pablo, 185 Castro Martín, Teresa, 217 Catteeuw, Laurie, 028 Cecchi, Lorenzo, 094 Celis, Karen, 008 Cerna, Lucie, 181, 227 Cesari, Jocelyne, 072, 118, 162 Chaban, Natalia, 159 Chalmers, Adam, 108, 183 Chaplin, Alexander, 197 Chaqués, Laura, 124 Chaqués-Bonafont, Laura, 124, 147, 188 Chardas, Anastassios, 032 Charitakis, Stelios, 151 Charnysh, Volha, 186 Charron, Nicholas, 113, 163 Chauvin, Sebastien, 095, 099, 121, 170 Chebel d’Appollonia, Ariane, 091 Chelotti, Nicola, 108 Childs, Sarah, 008 Christiansen, Flemming, 117 Chuliá, Elisa, 149 Cini, Michelle, 155
Ciornei, Irina, 217 Cisar, Ondrej, 057 Citi, Manuele, 050 Ciupijus, Zyama, 170 Clark, Julian, 242 Clasen, Jochen, 145 Clegg, Daniel, 180 Clements, Rachel, 077 Cohen, Jim, 091 Colino, César, 252 Collignon, Stefan, 039 Colpani, Gianmaria, 068 Conconi, Paola, 017 Conti, Francesca, 177 Cooper, Ian, 182 Cooper, Jasper, 022 Corduwener, Pepijn, 071 Corrias, Luigi, 061 Cortina, Clara, 217 Cottias, Myriam, 222 Couperus, Stefan, 158 Coussens, Wouter, 247 Cox, Laurence, 204, 236, 271 Cremers, Johannes (Jan), 170 Cremona, Marise, 002 Cronin, James, 012, 090 Crotty, William, 021 Crouch, Graeme, 094 Cular, Goran, 038 Cullen, Pauline, 097 Culpepper, Pepper, 031, 049, 146 Curtin, Deirdre, 089 Cutler, Robert, 232
D’Amato, Gianni, 200 D’Auria, Matthew, 054, 125, 195 d’Ottavio, Gabriele, 104 Daalder, Hans, 205 Dabrowski, Marcin, 032 Dagilyte, Egle, 161 Dahlström, Carl, 087 Daly, Mary, 085, 214 Dandashly, Assem, 175 Dandolov, Philip, 140 Dandoy, Régis, 060, 088 Dannwolf, Tanja, 037, 185 Danson, Michael, 006 Darcillon, Thibault, 066 Davidson-Schmich, Louise, 218 Davidsson, Johan, 005 Davies, Gareth, 061 Davis, Mark, 151 Daviter, Falk, 050 de Bruin, Robin, 104 De Cecco, Marcello, 203 De Deken, Johan, 149 de Dijn, Annelien, 075 de Goede, Marieke, 040, 089
De Haan, Ido, 173 de la Porte, Caroline, 047, 049, 228, 264 de Lange, Sarah, 126, 173, 205, 238 de Lange, Tesseltje, 170 De Ligio, Giulio, 125, 245 de Miguel, Carolina, 021 de Miguel, Jesús, 256 de Roode, Sven, 104 de Ruijter, Anniek, 033 de Valk, Helga, 217, 266 de Wilde, Pieter, 266 de Witte, Marleen, 193 Deckwitz, Sanne, 133 Deeg, Richard, 128, 146, 167 deegan-Krause, Kevin, 009 Delgado Casteleiro, Andrés, 002, 027, 053 Delhey, Jan, 209, 217 dell’Agnese, Elena, 242 Della Porta, Donatella, 001, 041, 190 Dellepiane, Sebastian, 202 Dellmuth, Lisa, 171, 224 Dembinska, Magdalena, 057 Denissen, Amy, 092 Deschouwer, Kris, 205 Desser, Daphne, 188 Deswarte, Richard, 054, 125 Diels, Hans, 211 Díez Medrano, Juan, 217, 266 Dimopoulos, Angelos, 027 Dini, Vittorio, 028 Djordjevic, Biljana, 100 Djordjevic, Dusan, 257 do Vale, Helder, 252 Dobbernack, Jan, 112 Dobbins, Michael, 227 Dobos, Gábor, 088 Doerr, Nicole, 035, 082 Dolenec, Danijela, 093 Donas, Tom, 224 Donovan, Barbara, 218 Doomernik, Jeroen, 070, 181 Dotti, Nicola, 032 Dougherty, Sarah, 084 Doukouré, Ounia, 223 Draper, Nicholas, 222 Dreyer-Lassen, David, 249 Drieskens, Edith, 176 Dronkers, Jaap, 065 Dubajic, Daria, 088 Dubin, Kenneth, 180 Duch, Raymond, 017 Dudek, Jerzy, 053 Dudová, Radka, 092 Dufour, Pascale, 041 Dumka, Ivan, 230 Dunlop, Claire, 182 Durand, Cédric, 157
Participant Index
67
Duyulmus, Cem, 111 Duyvendak, Jan Willem, 014, 035, 072, 101, 143, 173 Dyevre, Arthur, 185 Dzankic, Jelena, 029 Dølvik, Jon Erik, 196
Ecchia, Stefania, 028, 098 Eckhardt, Jappe, 116 Eder, Mine, 118 Egeberg, Morten, 155 Eger, Maureen, 025, 051, 072 Ehrkamp, Patricia, 262 Eigmüller, Monika, 129 Eijberts, Melanie, 127 Eissenstat, Howard, 132 Ekiert, Grzegorz, 024, 229 Ekmekcioglu, Lerna, 132 El Qadim, Nora, 013 Elbasani, Arolda, 094, 120, 162 Eleftheriadis, Konstantinos, 156 Elias, Anwen, 060 Elias, Leticia, 215 Elpers, Sophie, 193, 260 Emmenegger, Patrick, 106, 137, 254 Emperador, Montserrat, 255 Engbersen, Godfried, 199 Engeli, Isabelle, 179, 235 Entzinger, Han, 199 Epperly, Brad, 083 Erk, Jan, 165 Ertugal, Ebru, 044, 111 Ervasti, Heikki, 063 Escafré-Dublet, Angéline, 112 Eskyte, Ieva, 151 Esping-Andersen, Gøsta, 109 Estevez-Abe, Margarita, 080, 102 Ette, Andreas, 177 Exadaktylos, Theofanis, 197 Eydal, Gudny, 243 Ezquerra, Sandra, 068, 082
