Mar 12, 2008

Int'l Dimension of Political Party System Development Work

International Academic Workshop, Department of European Studies, Universiteit van Amsterdam (November 14-15, 2008)

THE INTERNATIONAL DIMENSION OF POLITICAL PARTY (SYSTEM) DEVELOPMENT: ASSESSING ACTORS, METHODS, AND EFFECTS

Political parties develop at the hand of both internal and external factors. The bulk of academic research on party (system) development focuses on the former. This workshop examines the variety of external forces which influence the formation and development of political parties and party systems in post-authoritarian states.

In recent years, foreign assistance to political parties has drawn increasing attention from those studying the external dimensions of party (system) development and democratization processes. Analyses of foreign assistance to political parties have almost exclusively concentrated on the forms of assistance that explicitly seek to enable democratic transformation. Such `conventional' forms of assistance include
party-to-party and multiparty trainings, seminars, and study trips supported by established democracies in Western Europe and North America. Contemporary conceptions of political party assistance are therefore limited to one subset of democracy promotion?that of democracy assistance?and shed little light on the remaining external mechanisms which may also affect processes of political development. This workshop aims to challenge such perspectives by encouraging participants to explore political party assistance beyond the confines of conventional democracy assistance.

We welcome papers on a wide range of topics examining the impact of external factors on political parties and party systems. Such topics include, though are not limited to: for-profit services provided by consulting firms and individual consultants; assistance bolstering anti-democratic or anti-systemic parties (i.e. `promoting democracy backwards'); support provided by nongovernmental organizations, such as religious organizations or diaspora communities; the consequences of supranational integration processes, most notably European integration; support provided to
post-conflict territories; and new perspectives on the more `conventional' forms of democracy assistance geared towards political parties. Additional topics unmentioned here are also encouraged.

Practical information: Participation in the workshop is contingent upon the acceptance of applicants' abstract. Participants are expected to present individual papers. The final program of the workshop will be made available after the paper proposals have been received.

Proposals for papers, in the form of a title and 300-word abstract, should be sent by April 15, 2008 to Marlene Spoerri at: M.S.Spoerri@ uva.nl.

Full papers (5,000 to 7,000 words) should be submitted by October 15, 2008.

The workshop will be held at the Department of European Studies, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Spuistraat 134, Amsterdam.

Travel expenses and accommodation will be fully covered by the organization.

The organizing committee expects to publish a collection of the papers presented.

For further questions please contact:
Marlene Spoerri
Department of European Studies
Tel.: +31.20.5252273
Fax: +31.20.5254625
E-mail: M.S.Spoerri@ uva.nl

[sursa study-x]

If you want to receive academic resources in your e-mail on daily basis, please subscribe to 10resources-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.