Call for papers 2022 Special Issue: The international jouranal of transitional justice @Oxford Academic

About the issue:

Young people play a crucial role in driving social and political change across the globe. Historically they have spearheaded social movements in contexts as diverse as the South African anti-apartheid struggle, the US civil rights movement, Tiananmen Square protests in China, or the “Arab Spring”. Today, young women and men are leading global protests against police brutality, struggles for climate justice and pro-democracy protests.

Despite their role in mass movements, young people often appear to be treated as peripheral stakeholders within transitional justice processes. They can be marginalised or excluded from the political, peacebuilding or accountability processes aimed at addressing the causes and consequences of conflicts. Young people, who make enormous sacrifices in the course of these conflicts, are many times expected to return to disrupted educational institutions, seek employment, or simply wait, as others make the decisions or shape the narratives of past conflicts. While the impact and role of youth in peacebuilding has received increased recognition, scant comparable attention has been given to the implications or role of youth in transitional justice processes.

Young people are severely affected by violent conflict, both as victims and as perpetrators, through being recruited into armed groups, often as child soldiers, or through voluntary participation in protests and dissent that may face violent repression. Also their vibrant role as social and political change agents animates peace, justice, accountability, or reconciliation efforts. Their direct experiences make them arguably among the most crucial stakeholders in socializing and democratizing transitional justice processes across generations and in the prevention of future conflicts. As such – and because of their enduring role in the legitimacy and durability of peace processes – transitional justice processes should cultivate spaces for meaningful inclusion of young women and men as stakeholders. Young people bring creative leadership styles and diverse methodologies for inclusive and participatory decision-making – frequently honed and practiced in the course of conflicts – that offer innovations of potentially great value to transitional justice approaches.

While youth participation, along with other marginalised groups, has been recognised by policy makers as key to inclusive transitional justice, this has seldom gone beyond superficial approaches. The transitional justice field has yet to fully take into account young people’s needs, priorities, skills and agendas in how it frames its purpose and implements processes and mechanisms to give effect to such an expanded horizon.

Further, many young women confront multiple and intersectional experiences of marginalization – excluded for being young, poor, and women of colour. Young people who speak non-dominant languages, are members of indigenous communities, are sexual minorities, non-formally educated, or differently-abled are inevitably further excluded in these processes. Thus, transitional justice needs to proactively include those who are all too often on the sidelines of peace processes.

Themes and sub-themes:

Key Questions:

  • How can transitional justice (both formal and informal) genuinely include and more effectively harness youth innovation, when conventional transitional justice models have often been framed by ‘the old and wise’?
  • What youth-led or -initiated approaches to transitional justice have been explored in different contexts that may expand the more traditional transitional justice categories, instruments or approaches? What innovations and new methods (including social media and cyber capacities, art, music, poetry, or other cultural forms, etc.) might young people add to the conventional set of approaches?
  • Do transitional justice processes have the potential to highlight the conditions of young people and respond to their basic needs and ambitions for a future post-transition society?
  • How does young people’s engagement facilitate the goal of non-recurrence or preventing future conflict?
  • What possibilities exist for innovation or transformation at the nexus of youth and transitional justice, to re-imagine what transitional justice looks like?  Are, or should, youth futures post-conflict be different from those of the rest of the population?
  • Are there particular spheres of distinct importance to youth – for example education, criminal justice, security sector reform, or DDR – that need to be reconceptualised from a youth perspective?
  • What are the barriers and challenges to ensuring that transitional justice processes are youth inclusive?

We would particularly encourage contributions from young scholars, practitioners and activists as we seek to amplify the voices of young contributors in shaping the Special Issue. We also encourage contributions that break the mold in the creative form, style and content of submissions, whether local, national or comparative in their focus. This can include written and graphic contributions, including poetry, spoken word, artistic expression, and musical lyrics, etc.

The Guest Editors for the Special Issue are: Ali Altiok, Youth, Peace and Security Project Officer at Interpeace; Anjli Parrin, Associate Director, Project on War Crimes and Mass Graves, Columbia Law School Human Rights Institute; Graeme Simpson, Principal Representative and Senior Peacebuilding Adviser, Interpeace NY, and Lead Author of the Progress Study on Youth, Peace and Security mandated by UNSC Resolution 2250; and Njoki Wamai, Assistant Professor, International Relations Department, United States International University-Africa.

Deadline:

The deadline for submissions is 1 June 2021.
Papers should be submitted online on the IJTJ webpage at www.ijtj.oxfordjournals.org.

For more details, Click Here

National virtual debate competition (17-18 October, 2020)

DEBATE COMPETITION, 2020 OFFICIAL RULES:

Virtual School for Personality Development and Professional Skills (hereinafter referred as the organizer) presents an amazing opportunity for school & colleges students to exhibit their Art of Speaking and win up to Rs. 2500/- . By participating in the Debate Competition one can increase their confidence, self-esteem, can develop excellent oral as well as written communication skills and also develops effective tools for research, organization and presentation.