Fabbrini, Sergio, 175 Fabian Borenstein, Corey, 167 Facchini, Giovanni, 017 Fagan, Adam, 029, 057 Fagan, Colette, 105 Fahey, Elaine, 089, 161 Falcó-Gimeno, Albert, 117 Falkner, Gerda, 037, 219 Falleti, Tulia, 079, 123, 146 Fargion, Valeria, 169, 272 Fassin, Didier, 099 Fassin, Eric, 274 Fassman, Heinz, 199 Favell, Adrian, 129, 177 Fennema, Meindert, 071 Fernandes, Tiago, 001, 024
Fernández-Albertos, José, 152, 212 Ferree, Myra Marx, 069 Ferrera, Maurizio, 172 Fichera, Massimo, 089 Field, Bonnie, 060 Fine, Janice, 026, 052 Fink-Hafner, Danica, 038 Fioretos, Orfeo, 123, 146 Fishman, Robert, 001 Fitzpatrick, Tony, 150 Fleming, Crystal, 025 Flesher Fominaya, Cristina, 082, 204, 236, 273 Fligstein, Neil, 056 Folescu, Corina, 208 Follis, Karolina, 208 Fonseca, Dora, 041 Ford, Robert, 017 Forde, Chris, 170 Foscari, Giuseppe, 125, 195, 216 Fossati, Flavia, 254 Fourcade, Marion, 203 Fox, Jon, 112, 225 Franklin, Elise, 090 Franquesa, Jaume, 007, 257 Fransen, Luc, 212 Freyburg, Tina, 182, 234 Fuchs, Frieda, 178 Fuchs, Ralf-Peter, 245
Gagatek, Wojciech, 088 Gal, Susan, 003, 226 Gallo, Fernanda, 054, 195 Garavini, Giuliano, 267 Garbaye, Romain, 091 Garcés-Mascareñas, Blanca, 099 Garcia, Maria, 116, 234 García Blanco, José María, 119 Garcia Faroldi, Livia, 141 García-Munoz Alhambra, Antonio, 130 Garrett, Crister, 140, 211 Garritzmann, Julian, 019 Gebel, Michael, 078 Geddes, Andrew, 200, 232, 269 Geering, Dominik, 166, 253 Georgakakis, Didier, 155 Gerhards, Jürgen, 266 Germond, Carine, 016, 267 Gest, Justin, 139, 201 Geva, Dorit, 069 Gherghina, Sergiu, 009, 136 Ghervas, Stella, 198, 258 Ghorashi, Halleh, 127 Giannoumis, Anthony G., 151 Gicquel, Héloïse, 223 Giesecke, Johannes, 078 Giger, Nathalie, 253 Gilbert, Neil, 243
Gillett, Christopher, 004 Gingrich, Jane, 198 Giuliani, Marco, 194 Givens, Terri, 051 Glaab, Sonja, 004 Glatzer, Miguel, 119, 148 Glöckler, Gabriel, 247 Goddard, Victoria, 131 Goetz, Klaus, 020 Goldner, Iris, 223 González Begega, Sergio, 169 González de Lara, Yadira, 087 Gordon, Geoff, 061 Goslinga, Hans, 205 Gottardis, Andreas, 112 Goudappel, Flora, 223 Gough, Ian, 150 Goul Andersen, Jørgen, 063 Gourevitch, Peter, 095, 203 Goyer, Michel, 031, 067 Gram-Skjoldager, Karen, 158 Grappi, Giorgio, 026 Grasten, Maj Lervad, 094 Graziano, Paolo, 111 Greene, James, 046 Greenwood, Justin, 097, 122, 171 Greer, Scott, 033, 180 Greiner, Florian, 098 Greskovits, Bela, 024 Griffo, Maurizio, 054 Grill, Jan, 225 Grin, François, 226 Groß, Martin, 078 Grzymala-Busse, Anna, 146 Grötsch, Florian, 255 Grözinger, Gerd, 012 Guadeloupe, Francio, 193 Guarnizo, Luis, 241 Gueye, Abdoulaye, 255 Guillaud, Elvire, 138 Guillen, Ana, 148, 169 Guiraudon, Virginie, 013, 056, 080, 129, 237, 269, 274 Guisan, Catherine, 093, 140, 198 Guo, Jing, 243 Gupta, Devashree, 160 Guthoerl, Milena, 019 Gutiérrez, Rodolfo, 119 Gutierrez-Camps, Arnau, 006 Götz, Irene, 240
Haas, Jerome, 081 Hadden, Jennifer, 122 Haenggli, Regula, 254 Hager, Philip, 077 Halkias, Alexandra, 068 Hall, Catherine, 222 Halsey, Eric, 098
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Inde
