Applied Linguistics, Ethics and Aesthetics of Encountering the Other

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Special Issue: Applied Linguistics, Ethics and Aesthetics of Encountering the Other, Applied Linguistics Review, 8(2-3), 2024.

Guest Editors: Magdalena Kubanyiova and Angela Creese

1 Kubanyiova, M., & Creese, A. (2024). Introduction: Applied linguistics, ethics and aesthetics of encountering the Other.

2 Beiler, I. R., & Dewilde, J. (2024). “When we use that kind of language…someone is going to jail”: Relationality and aesthetic interpretation in initial research encounters.

3 Creese, A. (2024). The humanism of the other in sociolinguistic ethnography.

4 Williams, Q. (2024). Towards a sociolinguistics of in difference: Stancetaking on others.

5 Krause-Alzaidi, L.-S. (2024). Becoming response-able with a protest pacard: White under(-)standing in encounters with the Balck German Other.

6 Kubanyiova, M. (2024). (Im)possibility of ethical encounters in places of separation: Aesthetics as a quiet applied linguistics praxis.

7 Brizić, K. (2024). Unsettled hearing, responsible listening: Encounters with voice after forced migration.

Munich School of Philosophy: Ethics of Intercultural Dialogue (Germany)

Study AbroadEthics of Intercultural Dialogue Certificate Programme, Munich School of Philosophy, Munich, Germany (but online). Application deadline: 15 September each year to begin in October.

What is right and what is wrong in a globalized world? What values count in a society of diversity? The part-time English study programme “Ethics of Intercultural Dialogue” focuses on the ethical questions professionals face in today’s globalized and culturally diverse world. This programme was introduced for the first time in the winter semester 2023/24 and is a graduate level certificate programme available entirely online and in English. It offers a robust ethical foundation, political-philosophical insights, and practical orientation knowledge, ideal for professionals who aspire to deepen their skills and broaden their understanding and reflection. Important facts:

  • Offered by: the Munich School of Philosophy and Jesuit World-Wide Learning
  • Programme Type: Certificate programme (36 ECTS), graduate level, English, fully online
  • Start: every year fall term (October), application any time (deadline Sept. 15th)
  • Tuition fees: 2,880.00 € plus semester fees (approx. 240€/Semester)
  • Q&A Session: 30th July 2024 at 7pm CEST online.

The course is designed for working professionals and leaders who are confronted with the challenges of globalization in their professional contexts and are particularly interested in ethical reflection. These are, for example, people who work in international companies, educational institutions, non-governmental organizations, social work, churches, advocacy groups, medical fields incl. care work, political institutions or as freelance consultants. EID is also attractive for students who seek expertise in intercultural communication. Since this programme is a collaborative effort with Jesuit Worldwide Learning, marginalized people and refugees from around are also a crucial target group.

For more information check out their website hfph.de/eid or contact the programme-coordinator, Julianne McCormack.

Musser Fund Grants for Intercultural Harmony 2024 (USA)

Grants

Intercultural Harmony Initiative, Laura Jane Musser Fund. Deadline:  October 16, 2024.

Through the Intercultural Harmony Initiative, the Laura Jane Musser Fund supports projects that promote mutual understanding and cooperation between groups of community members of different cultural backgrounds. Project planning grants up to $5,000 or implementation grants up to $25,000 will be considered. Applications will be accepted online through the Fund’s website from September 16 – October 16, 2024.

Priority is placed on projects that include members of various cultural communities working together on projects with common goals; build positive relationships across cultural lines; engender intercultural harmony, tolerance, understanding, and respect; and enhance intercultural communication, rather than cultural isolation, while at the same time honoring the unique qualities of each culture.

NOTE: The geographic areas for this initiative are only Colorado, Hawaii, Minnesota, Wyoming, and limited counties in New York and Texas

Fordham U: Senior Director, Fordham London (UK)

“JobSenior Director of Fordham University London, Fordham University, London, England, UK. Deadline: 16 August 2024.

Fordham University is seeking an outstanding leader for the post of Senior Director of Fordham London. Continuing its 40-year tradition of providing international education in London, Fordham London’s new global campus in the city’s Clerkenwell neighbourhood is a symbol of the University’s commitment to education abroad and a furtherance of its mission beyond New York. At the heart of Fordham London is an inclusive learning environment which fosters intercultural competence and prepares undergraduate and graduate students to thrive in an increasingly multicultural, global society.

