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Home PUBLICATIONS AN Columns AES Spring Meeting, Toronto, May 2007

AES Spring Meeting, Toronto, May 2007

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By Frances Rothstein, AES Secretary

The program from the 2007 AES/CASCA Toronto Meetings can be downloaded here. (.pdf)  Visit the conference website.

From all accounts the AES/CASCA Conference in Toronto, May 9 - 12 was very successful. The Conference was well attended with over seven hundred people registering and the sessions were quite stimulating.     

registration toronto

The lovely weather, convenient and comfortable setting at the University of Toronto, and the generous welcome from the Canadians of CASCA contributed to a very relaxed atmosphere that provided an excellent context for meeting and talking with old and new friends. Thanks to Councilor and AES Conference Organizer Matti Bunzl’s efforts to provide many student travel grants and Graduate Student Representative Becca Prahl’s organization of a number of events of interest to students, student participation was unusually strong. Becca organized a number of useful workshops on IRBs, funding, and publishing as well as an AES/CASCA student party.

Among the many highlights of the conference was the AES Plenary Panel chaired by President, Ida Susser. The session entitled “The Metaphysices of Disorder and the Pragmatics of Exclusion: Society, Subject and Sovereignty in the Present Continuous” began with Jean and John Comaroff’s paper, “Ethnicity Inc: On Indigeneity and Its Interpolations,” in which they analyzed the new venture capital activity of indigenous entrepreneurs who take identity into the market. The authors concluded by suggesting that institutional topography has shifted in the contemporary world so that politics and economics are anchored together in market and law. Lively commentaries on the presentation by Carol Greenhouse and James Siegel were followed by questions and discussion from an extremely engaged audience. At the plenary also, the Elsie Clews Parsons Prize for best graduate student essay submitted for presentation at the Conference was awarded to Limor Samimian Darash, a Ph.D. student at Hebrew University and a visiting scholar at University of California, Berkeley. Darash’s paper, “The Limits of Emergencies and The Time of Event: The Pre-Event Configuration of Biological Threats” raised important questions about what gets defined as emergencies, why, and how the construction of hazardous events influenced the actualization of events. 

 

News Flash

Spring Conference in Chicago 

April 11-13, 2013, cosponsored by APLA

Preliminary Program now available! Time to make travel plans! 

AMERICAN ETHNOLOGIST

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