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Hamer, Christina, 246 Hampshire, James, 110 Hancke, Robert, 031 Hans, Silke, 266 Hansen, Peo, 099, 121 Hanson, Stephen, 251 Hardiman, Niamh, 087, 202 Hassel, Anke, 012, 109, 206 Haughton, Tim, 009 Haukanes, Haldis, 131 Heath, Anthony, 017 Hedegaard, Troels, 063 Heidbreder, Eva, 244, 264 Heinisch, Reinhard, 126 Heinrich, Horst-Alfred, 197 Heizmann, Boris, 139 Helbling, Marc, 017, 162 Helgadottir, Oddny, 067 Hemerijck, Anton, 095, 102, 137, 172 Hendley, Kathryn, 083 Henninger, Annette, 192, 218 Herlin-Karnell, Ester, 089 Herweg, Nicole, 257 Hinnfors, Jonas, 086, 110 Hjerm, Mikael, 063 Hobolth, Mogens, 264 Hodson, Dermot, 247, 261 Hofhansel, Claus, 162 Hofman, Ana, 011 Hogea, Constanta, 258 Hoijtink, Marijn, 040 Holden, Patrick, 176 Holgate, Jane, 052 Holleran, Max, 022 Holli, Anne Maria, 105 Holman, Otto, 094, 157 Holz, Keith, 113, 134 Hombrado Martos, Angustias, 252 Hondius, Dienke, 222, 260 Hooghe, Liesbet, 042, 219, 249 Hopkin, Jonathan, 030, 180 Horta, Hugo, 227 Hosli, Madeleine, 175 Hotze, Jessica, 217 Howell, Chris, 206, 230 Huber, Evelyne, 062 Huebner, Kurt, 115 Huggins, Christopher, 006, 032 Hughes, Catherine, 250 Hunter, Alistair, 269 Huo, Jingjing, 062 Hurenkamp, Menno, 173 Husu, Liisa, 105 Hutter, Swen, 097, 233 Hübscher, Evelyne, 117 Häusermann, Silja, 109, 172, 253
Ikstens, Janis, 038
Infantino, Federica, 013 Inglot, Tomasz, 214, 243, 265 Ioannidou, Eleftheria, 077 Ioannou, Demos, 247 Iszkowski, Krzysztof, 232 Ito, Takeshi, 163, 231 Ivaldi, Gilles, 238
Jabko, Nicolas, 018, 261 Jacoby, Wade, 270 Jacquot, Sophie, 186 Jancic, Davor, 182 Janssens, Rudi, 226 Jarman, Holly, 033 Jasiewicz, Joanna, 153 Jasper, Jim, 059, 273 Javornik, Jana, 214 Jayet, Cyril, 209 Jeandesboz, Julien, 013, 040, 248 Jeffery, Charlie, 249 Jennings, Will, 215 Jenny, Marcelo, 194 Jensen, Camilla, 064 Jensen, Carsten, 043 Jensen, Janne, 266 Jensen, Mette, 133 Jepsen, Maria, 005 Jessoula, Matteo, 102 Jezierska, Katarzyna, 208 Johansson, Hakan, 097, 122 Johansson-Nogues, Elisabeth, 176 Johnston, Alison, 012, 031, 066 Johnston, Richard, 017, 070 Jones, Alun, 242 Jones, Stephany, 081 Jones-Correa, Michael, 036 Jordana, Jacint, 180 Jounin, Nicolas, 170 Jungar, Ann-Catrine, 103 Jupskas, Anders, 126 Jusko, Karen, 017
Kaasch, Alexandra, 137 Kacarska, Simonida, 029 Kaczmarczyk, Pawel, 199 Kahlina, Katja, 003 Kaiser, Wolfram, 016, 267 Kalantzis, Konstantinos, 055 Kalb, Donald, 007, 187 Kalman, Judit, 006 Kaminska, Monika -Ewa, 058 Kangas, Olli, 196 Kantola, Johanna, 008 Karaca, Banu, 220 Karner, Christian, 197 Kashin, Konstantin, 229 Kassim, Hussein, 069, 155 Katsiardi-Hering, Olga, 216
Kawar, Leila, 161 Kaya, Ayhan, 112 Kelemen, R. Daniel, 123 Kemmerling, Achim, 066 Kende, Judit, 057 Kennedy, James, 104, 133, 173 Kentikelenis, Alexander, 019 Kerremans, Bart, 210 Kesler, Christel, 154 Kettunen, Pauli, 207 Kevins, Anthony, 070, 189 King, Desmond, 023 Kinsey, Barbara, 233 Kirkpinar Acar, Nihal, 044 Kitschelt, Herbert, 135 Kittel, Bernhard, 152 Kleider, Hanna, 189 Kleine, Mareike, 239 Klinke, Ian, 263 Kloosterman, Robert, 046, 241 Klumbyte, Neringa, 167 Knijn, Trudie, 243 Knoll, Moritz, 037 Knudsen, Jette, 116, 141 Kóczé, Angela, 084 Koehler, Daniel, 187 Koelet, Suzana, 266 Kofman, Eleonore, 080, 181 Kohlbacher, Josef, 199 Koivu, Kendra, 163 Kolossov, Vladimir, 263 Koning, Edward, 070 Konstadinides, Theodore, 089 Koopmans, Ruud, 051, 201 Kopecky, Petr, 136 Koreh, Michal, 145 Korneev, Oleg, 013 Korteweg, Anna, 127 Kosar, David, 083 Koska, Viktor, 100 Koski-Karell, Danny, 025 Koslowski, Rey, 181 Kotnarowski, Michal, 088 Kotz, Hans, 081 Kourtova, Plamena, 113 Kousis, Maria, 041 Krasniqi, Gezim, 100 Kreuzer, Markus, 009, 079, 106 Kriesi, Hanspeter, 017, 109 Krings, Torbin, 026 Krook, Mona, 008 Krug, Katharina, 227 Kröger, Sandra, 183 Kudrna, Zdenek, 128, 219 Kuhn, Theresa, 212 Kulpa, Roberto, 156 Kumlin, Staffan, 063 Kuo, Alexander, 152, 212
Participant Index
69
Kuokstis, Vytautas, 093 Kurzer, Paulette, 033 Kutter, Amelie, 023 Kvist, Jon, 189, 196, 228 Käsper, Kari, 179
