Social Justice & Activism Papers


John Asimakopoulos
 
Steve Best
From "Dominion" to Domination: The Duplicity and Complicity of Matthew Scully
 
Marc Bousquet, How the University Works:
Introduction: Your Problem Is My Problem
Chapter 4: Students Are Already Workers
 
Anthony J. Nocella, II
Fighting Against the Conservative Agenda in the Academy: An Examination of the 4Ss of Academic Repression and Repressive Pedagogy Post-9/11/01
 
Roland Sheppard, Retired Business Representative of Painters District Council #8 in San Francisco
 
Ali Shehzad Zaidi:
Reenchanting the World
Powerful Compassion
The Successful President
Destruction and Resistance at SUNY
Sentimentality and Responsibility in the University
Adjuncts Arise
Rochester, Radiation, and Repression
In the Shadow of Kodak
Embracing the World
Forum on Democracy and Education
Adelphi Recovers "The Lengthening View"

*** CALL FOR PAPERS ***

The Transformative Studies Institute is soliciting papers for our Social Justice & Activist section.

While there have been many theoretical analyses of such aspects of social justice as stratification and inequality, and civil rights, there is a need for more research that connects activism with theory.  We believe that theory without action and action without theoretical grounding are inherently flawed. To change the world, activists and scholars need to collaborate in order to inform one other’s work.  To this end, we especially seek papers in which theoretical analysis fosters societal change or in which practical experience guides theoretical research.

We invite U.S. and international submissions of well-researched and thought-provoking papers from various disciplines, including sociology, political science, psychology, art, philosophy, history, and literature.  We welcome works by activists, independent scholars, graduate students, and faculty. We accept both theoretical and empirical papers by scholar-activists.  Topics may include, but are not limited to:

*   Novel Means of Resistance

*   Direct Political Action

*   Environment, Space, Social Justice, & Direct Action

*   Direct Action for Social Justice

*   Labor / Civil Rights & Direct Action

*   Globalization

*   Sex & Gender

*   Activism, Academia, & Scholarship

*   Activism & Resistance through the Arts

*   The Media & its Relationship to Societal Justice and Change

*   Non-violence vs. Active Self Defense and its Effectiveness

*   Historical Analysis

*   The Psychology of Transformative Learning & its Relationship to Action

 

Submissions should be sent using our on-line form found in the ‘submissions’ menu.