Agreement to Official Rules:

Participation in the Debate Competition constitutes of participants full and unconditional agreement to and acceptances of these Official Rules and Decisions of the Organizer, which are final and binding. Wining a Prize is contingent upon being compliant with these Official Rules and Fulfilling all other requirements set forth herein.
The Debate Competition is open to all the school and college students through regardless of their fields of study.

Details and Requirements of the Competition:

Participants are asked to prepare their debates one for the motion and one against the motion of the following proclamation “Hatred to Men: A Myth or A real threat of Feminism
For and Against the Motion sides will be decided by the committee and communicated via mail once the registration is complete along with the allocation of Participant Code. Each team should be ready with 2 arguing speeches and a round of question from the judges .

Procedure for Registration:

The registration fees for the participating in the contest is Rs. 100/-.

This competition is being conducted for the benefit of the students to enhances their personality, confidence and research skills. The registration fee shall not be refunded under any given circumstances.

Registration Link:

To register for the competition, the participants must fill in the registration form.

To Register, Click Here

Upon registration, the participants will have to join the whatsApp or Telegram group via link which will be displayed immediately after the registration. All the important details will be shared in whatsApp and telegram groups only
The Last date for registration is 15th October, 2020 (timing will be announced the day before the competition)

To Download Brochure, Click Here

Contact Details:

Phone No: +91 9305024341

E-mail: virtualschoolpdps@gmail.com

call for papers: Information Technology and Customization Strategies in the Digital Economy

Call for Papers

Title: Information Technology and Customization Strategies in the Digital Economy

Short title (VSI): Technology & Customization

Background and Motivations

Customers’ preferences and needs are changing surprisingly fast in the digital economy (Kotler et al., 2016). Emerging information technologies (e.g., mobile apps, voice technology, virtual reality) are empowering individual customers to have mounting knowledge, flexibility, and engagement in business practice (Araujo et al., 2020; Zhang & Chang, 2020). As such, how to better fulfill customer value creation and delivery is becoming increasingly important (Kostis & Ritala, 2020; Van Le & Suh, 2019), and is an immutable source for firms’ competitive advantage.

Firms have been increasingly emphasizing and advancing customization strategies to enhance their ability to fulfill personalized customer demands (Wind & Rangaswamy, 2001). However, due to the paramount role in collecting, analyzing, and understanding customer needs (Selladurai, 2004), integrating and optimizing supply chains (Schniederjans et al., 2020), and delivering agile products/services (Shams et al., 2020), information technology has always been a critical constraint in the customization process (Zipkin, 2001). Amid the digital age, many new information technologies (e.g., Big data analytics, Cloud computing) are surfacing and being adopted in business decision-making (Kohtamäki et al., 2020; Nieuwenhuis et al., 2018). The emergence of those disruptive digital technologies has ushered in new opportunities and challenges for firms to formulate and implement effective and innovative customization strategies (Deradjat & Minshall, 2017). For instance, better data collection, data analysis, and system design and iteration (Ghobakhloo, 2020; McAfee et al., 2012) are enabling and galvanizing firms to innovate their customization strategies in the digital economy.

Although customization strategies can improve firms’ performance by meeting the heterogeneous demands of customers, they also increase the cost of value creation and delivery, which reflects a paradoxical trade-off of “benefits-costs” (Wang et al., 2017; Wiengarten et al., 2017). Many previous studies have shed light on how to deal with this tension from a variety of theoretical perspectives (Liu & Yao, 2018; Yao, 2013). However, scant studies have explicitly explored and synthesize how new IT artifacts affect customization strategies, especially in the digital age, despite the role of IT has become increasingly significant nowadays (Ballestar et al., 2020). Therefore, it is imperative to gather the knowledge of the relationship between IT and innovative customization strategies, and to examine how the new digitized IT artifacts influence the revenue and cost of firms’ customization strategies in the digital economy.

Furthermore, digitized information technologies have also been driving firms to innovate their customization modes, such as personalized customization based on AI (Robinson et al., 2020), mobile-based customization (Tong et al., 2020), etc. However, digitized information technology also brings new challenges to the customization practice of firms, such as privacy leakage and data discrimination (Caputo et al., 2018; Okazaki et al., 2020). So it is also important to explore how firms can take full advantage of those new information technologies and avoid such kinds of negative effects at the same time.

Thus, as the way of customer participation in customization continues to evolve and firms keep improving their customization capabilities, it is necessary for future studies to deeply explore the potential various “revenue” and “cost” mechanisms from the perspective of information technologies in the digital economy.