Lacewell, Onawa, 266 Laczó, Ferenc, 125 Lagendijk, Vincent, 158 Lamont, Michèle, 014, 035, 056 Lancee, Bram, 066 Lanzillo, Laura, 195 Lapuente, Victor, 180 Laqua, Daniel, 158 Laragon, Ashley, 017 Larik, Joris, 002, 027, 053 Larsen, Christian, 063, 141 Latour, Vincent, 091 Laurence, Jonathan, 201 Lawrence, Jessica, 061 Lawrence, Roger, 006 Le Galès, Patrick, 237 Leal, David, 014 Lecheler, Sophie, 064, 188 Ledoux, Clémence, 080 Leemann, Lucas, 020 Leerssen, Joep, 190 Legêne, Susan, 222 Leibfried, Stephan, 062, 172 Leimgruber, Matthieu, 043, 048, 207 Leisyte, Liudvika, 227 Lemke, Christiane, 107 Lengfeld, Holger, 129 Lentin, Alana, 260 Lenz, Tobias, 042 León, Margarita, 085, 214 Lepinard, Eleonore, 034, 076 Leruth, Benjamin, 114, 163 Levels, Mark, 065 Levy, Jonah, 062 Lewis, David, 087 Liefferink, Duncan, 244 Lima, Antónia, 007 Lindekilde, Lasse, 112 Lindner, Johannes, 247 Lindvall, Johannes, 012, 174 Littoz-Monnet, Annabelle, 183 Lochocki, Timo, 268 Loewen, Peter, 017 Lok, Matthijs, 075 Lomb, Samantha, 098 Lopez-Santana, Mariely, 114, 189 Lovenduski, Joni, 008 Lovrenovic, Maja, 011 Lucci, Diego, 245 Luede, Rolf, 067 Lynch, Julia, 030, 123
Maatoug, Senna, 136 Mabbett, Deborah, 031, 149 MacKenzie, Robert, 170 Maeder, Lars, 194 Mahon, Rianne, 137, 265 Maiolo, Francesco, 198 Malik, Adeel, 229 Mallard, Gregoire, 076 Mamadouh, Virginie, 226, 242, 263 Mancuso, Francesco, 098 Manow, Philip, 145, 233, 253 Mantouvalos, Ikaros, 216 Marácz, László, 226 Marco Colino, Sandra, 045 Mares, Isabela, 005, 251 Marino, Stefania, 026, 074 Marks, Gary, 042, 090, 249 Martin, Cathie Jo, 178 Martín Casares, Aurélia, 222 Martinez Lucio, Miguel, 074 Martinsen, Dorte, 244, 264 Marx, Paul, 138, 152, 254 Masselot, Annick, 272 Massetti, Emanuele, 060 Mastenbroek, Ellen, 244, 264 Matera, Claudio, 073 Matiaske, Wenzel, 012 Matsaganis, Manos, 102, 119, 169 Matthijs, Matthias, 018, 030 Mattoni, Alice, 204 Mau, Steffen, 217 Maussen, Marcel, 040, 248 Maxwell, Rahsaan, 143 Mazzoleni, Oscar, 126 Mbaye, Heather, 171 McClelland, Keith, 222 McDonnell, Duncan, 126, 238 McDonnell, Hugh, 075 McGhee, Derek, 225 McInerney, Chris, 006 McLaughlin, Sarah, 211, 224 McManus, Patricia, 141, 153 McNamara, Kathleen, 018, 129 Medina, Tait, 015 Medrano, Juan, 167, 237 Meffert, Michael, 152 Meguid, Bonnie, 060, 154 Mehring, Frank, 231 Meier, Petra, 008 Meiorg, Marianne, 179 Melik-Tangyan, Andranik, 020 Menédez Gonzalez, Maria, 105 Menendez, Irene, 210 Menz, Georg, 070, 154 Mepschen, Paul, 014, 035, 167, 213 Meret, Susi, 103, 126, 238 Messina, Anthony, 154 Meunier, Sophie, 232, 237, 270
Meyer, Jan-Henrik, 016, 267 Michalowski, Ines, 201 Mihaila, Roxana, 208 Mijs, Arnout, 175 Milio, Simona, 032 Miller, Lisa, 215 Miller-Gonzalez, Jennifer, 139, 255 Milman, Noa, 035 Mironova, Vera, 118 Mitsilegas, Valsamis, 089 Modood, Tariq, 112 Molnar, Virag, 184 Monaghan, Shannon, 090 Mondon, Aurelien, 187 Monforte, Pierre, 013, 041 Montero-Sieburth, Martha, 256 Morales, Laura, 147 Moraru, Madalina, 053, 073 Morel, Nathalie, 080 Moreno-Fuentes, Francisco, 154 Morgan, Kimberly, 014, 145 Morosanu, Laura, 225 Moses, Julia, 019, 048 Motmans, Joz, 179 Moutselos, Michalis, 255 Mukerji, Chandra, 045 Mulholland, Jon, 181 Mushaben, Joyce Marie, 192 Musterd, Sako, 241 Mügge, Daniel, 067, 128, 261 Mügge, Liza, 103, 127, 255 Müller, Patrick, 219 Müller-Härlin, Anna, 134
Naczyk, Marek, 005 Narotzky, Susana, 007, 131 Natali, David, 005, 137, 148, 168 Naujoks, Daniel, 010 Navratil, Jiri, 057 Nenadovic, Maja, 093 Neves da Costa Maia, Fernando, 028 Nez, Héloïse, 041 Nicholls, Walter, 262 Novak, Stephanie, 182, 232 Novaky, Niklas, 108