London is the classroom in which undergraduate study abroad students from Fordham and other colleges and universities explore subjects from new perspectives and in a unique setting. The 2023-24 academic year saw Fordham London set an annual enrolment record with over 550 students during the fall, spring and summer semesters.

Beyond its premier undergraduate study abroad programmes, Fordham London is host to short-term graduate programmes, a community of international research scholars, and is actively planning to increase and enhance its undergraduate and graduate presence in London.

As Senior Director, you will serve as the Chief Administrative Officer of Fordham London and hold primary responsibility for identifying, implementing and articulating a future vision for the institution. You will be a leader in international higher education and provide visible advocacy on behalf of Fordham London to both internal and external constituencies and audiences.

With significant administrative experience at the university level, and proven leadership, you will advance the nature and reputation of Fordham London and provide academic programming reflecting Fordham’s mission of educating students to lead and serve in an increasingly multicultural and multinational society. You will also advocate in the areas of governance, academic standards, curricular development, research and pedagogy, academic facilities and operations and mission integration in collaboration with Fordham’s global community.

The successful candidate will have the ability work effectively and collaboratively with individuals from all backgrounds to promote diversity, equity and inclusion and effect positive change within Fordham University and society.

U Winchester: Reconciliation & Peacebuilding (UK)

“JobLecturer in Reconciliation and Peacebuilding, University of Winchester, Winchester, England, UK. Deadline: 14 August 2024.

The University is seeking a new Lecturer to teach and coordinate an MA programme in Reconciliation and Peacebuilding. The successful applicant will have a strong academic and professional background in reconciliation / peace studies and have competence in digital teaching and learning methods.

Delivered primarily online, the MA Reconciliation / Reconciliation and Peacebuilding programme supports the advanced study of contemporary theoretical and practical approaches to reconciliation and peacebuilding, with a particular emphasis on religious and cultural contexts. The programme enables students to engage profoundly in key methods of reconciliation and religious peacebuilding through reflection and analysis of relevant theories, case studies, and examples of best practice.

Taught modules include Theories and Dynamics of Reconciliation, Dialogue and Disagreement, and Practical Bridge-building. This role will also include the supervision of dissertation projects.

George Washington U: International Graduate Admissions (USA)

“JobAssistant Director of International Graduate Admissions, George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA. Deadline: 17 August 2024.

The Office of Graduate Admissions and Student Services (OGA) at the George Washington University’s (GWU) School of Engineering and Applied Science (GW Engineering) provides comprehensive information about GW Engineering’s graduate programs, processes a high volume of graduate applications and admission decisions, and provides professional advising services to the current GW Engineering’s graduate student body.

The Assistant Director of International Graduate Admissions reports to the Associate Director of OGA and is responsible for providing international student support that enhances the admissions experience of GW Engineering’s graduate students from prospective applicant to matriculation. The Assistant Director and the OGA team serve an integral role directly impacting targeted GW Engineering’s enrollment projections per semester. The Assistant Director is the primary international credential evaluator on the OGA team and may serve on the admissions committee.

This position also participates in or hosts information sessions or other virtual or in-person events and may coordinate special programs/projects in support of admissions efforts.

CFP Communication Theory: Communication and Constitution

“Publication

Call for papers for a special issue of Communication Theory on Communication and Constitution: Exploring Classical and Emerging Topics Relationally. Deadline: 1 November 2024.

Guest editors: Mariaelena Bartesaghi (University of South Florida, USA), François Cooren (Université de Montréal, Canada), Jimmie Manning (University of Nevada, Reno, USA); Thomas Martine (Audencia Business School, France) and Cynthia Stohl (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA)

In his landmark 1999 article, Communication Theory as a Field, Robert T. Craig called for more dialogue between what he then identified as the seven traditions of communication (rhetoric, semiotics, phenomenology, cybernetic, socio-psychology, sociocultural theory and critical theory). This call was based on two principles: (1) the constitutive model of communication as a metamodel and (2) communication theory as metadiscourse. With his first principle, Craig invited us to acknowledge that each of these different traditions has its own way of thinking the world communicatively and that there is a real payoff in studying various phenomena as being communicatively constituted. With his second principle, he proposed that the communication discipline could be envisaged as a sort of metadiscourse, that is, a discourse about discourse by which we pursue the study of one of the most basic phenomena of our human condition: the act of communicating.

