Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Provide Input on USDA Research Priorities

USDA Seeks Public Comments on Research Priorities -- due Mar. 22

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is accepting public comments regarding future research priorities and program solicitations for the Agriculture and Food Research Initiative. A public meeting for stakeholders will be held on 22 February 2012 in Washington, D.C. Written comments will be accepted through 22 March. More information is available at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-02-01/html/2012-2100.htm.


Friday, February 17, 2012

Submission Deadline for SAFRIG Mini-Conference Extended

The deadline for abstract submissions for the SAFRIG Mini-Conference has been extended to Wednesday, February 29.

As before, if you would like to submit an abstract to be considered for the SAFRIG mini-conference, simply include the phrase “SAFRIG mini-conference” in the title of your abstract to differentiate it from regular submissions to the RSS annual meeting.

And, please remember the corrected date for this mini-conference: Thursday, July 26.

See the Call for Papers below.

-----------------------
SAFRIG Mini-Conference Call for Papers
As part of SAFRIG’s contribution to the RSS 75th anniversary celebration , we will convene a mini-conference in Chicago on July 26th, 2012. This is the day of the Presidential Address and the day before the annual meeting program begins in earnest.

The mini-conference is designed to allow us to have an extended collective dialogue on a theme that we believe will be of general interest. While we welcome astracts from people who are not SAFRIG members, we are particularly eager to attract interest from our membership in order to advance the cohesion and intellectual vibrancy of the group. The mini-conference planning committee consists of Steven Wolf, Alessandro Bonanno and Wynne Wright.

Find the call for papers below and attached, and you are invited to distribute and post widely. Looking forward to seeing you in Chicago.

Call for Papers

The Neoliberal Regime in Agri-Food: Crisis, Resilience and/or Restructuring

Mini-conference organized by the Rural Sociological Society (RSS), Sociology of Agri-food Research Interest Group (SAFRIG)

July 26, 2012
Palmer House, Chicago Illinois

For the last three decades, the Neoliberal regime has shaped production and consumption processes in agriculture and food. At present, social instability and protest, economic recessions, political uncertainties and ecological degradation and risks have prompted claims that we now confront a systemic crisis. The regulatory mechanisms and patterns of material flow that constitute the contemporary agri-food regime are implicated in contemporary global insecurities, both physical and metaphysical on an unprecedented scale. The capacity to maintain the legitimacy and material coherence of the neoliberal regime is in doubt. We propose a one-day mini-conference devoted to an informed, constructive dialogue and debate around the thesis that we have reached some institutional and material limit. Is the neoliberal regime exhausted? Are we at the outset of a new regime? And if so, what are the opportunities and risks linked to the construction of a new regime? Of course, in contemplating radical restructuring we must account for the historical capacity of agri-food governance to deflect critique, co-opt rivals and sustain the unsustainable. We seek to advance understanding of the evidence supporting claims of rupture of, or incursions to, the Neoliberal model. We also seek to encourage the submission of papers that develop programmatic outlines of pragmatic responses to these critiques including policy initiatives, social mobilization and research targeted at various scales and points of entry.

This mini-conference celebrates the 75th anniversary of the Rural Sociological Society and SAFRIG’s rich tradition of conceptualizing agriculture and food as reflecting and structuring larger developmental processes. We seek theoretical contributions that address overarching debates regarding systemic crisis, including papers that address financialization, ecological overshoot, the status of nation states, transnational agents, market logic and civil society in governance and the prospects for realization of democratic ideals. We also seek empirical contributions that explore particular aspects of crisis and responses, including the potential for continued resilience, a neo-productivist return, as well as the emergence of new alternative models and scaling up of new or existing alternative models.

We invite submission of abstracts from all interested people through the RSS Annual meeting webpage (go to http://ruralsociology.org/). Deadline for abstracts is February 29th 2012. Include the phrase “SAFRIG mini-conference” in the title of your abstract to differentiate it from regular submissions to the RSS annual meeting. Authors of papers selected for the mini-conference will contribute a 3000 word paper by June 15th, which we will post online in order enhance the quality of scholarly exchange during the mini-conference. Questions can be directed to Steven Wolf atsaw44@cornell.edu.