O'Reilly, Pierce, 230 Obinger, Herbert, 019, 207 Obrien, Peter, 162 Odmalm, Pontus, 086, 110, 139 Oesterle, August, 085 Offe, Claus, 203 Oktem, Kerem, 246 Olafsdottir, Sigrun, 015, 184, 221 Olafsson, Stefan, 063, 196 Oliver, Rebecca, 043 Ost, David, 001 Otterspeer, Willem, 059
Part
icip
ant
Inde
x
70
Oude Nijhuis, Dennie, 230 Outshoorn, Joyce, 092 Owen, Louise, 077 Ozcurumez, Saime, 111, 188, 246 Ozer, Yonca, 044 Ozgul, Ceren, 220
Page, Edward, 155 Pagoulatos, George, 202 Palau, Anna, 147 Palau, Anna Maria, 194 Palier, Bruno, 106, 172, 196 Palme, Joakim, 168 Palomera, Jaime, 007 Pancaldi, Federico, 005 Pannico, Roberto, 159 Pappas, Takis, 009 Paraskevas, Anne-Marie, 265 Paraskevopoulos, Christos, 093, 272 Parker, Owen, 157 Parla, Ayse, 220 Parrado, Salvador, 087 Partos, Rebecca, 110 Partridge, Damani, 260 Paster, Thomas, 043 Patel, Kiran, 158 Paternotte, David, 156, 179, 235 Pattyn, Elise, 015 Paul, Darel, 224 Paul, Herman, 059 Paul, Regine, 099, 121, 157 Paul, Ruxandra, 009, 186 Pauwels, Teun, 126 Pavolini, Emmanuele, 005 Peisakhin, Leonid, 229 Pellen, Cédric, 187 Penninx, Rinus, 036, 074 Perchoc, Philippe, 164, 209 Pereira da Silva Gama, Carlos Federico, 028 Perez, Sofia, 102, 154 Pero’, Davide, 026 Perreau, Bruno, 156 Peters, B. Guy, 087 Peters, Maggie, 017 Peters, Yvette, 020 Petersen, Klaus, 019, 207 Petersohn, Bettina, 252 Petmesidou, Maria, 148, 169 Petrovic, Tanja, 011, 240 Pettai, Vello, 038 Pfau-Effinger, Birgit, 214, 243, 265 Philliou, Christine, 132 Piccio, Daniela R., 021 Pine, Frances, 131, 164 Pink, Michael, 088 Piotrowski, Grzegorz, 057 Pochet, Philippe, 049, 150, 228
Podstawa, Karolina, 053, 073, 223 Pohl, Benjamin, 108 Polak, Josine, 244, 264 Polavieja, Javier, 139 Poletti, Arlo, 116 Polk, Jonathan, 233 Pontusson, Jonas, 135, 212 Pop-Eleches, Grigore, 024, 229 Popic, Tamara, 058 Popova, Maria, 083 Portela, Clara, 176 Prata, Ana, 092 Princen, Sebastiaan, 050 Prokic-Breuer, Tijana, 118 Puccio, Laura, 027 Puetter, Uwe, 239, 261 Puzzo, Catherine, 091
Queralt, Didac, 251
Racho, Tania, 223 Racovita, Mihaela, 208 Raess, Damian, 114 Ragazzi, Francesco, 100 Raiser, Christoph, 117 Raitano, Michele, 119 Ramonaite, Aine, 038 Ramos Martin, Nuria Elena, 130 Ranci, Costanzo, 085, 119 Rath, Jan, 022 Rayder, Benjamin, 166 Rea, Andrea, 080 Read, Rosie, 055 Recchi, Ettore, 056, 129 Reeger, Ursula, 199 Reich, Simon, 091 Reijnen, Carlos, 104, 263 Reinhold, Bernadette, 134 Reksodirdjo, Wisnu, 068 Rempe, Martin, 016 Rensen, Marleen, 075 Resnick, Elana, 250 Resodihardjo, Sandra, 045 Reusch, Johann, 245 Reuter, Wolf Heinrich, 114 Ricci, Rosa, 245 Rich, Morgan, 113 Richard, Anne-Isabelle, 158 Rigó, Máté, 090 Rivero, Gonzalo, 165 Robcis, Camille, 156 Rodrigo y Alharilla, Martin, 222 Roederer-Rynning, Christilla, 211 Rogers, Anne, 015 Romanos, Eduardo, 041 Roodenburg, Herman, 193, 213 Rooduijn, Matthijs, 233, 259 Ros, Virginia, 147
Rosén Sundström, Malena, 086 Rosenhaft, Eve, 222 Rossano, Marco, 209 Rostgaard, Tine, 085 Rothschild, Emma, 203 Rothstein, Bo, 133 Roussias, Nasos, 021 Rovny, Allison, 253 Rovny, Jan, 208, 233 Rovnyi, Ievgenii, 263 Roxana, Barbulescu, 186 Royo, Sebastián, 175 Ruble, Alexandria, 090 Rueda, David, 066, 135, 174, 253 Rutgers, Mark, 133 Ruvolo, Francesco, 195 Ruzza, Carlo, 097, 122 Ryan, Louise, 181, 225 Rybar, Marek, 088 Rössel, Jörg, 266
Saada, Emmanuelle, 209, 237 Sacchi, Stefano, 102, 172 Sadeh, Tal, 175 Saharso, Sawitri, 025 Samaluk, Barbara, 170 Sanchez Salgado, Rosa, 097, 122, 183 Sandelind, Clara, 268 Sanmartin, Jose, 071 Santana-Acuna, Alvaro, 113, 257 Santbergen, Leo, 244 Sardelic, Julija, 100 Sauer, Birgit, 034 Saunders, Claire, 204 Savas, Efe, 043 Schakel, Arjan, 088, 249 Scharpf, Fritz, 049 Scheffel, David, 160, 186 Schelkle, Waltraud, 031, 175, 192 Schilde, Kaija, 115, 202, 234 Schinkel, Willem, 240 Schipper, Frank, 158 Schmidt, Vivien, 018, 039, 049 Schmidtke, Oliver, 036, 268 Schmitter, Philippe, 001 Schnabel, Annette, 255 Schneider, Gerald, 042 Schoenman, Roger, 093 Scholten, Peter, 036, 118, 147, 167, 199 Schout, Adriaan, 175 Schroedter, Julia, 266 Schuck, Andreas, 064 Schulze-Cleven, Tobias, 140 Schumacher, Gijs, 152 Schwander, Hanna, 138, 253 Schwartz, Herman, 062, 128 Schwellnus, Guido, 211, 219 Sciarrotta, Silvana, 028, 195
