Iza Hussin Assumes Chair of the Section

image from political-science.uchicago.eduFrom the faculty profile page – Political Science Department, University of Chicago:

Iza Hussin’s recent work has focussed upon the mobility of law and legal projects in empire, and upon the politics of Islamic law in both contemporary and colonial periods. Her book on the transformation of Islamic law and the Muslim state during British colonisation in India, Malaya and Egypt, The Politics of Islamic Law: Local Elites, Colonial Authority and the Making of the Muslim State, is forthcoming from the University of Chicago Press. Recent publications in journals and edited volumes include: “The Pursuit of the Perak Regalia: Law and the Making of the Colonial State,” Law and Social Inquiry 32:3 (2007); “Ethnicity, Religion and the Paradox of Jurisdiction: Two Malaysian Cases,” Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law, 2010; and “The Making of Islamic Law: Local Elites and Colonial Authority in British Malaya,” in Thomas Dubois, ed. Casting Faiths: Technology and the Creation of Religion in East and Southeast Asia, Palgrave Macmillan 2008. Her new research includes a collaborative project on Internet fatwa and a second book project on the mobility of law across the Indian Ocean arena.

Professor Hussin’s work is based upon comparative, archival and textual research in Arabic, Malay and English texts across various sites of empire and legal transformation, and has been supported by grants from the National Science Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Woodrow Wilson Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. She has been a Fellow in Islamic Legal Studies at Harvard Law School and is a recipient of awards from the American Political Science Association and the International Convention of Asia Scholars.

Call for Proposals from Paul A. Djupe – SPSA

Dear APSA Section Members,

I am the Religion and Politics program chair for the Southern Political Science Association this year and I'd like to invite you to submit a proposal and join me in Orlando, Florida from January. 3-5, 2013. I have no particular agenda for this meeting other than to assemble high quality panels for you to deliver your work, have engaging conversations, and gain valuable feedback.

As usual, the SPSA is open to a wide variety of formats beyond traditional panels, including author meets critics, topical roundtables, or anything else you can dream up. One innovation is the conference within a conference, in which participants gather at a variety of panels and have conversations around specific themes. I'm open to just about anything.

The online submission system is now open through **August 9**.

The conference is January 3-5, 2013 in Orlando, Florida.

The swank conference hotel is the Peabody Orlando (it has a duck on the outside):

image from www.peabodyorlando.com
Please consider submitting a proposal for a paper or panel.

Regards,
 
Paul A. Djupe
Journal Co-editor, Politics & Religion
Department of Political Science
Denison University
Granville, OH 43023

Western Political Science Association Invites Participants for 2013 Meeting

The WPSA is planning its 2013 Annual Meeting scheduled for March 28-30, 2013, at the Renaissance Hotel in Hollywood, California.

Information regarding the program and additional WPSA news is found here. Please note that the deadline for submission of participation forms is September 17, 2012. The forms will be available in early June for submission.

Of possible interest to Religion & Politics Section members:

Section 15: Politics and History

Section Chairs:

Daniel HoSang
University of Oregon
dhosang@uoregon.edu

and

Joe Lowndes
University of Oregon
jlowndes@uoregon.edu‎

The section welcomes proposals for papers or panels covering the broad scope of the study of politics, policy and institutions using historical perspectives to address issue areas of contemporary concern. In particular, the section encourages submissions from scholars whose work focuses on developmental themes related to major political processes including institutional reform and policy change and concepts, such as democratization, citizenship, political representation, and political parties. We especially encourage research that locates American political development in comparative and historical frameworks and that addresses the intersection of major group identities, such as race, class, gender, and religion.