maandag 23 april 2018

Les Universités européennes se connectent auX chapitres des questions essentielles: quelle bonne gouvernance en Europe?... Même dans l'électronique...

Un lecteur y revient:

Seminars and Events:

Max Weber Lecture Archon Fung , Harvard University "Viral Engagement: Fast, Cheap, and Broad, but Good for Democracy?"

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Date/Time Wednesday 17 April 2013 17:00 - 18:30

Location Conference Room, Villa la Fonte Affiliation Max Weber Programme Type Lecture Description: Prof. Archon Fung

In 2011 and 2012, several high profile campaigns spread with unexpected speed and potency. These "viral engagements” include the mobilization that scuttled the Stop Online Piracy Act, popular protest against the Susan G. Komen Foundation’s decision to stop funding Planned Parenthood, 100 million views of KONY 2012 video on YouTube and its subsequent criticism and defense, and on-line activism around the shooting of Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida. This paper examines three aspects of these viral campaigns as form of political engagement. First, is there a common structure of mobilization and spread? Some have argued that these viral campaigns synthesize conventional social and political networks but amplify the messages that spread through those networks through the speed of digital communication. Second, what are the potential contributions of this fast, cheap, and thin mode of engagement to democracy? We examine the implications of viral engagement for four critical democratic values: inclusion, public deliberation, political equality, and civic education.

All are welcome to attend. Please register

Register for this Event Contact Susan Garvin (EUI) - Send a mail

Speaker: Professor Archon Fung (Harvard University)

http://www.eui.eu/SeminarsAndEvents/Index.aspx?eventid=82110


Seminars and Events:

Democratic Participation in Times of Crisis - Joint conference organised by NYU-Florence/NYU Liberal Studies and the Max Weber Programme, EUI.

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Date/Time: Wednesday 10 April 2013 09:00 - 19:00

Location Conference Room, Villa la Fonte AffiliationMax Weber Programme Type Conference Description: Tuesday 9 April at Villa la Pietra (NYU) and Wednesday 10 April at Villa la Fonte (MWP) .

Description:

Voter ID laws and a creaking Electoral College in the United States, street protests against a democratic deficit in Brussels, Rome and Athens, increasingly noisy praise for authoritarian capitalism in Singapore and Beijing / the contemporary political world is confronted with the nature and limits of democratic representation. The La Pietra Dialogues at NYU-Florence have recently regularly probed these issues, with distinguished scholars leading sessions on dissent, the euro crisis and the US elections. The Max Weber Programme at the EUI, meanwhile, is home to post-doctoral scholars from around the globe and across four disciplines. Their research this year is concerned with judicial independence, migrant labor rights, trans-national social movements and constitutional law, to name just a few areas that bear on the question of democratic representation.

This multi-disciplinary conference, co-sponsored by the La Pietra Dialogues and the Max Weber Programme, brings together invited senior scholars, Max Weber Fellows and the NYU-Florence community, in a joint La Pietra Dialogues-Max Weber Programme conversation. The conference will focus on how political and philosophical theories of democratic representation inform empirical social scientific research. For example, what can recent theories of global justice and democracy offer a political-scientist who researches Internet campaign fund-raising? What is a reasonable minimum condition for a government to be classified as 'democratic’ or 'representative’ of its citizens, and how can the social sciences help to answer this question with respect to any given state? Finally, how do such debates fit into contemporary political situations and scholarly practice?

These and other questions will be addressed via six panels, in each of which a senior invited guest and a Max Weber Fellow will give papers that enter into theoretical-empirical dialogue on a specific aspect of our broader rubric.

All are welcome to attend
.
For organisational purposes please register.

Register for this Event Contact Simon Jackson (EUI) - Send a mail

Organisers:

Simon Jackson (EUI)
Brendan Hogan (NYU Florence)

Speakers:

Prof. Philippe C. Schmitter
Prof. Donatella Della Porta (EUI)
Prof. Joshua Tucker (New York University)
Emeritus Professor Alessandro Pizzorno (EUI)
Daniel Viehoff (University of Sheffield

http://www.eui.eu/SeminarsAndEvents/Index.aspx?eventid=64934


Seminars and Events:

Windows Into the Soul: Surveillance and Society in an Age of High Technology

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Date/TimeMonday 22 April 2013 09:00 - 18:00

Tuesday 23 April 2013 09:00 - 18:00

Location Seminar Room 3, Badia Fiesolana Affiliation Department of Political and Social Sciences Type Workshop Description Gary Marx

This workshop will be based on my forthcoming book of the same title. The study is an inquiry into the social, political, cultural and ethical aspects of the new surveillance (articles at www.garymarx.net are illustrative of my approach --several are listed below). The emphasis is on a conceptual framework dealing with structures, processes, cultural meanings and experiences that can accommodate and help explain the variation in surveillance tools --whether they involve video, biometry, sensors, RFID chips, GPS, social media and big data sets to mention only a few. My goals are normative, as well as social scientific, as I seek frameworks for judging and evaluating public policy.

I will of course draw examples from the policing of protest and law enforcement more broadly, but also from other areas such as work, consumption, school, government. I am also concerned with comparative international questions and the correlates and consequences of technological forms of surveillance which break traditional borders, as well as creating new ones.

Contact Maureen Lechleitner (EUI) - Send a mail

Speaker: Prof. Gary Marx (MIT)

Links: Children as Subjects and Agents of Surveillance

Your Papers Please

Privacy is not quite like the weather

http://www.eui.eu/SeminarsAndEvents/Index.aspx?eventid=89709

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The EUI Campus :

The European University Institute is seated on the Tuscan hillside overlooking Florence and close to Fiesole.

Many of the villas date from the Renaissance period and have been restored along with their landscaped gardens. Where available information has been provided on the history of each estate, which can be found by clicking on the villa images below. Newly-built residencies for researchers are a welcome addition to the EUI campus.

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