Participant Index
71
Sciortino, Giuseppe, 200 Scruggs, Lyle, 150 Seeleib-Kaiser, Martin, 005, 214 Segeral, Nathalie, 164 Segers, Mathieu, 018 Sergi, Vittorio, 204 Serritzlew, Soren, 249 Sezneva, Olga, 241 Shahin, Jamal, 176, 242, 263 Shalev, Michael, 045, 140, 168, 231 Shaw, Eric, 086 Shaw, Jo, 003, 029, 120 Sheets, Penny, 259 shemer Kunz, Yoav, 183 Sherry, Jonathan, 071 Shoshan, Nitzan, 213 Shum, Robert, 231 Shutes, Isabel, 085 Sierp, Aline, 197 Siim, Birte, 034 Sil, Rudra, 178 Siles-Brugge, Gabriel, 211, 272 Simard, Augustin, 076 Simms, Melanie, 052, 074 Simoni, Marco, 174, 231 Sithole, Kundai, 107 Skaaning, Svend-Erik, 231 Skalamera, Morena, 234 Skoutaris, Nikos, 027, 073 Slootmaeckers, Koen, 179 Smith, Michael E., 108 Snel, Erik, 199 Soroka, George, 234 Sorrels, Katherine, 098 Soskice, David, 135 Sotiropoulos, Dimitrios, 024, 148 Soyaltin, Digdem, 111 Spanihelova, Lucie, 020 Spehar, Andrea, 036 Spendzharova, Aneta, 083, 244 Spijkerboer, Thomas, 274 Spilker, Gabriele, 212 Spiritova, Markete, 240 Spirova, Maria, 136 Spitz, Jean-Fabien, 039 Spreitzer, Astrid, 194 Squatrito, Theresa, 224 Stahl, Bernhard, 197 Stamati, Furio, 148 Stambolis-Ruhstorfer, Michael, 156 Starke, Peter, 137, 207 Starostina, Natalia, 164 Statham, Paul, 201, 225 Steinberg, Phil, 022, 242 Steinhardt, Max, 017 Stekelenburg, Jacquelien, 035 Stengs, Ireme, 011 Stengs, Irene, 193, 213
Stephens, John, 045, 202 Steunenberg, Bernard, 037 Stiks, Igor, 029, 120 Stiller, Sabina, 150, 228 Stjepanovic, Dejan, 100 Stockemer, Daniel, 020, 166, 187 Stoeckel, Florian, 209 Stone, Marla, 071 Stoyanov, Dragomir, 117, 183 Streeck, Wolfgang, 095, 239 Stubbergaard, Ylva, 097 Suginohara, Masako, 163 Sulitzeanu-Kenan, Raanan, 152 Svallfors, Stefan, 030 Szalma, Ivett, 179 Szekely, Istvan, 088
Tabachnik, Maxim, 258 Takács, Judit, 069, 179 Tallberg, Jonas, 042 Tanasoiu, Cosmina, 208 Tapia, Maite, 026, 052 Tatham, Michael, 144, 171, 224, 249 Teigen, Mari, 105 Teitzer, Roland, 078 Teney, Céline, 266 Teorell, Jan, 114, 163 Teti, Andrea, 204 Thatcher, Mark, 146 Thelen, Kathleen, 206 Thelen, Tatjana, 131, 186 Theodosiou, Aspasia, 055 Thesen, Gunnar, 064, 124 Thiemann, Matthias, 081 Thraenhardt, Dietrich, 181 Tiberghien, Yves, 270 Tieze, Agnes, 134 Tijdens, Kea, 130 Timmermans, Arco, 124, 194 Tokuzlu, Lami, 220 Tonkens, Evelien, 173 Torpey, John, 059 Toshkov, Dimiter, 037 Toubeau, Simon, 252 Townsend-Bell, Erica, 034 Trampusch, Christine, 048, 079, 106, 168 Tremblay, Manon, 068 Trenz, Hans-Joerg, 056 Tresch, Anke, 124 Trocini, Federico, 125 Troubeta, Sevasti, 055 Truchlewski, Zbigniew, 114 Tsakona, Anna Elisabeth, 197 Tsilimpounidi, Myrto, 077 Tucker, Joshua, 229 Turcu, Anca, 233 Turkyilmaz, Yektan, 220
Turner, Eric, 041
Ugland, Trygve, 070 Uhereczky, Agnes, 265 Ungor, Ugur, 132 Urbinati, Nadia, 039 Ursin, Jani, 227 Valdez, Sarah, 025, 051, 072 Valdivielso, Rocio, 031 Vallbé, Joan-Josep, 117 Vampa, Davide, 189 Van Aelst, Peter, 259 van Biezen, Ingrid, 038 van Criekinge, Tine, 116 van de Port, Matthijs, 011 van de Werfhorst, Herman, 065 van der Brug, Wouter, 117, 205 van der Leun, Joanne, 262 Van der Ree, Gerard, 198 van der Ros, Janneke, 179 van der Veen, Maurits, 159, 234 van der Velden, Rolf, 065 van Der Vleuten, Anna, 116 Van der Zwan, Natascha, 149 van Gerven, Minna, 130, 228 van Hooren, Franca, 080, 137 Van