The interpretation of global politics: methods and epistemologies after the event

The ANU School of Politics and International Relations is proud to host the international conference The Interpretation of Global Politics: methods and epistemologies after the event. The conference will be held at the Australian National University on 2-3 November 2017. Places are limited so please at Eventbrite register by 9 October https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/the-interpretation-of-global-politics-me... Keynote Speaker Professor Dvora Yanow Wageningen University, The Netherlands "Interpretation in a Time of 'Truthiness'" Roundtable: Interpreting communal violence in Myanmar In the era of ‘post-truth’ and electoral outcomes that don’t follow the seductions of quantification (Merry 2016), it might be appropriate to return to discussions of the ‘event’ in the Derridean sense —that which always exceeds calculation and prediction (Derrida 2007). In the twentieth century, the social sciences turned, and turned again, and the politics of knowledge have remained unsettled. If the twentieth century saw the challenge to classical knowledge paradigms in the form of critical, social, post-structuralist, post-colonial and ‘post-modern’ interventions, the tables were quickly turned by a series of methodological counter-reformations, begun in the mid-century with the Popperian and ‘rational choice’ programs in Anglo-American political science and the growing prestige of economics. Adherents to these broad churches laid down the methodological gauntlet, facilitating a growth industry of texts, handbooks and training manuals for graduate students and researchers, the development of formal methodological organisations, conferences and journals. This debate clearly designated as ‘interpretivist’ anything not regarded as ‘positivist’ or ‘causal’ social science. Scholars in the ‘interpretivist’ camp, broadly defined, have in turn responded with their own treatises and texts addressing constructivism, hermeneutics, assemblage, and discourse, both within the disciplinary literatures of politics (Yanow and Schwartz-Shea 2006, Klotz and Lynch 2007, Brady and Collier 2010, Jackson 2011) and well beyond (Pryke, Rose et al. 2003, Law 2004, Latour 2005, Steinmetz, Adams et al. 2005). Today, amid the popular appeal of ‘big data’ and the promise of further quantification, similar challenges to the role of interpretation in research are being rehearsed. In turn, the call for pluralism has been heard by disciplinary gatekeepers with the response of ‘mixed methods’. In the context of unprecedented global events, the self-assurance of science in the social sciences may again be on the back foot. The conference, therefore, calls for investigation into the value of interpretation as method, interrogating what it means to ‘interpret’ the political. The conference aims to: • provide a space to debate and formulate what is fundamental about interpretivist approaches and what they contribute to the social sciences • provide a showcase of interpretative methods in the social sciences • create a space for cross-disciplinary conversation and collaboration • consolidate a domestic network and create links with Australian and international scholars • create an opportunity for the professionalisation of post-graduates In this vein, the call for papers is seeking contributions which • demonstrate the purpose of interpretative methods in a variety of disciplinary settings • address the methodological debates from the perspective of non-European, Indigenous, Post- and de-colonial approaches • expound on interpretivism’s relevance for specific research projects • emphasise the diversity of methodologies or approaches within ‘interpretivism’, e.g. post-structuralism, critical realism, etc. • engage in contemporary debates concerning the role of interpretation in philosophy of science or science and technology studies (STS) • place ‘interpretivism’ in dialogue with theoretical frameworks that challenge the assumptions of a single ontology such as ‘multinaturalism’, ‘pluriversality’, etc. • reflect on the relevance of methods of interpretation to contemporary global politics engage in ‘mixed methods’ research which expand or problematise the dichotomy between ‘positivist’ and ‘interpretivist’ This conference is made possible through the generous support of the ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences, School of Politics and International Relations, Research School of Social Sciences and Humanities Research Centre.

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130 Garran Road, 2601 Acton,

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