Almost 25 years later, this article can be said to have had a key influence on our field…Echoing John Dewey’s (1916) pragmatist perspective on communication, all these approaches claim, in spite of their differences, that we should not only think of communication as something that happens in, say, organizations, families, or communities, but that these collectives should also be apprehended as constituted in communication…

Against this background, this special issue of Communication Theory aims to address the following questions:

  • What does a constitutive understanding of communication mean for the study of classical and emergent topics, as are identities, ecosystems, sustainability, technology, gender, ethnicity, organizations, relationships, coalitions, power, authority, creativity, discrimination, domination, disability, among others?
  • How can a relational/constitutive perspective enable scholars to see empirical and theoretical linkages among the various subfields of communication. What do these linkages mean in practice?
  • How are worlds communicatively constituted? That is, how is a phenomenon or even any state of being made of or constituted by communication?
  • How might constitutive approaches place communication as a central action or activity by which topics/phenomena can be analyzed and explained?
  • How can we make connections across theoretical traditions via embracing communication theory as a metadiscourse? And how might this shape how we think through our scholarship, especially in terms of theory/theorizing?
  • How, in an increasingly globalized world, might scholars nurture and/or deconstruct the relations that constitute the various phenomena that we as communication scholars study?

Organizers especially encourage empirical and theoretical essays that position communication as an explanans (what does the explaining) and not as an explanandum (what is to be explained). In other words, and in keeping with Craig’s (1999) call, they are looking for manuscripts that show that the world as we know it, in all its instantiations, can be studied and explained relationally, that is, communicatively.

CFP STAR Global Conference 2024 (Nepal)

Conferences

Call for papers: Society of Transnational Academic Researchers (STAR), 12-14 December 2024, Kathmandu, Nepal. Deadline: 31 August 2024.

The 2024 STAR Global Conference promises a diverse and enriching program featuring keynotes, plenaries, paper presentations, panel discussions, workshops, arts-based performances, and a book talk series. Organizers warmly invite researchers, practitioners, community leaders, educational leaders, activists, students, representatives of universities, educational and research institutions, government organizations, United Nations agencies, NGOs, and INGOs to join this knowledge community at this esteemed conference. This year’s conference will take place at Kathmandu University (KU) in Nepal from December 12-14, 2024.

STAR’s mission statement: “We leverage the power of transnational connections to build communities that support the advancement of new generations of scholars working across borders.”

Positive Approaches to Peacebuilding: A Resource for Innovators

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Positive Approaches to Peacebuilding: A Resource for Innovators by by Cynthia Sampson, Mohammed Abu-Nimer, Claudia Liebler, and Diana Whitney (printed version, 2010; Taos Institute Publications WorldShare Books version, 2024). The ebook version is free to download.

Positive Approaches to Peacebuilding presents an innovative perspective on peacebuilding that breaks new ground. The theoretical frameworks are rich enough to satisfy scholars, the case studies are practical enough to engage practitioners and the tips and guides to practice are sure to inspire new and innovative work among peacebuilders. This book beautifully describes the social construction of imagined futures, inviting us, as scholar-practitioners, to move beyond ‘problem solving’ and its ethic of ‘neutrality,’ towards Appreciative Inquiry, and its ethics of narrative, voice, and meaning-making, relying on the heart-wisdom that flourishes in the context of affirmation This book powerfully delivers what it promises — a provocation to think more deeply about how we conduct our peacemaking and peacebuilding relationships. A must read for those who dare to make a difference.

Related publication: Key Concept #64: Peacebuilding by Elenie Opffer; Seeds of Dialogue.

CFP 10th Explorations in Ethnography Language and Communication (Denmark)

Conferences

Call for papers: 10th Explorations in Ethnography Language and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, 18-19 August 2025. Deadline: 18 November 2024. Deadline extended to 18 January 2025.

At the 10th Anniversary EELC conference, organizers invite scholars working at the interface between linguistics and ethnography to interrogate and explore the affordances and challenges in today’s academic landscape. Linguistic ethnographers, as other human and social scientists, contribute to the understanding of important and difficult societal developments such as AI, digital technology, political instabilities and war, climate change and increasing demographic diversity. The EELC10 will be an occasion to take stock of the present research and the future potentials.

The plenary speakers all work with pertinent societal questions:
Charles Briggs (US) continues to advance our understanding of e.g. inequality, health, and the politics of knowledge.
Adrienne Lo (US) interrogates diversity, racialization and ideologies of multilingualism.
Caroline Tagg (UK) uncovers how language, digital technologies and digital
communication practices are deeply embedded into individuals’ wider social, economic, and political lives.
Line Møller Daugaard (DK) illuminates the challenges and possibilities of cultural diversity and multilingualism in education.