Ingelgom, Virginie, 209 van Kessel, Stijn, 238 Van Mol, Christof, 177 Van Reekum, Rogier, 101, 240 van Santen, Rosa, 064 Van Schaik, Louise, 033, 176 van Vooren, Bart, 002, 053, 073 Van Vossole, Jonas, 197 Van Walsum, Sarah, 121, 274 Vanhercke, Bart, 130 Vanhoonacker, Sophie, 016 Vardaki, Elia, 055 Vares, Laura, 184 Várnagy, Réka, 088 Velmet, Aro, 069 Velthuis, Olav, 076 Verbeek, Stijn, 269 Verdun, Amy, 175 Verheul, Jaap, 059 Verlaaik, Oscar, 213 Verloo, Mieke, 034, 103, 179 Vermeersch, Peter, 120 Vermeiren, Jan, 098, 216 Vermeulen, Floris, 040, 248 Versluis, Esther, 244, 264 Vertovec, Steve, 262 Verwiebe, Roland, 177 Veugelers, John, 187 Vianello, Ilaria, 223 Ville-pekka, Sorsa, 168 Vinale, Adriano, 028, 054, 195
72
Vincze, Eniko, 084, 186 Vink, Maarten, 010, 101 Vis, Barbara, 137, 152 Visser, Jelle, 230 Vlandas, Timothee, 138 Vliegenthart, Rens, 064, 159, 246 Voeten, Erik, 042 Vogiatzoglou, Markos, 204 Vogt, Julie Anna, 258 Vollaard, Hans, 244 von Lingen, Alexander, 232 von Staden, Andreas, 208 von Wahl, Angelika, 107, 192, 218 Vrablikova, Katerina, 141 Vucetic, Srdjan, 159
Wagner, Ines, 026 Walby, Sylvia, 105 Waldinger, Roger, 241 Walker, Siovahn, 167 Wall, Karin, 243, 265 Walliser, Andres, 022 Walsh, Aylwyn, 077 Wangermann, Ernst, 216 Warlouzet, Laurent, 016, 231 Waters, Timothy, 029 Weinar, Agnieszka, 118, 139 Weishaupt, J. Timo, 140, 189 Welsh, Helga, 107 Wendler, Frank, 159 Westerheijden, Don, 227 Wiering, Mark, 244 Wiesbrock, Anja, 268 Wiliarty, Sarah, 218 Wille, Anchrit, 155, 256 Winland, Daphne, 046 Winter, Elke, 014 Wintle, Michael, 075 Wiss, Tobias, 149 Witschge, Jacqueline, 065 Wolff, Sarah, 176 Wolinetz, Steven, 021, 205 Woll, Cornelia, 095, 210, 239 Woodall, Carole, 132 Woodward, Alison E., 069, 105 Wren, Anne, 023, 046, 141 Wrench, John, 026, 074 Wustenberg, Jenny, 164
Xiarchogiannopoulou, Eleni, 272 Xidias, Jason, 160 Xydias, Christina, 105, 192, 218
Yalcin-Heckmann, Lale, 220 Yerkes, Mara, 005 Yiakoumaki, Vassiliki, 055 Yilmaz, Gozde, 188 Yilmaz, Volkan, 058
Young, Brigitte, 115, 128 Young, Kevin, 128 Yurdakul, Gokce, 127
Zaharijevic, Adriana, 003 Zamponi, Lorenzo, 082 Zanardi, Maurizio, 017 Zarobell, John, 113 Zaroulia, Marilena, 077 Zaslove, Andrej, 103, 238 Zeitlin, Jonathan, 079, 172 Zemmour, Michaël, 138 Zentai, Violetta, 084 Zhang, Haiyan, 270 Ziblatt, Daniel, 071, 208, 229, 251 Ziegler, J. Nicholas, 106 Zobel, Malisa, 139 Zubrzycki, Genevieve, 190 Zwaan, Pieter, 244 Zürn, Michael, 042, 219
Resources
Crisis & Contingency: States of (In)stability
20th International Conference of EuropeanistsAmsterdam, The Netherlands • June 25-27, 2013
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Session TimesThe 20th International Conference of Eu-ropeanists will convene each morning at 9 a.m. Each session slot is allotted one hour and 45 minutes, with a 15-minute break in between each session and an hour and 15 minutes for lunch. There will be four ses-sion slots throughout the day, two before lunch and two after. The first session of the day will begin at 9 a.m. and go until 10:45 a.m. The second session of the day will begin at 11 a.m. and go until 12:45 p.m. Following a lunch break, the third session of the day will convene at 2 p.m. and go until 3:45 p.m. The fourth and final session of the day will start at 4 p.m. and go until 5:45 p.m. Following the final session, there will be another fifteen minute break before eve-ning conference events take place. There will be two plenary sessions, one on Tues-day and one on Wednesday evening, both starting at 6 p.m. On Thursday night there will be an array of semi-plenary sessions co-organized by the Council’s Research Networks. Following the plenary sessions, there will be receptions, starting roughly at 7:30 p.m.