Objective and topics

This Special Issue seeks state-of-the-art papers that take a broad view of information technology’s current and future impact on firm’s customization strategies and customer participation in customization. We also invite studies drawing on data from real-world settings that take a future-looking perspective to formulate new research paths and pragmatic applications for consumers and businesses. Papers considered for the Special Issue may focus on topics including, but not limited to, the following:

• Digital information technology adoption for innovative customization strategies

• Technological drivers that facilitate customization strategies

• Digital capabilities and the formulation and implementation of customization strategies

• Comparison of new customization strategies/ modes in the digital era

• The interconnections between information technologies and “revenue vs. cost” dilemma of customization

• Interaction and value co-creation between firms and customers in the digital customization platforms

• Customer empowerment and value co-creation in the customization practice

• The personalization experience–privacy paradox in the digital era

Paper Submission

• Submissions should be prepared using the Technological Forecasting & Social Change (TFSC) Manuscript Preparation Guidelines (https://www.elsevier.com/journals/technological-forecasting-and-social-change/0040-1625/guide-for-authors)

• Manuscripts must be submitted electronically online at https://www.editorialmanager.com/tfs/default.aspx

• Authors need to select ‘SI – Information Technology and Customization Strategies’ for this call.

• Papers will be reviewed according to the TFSC double-blind review process

• Informal inquiries relating to the Special Issue, proposed topics and potential fit with the Special Issue objectives are welcomed. Please direct any questions to the Guest Editors.

All submissions entailing empirical research are encouraged to provide complete methodological and other details in accompanying web appendices.

Important dates

The timeline of this special issue is as follows:

Submission start date: July 15, 2022

Last date for submission: August 30, 2022

Review process: On a rolling basis from September 2022 to April 2023

Possible Acceptance Date: May 30, 2023

For more details, click here

Special Issue – Environmental, Social and Governance in Capital Markets

About the Journal:

Borsa Istanbul Review is an open access journal and included in Social Science Citation Index (SSCI).Its 2019 impact factor is 2.13 (a Q2 journal) and CiteScore is 3.5. For the articles published in the journal, full texts of which are freely available, please visit https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/borsa-istanbul-review

Theme and Sub-theme:

Borsa İstanbul Review will publish a special issue on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) in the following and related areas:

  • ESG Screening on Return, Risk, and Diversification
  • ESG Investing in Markets
  • ESG performance of firms and assets
  • Valuation of ESG in capital markets
  • ESG disclosure, reporting and analyst forecasts
  • Public-Private Partnerships
  • Sustainability
  • Institutional investors and corporate social responsibility
  • Role of ESG factors on firm value and corporate financing
  • Green financial assets and uncertainty in the green finance market
  • Green financing and portfolio investment
  • The roles of green premium costs in sustainable development
  • Environmental consequences related to Financial Development

Submission Deadline:

September 30, 2020. Papers will be processed as they are received.

Submission link: https://www.editorialmanager.com/bir/default.aspx

For more details, Click here

Call for Papers for special issue on: Forest policy & economics in Latin America @Elsevier

About the Issue:

This is an open call for papers for a special issue of the Journal of Forest Policy and Economics. The SI will focus on Latin America with emphasis on the perspectives of Latin American researchers and policy analysts.

The objective of the SI is to examine the breadth of the forest sector of Latin America, including its many component issues: forests and the global climate; local human impacts on the forest; industrial structure, conduct and performance; and other forest issues as well—but from the special perspective of those economists and policy analysts who know the region best, those who are from Latin America. The topic is vast, and we cannot cover all important examples. To be sure, Latin American perspectives on some forestry issues are different from the perspectives and experiences of other parts of the world. Just as surely, Chile’s and Brazil’s forest industries, for example, do share some characteristics with the industry elsewhere in the world, and Costa Rica’s famous environmental orientation surely shares some experience with Western European and North American efforts to provide for forest-based environmental services. Our objective is to capture the research and policy insights of professionals with personal experience in the region, to capture insight as to the often less examined differences between regional experience and global perspectives, but also to acknowledge the global similarities that do arise.

Deadline

Papers may be submitted as early as December 1, 2020, but must be submitted before a June 1, 2021 deadline.

Please include the note “VSI: Latin America” along with the title of your paper. Additional submission instructions are identical with those for normal submissions to this journal. The editors will commit to rapid consideration by at least two blind reviewers for all submissions that satisfy the Journal’s review criteria. Accepted manuscripts will be published in the next regular issue of the Journal where they will be clearly marked as Special Issue articles. They will also pulled into the online Special Issue for Latin America.

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All India Essay Writing Competition by Aligarh Muslim University

About the Organization:

Aligarh Muslim University Accredited by NAAC in ‘A’ grade having 13 Faculties viz. Agricultural Sciences, Arts, Commerce, Engineering & Technology, Law etc., each comprising of several Departments of Studies.

About the Event:

Aligarh Muslim University is Organising All India Essay Writing Competition on “Sir Syed as the Chairperson of Educational and Social Renaissance of Indian Muslims”. It is open for all University and College students in English language only.

For more details, Click Here

Job Post: Faculty requirement at School of Education @GD Goenka University

About Post:

Urgent Faculty Requirement at School of Education, GD Goenka University, Gurugram.

Eligibility:

M.A (English), M.Ed. NET, Ph.D ( Education).

For any queries,
please contact: Dr. Pooja Chopra
Mob: 9999468840
Email Id: pooja.chopra@gdgoenka.ac.in