TechnologyEach session room will be provided with a PC computer, a projector, and a projection screen. Session organizers are strongly en-couraged to collect all presentations from their session presenters before the confer-ence and then arrive at their session room early to pre-load those presentations onto the computer. Both these actions will help prevent technological delays during the session.
For the first time in 2013, there will also be an official conference app available for download on all Android, Apple, and Black-berry devices. The app will include infor-mation about sessions, locations, exhibi-tors, and conference sponsors, as well as other useful information.
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*(A) PC Hoofthuis – Session RoomsSpuistraat 134, 1012 VB Amsterdam, Neth-erlands
(B) Aula – Plenary SessionsHandboogstraat 6, 1012 XM Amsterdam, Netherlands
(C) The Bazel – Reception SpaceVijzelstraat 32, Amsterdam, Netherlands
*(D) Binnengasthuis – Session Rooms1012 Amsterdam, The Netherlands
*(E) Oudemanhuispoort – Session RoomsOudemanhuispoort, Amsterdam, Nether-land
*(F) Oost-Indisch Huis – Session RoomsOude Hoogstraat 24, Amsterdam, Nether-lands
(G) Zuiderkerk – Reception SpaceZuiderkerkhof 72, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Conference VenuesOn the next page is a map of the conference venues for the 20th International Conference of Europeanists. The list below provides building name and address info for the highlighted locations. Those building which will be used for conference sessions (as opposed to receptions and other special events) are starred.
Hotels
Rho Hotel Nes 05-23, 1012 KC Amsterdam
Ibis Amsterdam CentreStationsplein 49, 1012 AB Amsterdam
NH City Centre AmsterdamSpuistraat, 288-292, 1012VX Amsterdam
NH CaransaRembrandtplein 19, 1017CT, Amsterdam
Below is a list of the official conference hotels for the 20th International Conference of Europeanists. These are not indicated on the map because not all of them fall within the space pictured. However, ad-dresses are provided and substantial additional information appears on the Council's website.
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Aboutthe CES Fellowship Fundraising Drive After a decade-long commitment, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation recently announced that it will no longer fund the Council for European Studies’ Pre-Dissertation Research Fellowship program. As a result, the Fellowship, which has been a cornerstone of the Council’s programming since 1972, now faces a funding crisis. The Council is working diligently to secure a new long-term funder. However, to continue awarding fellowships this year, we need your help. Donate now and help us raise $70,000 in “gap” funds by June 30, 2013. Without these funds, the Pre-Dissertation Research Fellowship will be discontinued immediately and, possibly, forever.
In order to keep this extraordinary program alive, CES has adopted a two-pronged approach. First, it is working diligently to secure a new long-term funder by reaching out to foundations and other financial partners. Second, the Council is appealing to its institutional friends and individu-al members to raise $70,000 in “gap” funds to support the continued awarding of fellowships in 2013 and 2014.
Strategy
Why you should give The Pre-Dissertation Research Fellowship dramatically advances and improves dissertation projects. Each fellow receives a $4,000 direct award intended to finance 6-8 weeks of early field research in Europe. But the fellowship doesn’t end after a few months in the field. It includes informa-tional programs, as well as publication and confer-ence presentation opportunities that accelerate early career advancement. In recent years, the Council has awarded an average of 20-25 Pre-Dissertation Research Fel-lowships each year to students from a wide range of institutions. Here’s why you should help us keep the program alive for future generations:
Sharpen research and shorten time-to-degree CES Pre-Dissertation Research fellows produce bet-ter dissertations, faster. In today’s job market, this makes all the difference in the competition for a meaningful and remunerative academic job.
Support the study of EuropeIn an age of diminishing attention to Europe, only Europeanists are eligible to receive this amazing fellowship, and the Council is committed to sup-porting all aspects of the study of Europe.
Council for European Studies
Sustain the humanitiesFunding for the humanities is increasingly hard to come by, yet the Council regularly awards 40%-50% of its pre-dissertation fellowships to those studying Euro-pean art, culture, literature, or history. Even the playing fieldMany wealthy universities also invest in providing early dissertation support. However, students at poorer schools are not so lucky. The Pre-Dissertation Re-search Fellowship helps even the playing field by pro-viding support for students at a wide range of schools. Build an international research communityThis much-beloved program supports professional de-velopment and networking by bringing fellows together with their peers and senior colleagues, encouraging international dialogue and the exchange of ideas. Meet the demands of a historic momentEurope is in a period of historic challenge which, like the Cold War and its aftermath, will require energetic researchers able to address big questions. Our prede-cessors made the investments needed in their time. Now it is our turn. We must ensure that young people have the resources needed to face today’s challenges.
Learn more at: www.councilforeuropeanstudies.org
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Council for European Studies