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En España y sus instituciones académicas de carácter jurídico y político es tradición solicitar la participación en jornadas y conferencias mediante el «llamado a comunicaciones». Se podría pensar que ese llamado a comunicaciones es sinónimo del clásico «call for papers» de las conferencias internacionales, porque coincide en una de las acepciones que el diccionario de la lengua española le otorga cuando define comunicación como «escrito sobre un tema determinado que el autor presenta a un congreso o reunión de especialistas para su conocimiento y discusión». No lo es. En el ámbito de las ciencias jurídicas, mi experiencia es que la expresión «llamado a comunicaciones» refleja una cultura de discusión científica pobre.

La palabra «comunicaciones», por un lado, desvalora las contribuciones que se aceptan como tales, ya que las comunicaciones se distinguen de las conferencias y ponencias, que suelen quedar reservadas a los invitados con cargos relevantes, sean catedráticos o magistrados o cualquier otro puesto de renombre. Esa diferencia me resulta chocante, porque para eso mejor no hacer un llamado a comunicaciones. El call for paper, en cambio, presupone que quienes envían propuestas deben probar un contenido de una calidad tan alta como para ser invitado a la conferencia o jornada. Pero lo que resulta totalmente inaceptable es la tradición española de mandar todas las comunicaciones al final de la jornada, y no dar la oportunidad de exponer las ideas propuestas y aceptadas para una conferencia con igual o similar consideración que los demás participantes. Es una falta de respeto. La consecuencia es una significativa reducción de los incentivos científicos para presentar propuestas de comunicaciones, cuya motivación, en cambio, puede fundarse en una buena medida en la necesidad de obtener certificados para completar los gruesos expedientes destinados a los actuales procesos de evaluación académica.

Voto por un verdadero «call for papers» frente al «llamado a comunicaciones». Y eso no significa, por supuesto, tener que usar la expresión inglesa, sino que la convocatoria a presentar propuestas de participación en un congreso refleje el compromiso con una cultura de discusión científica inclusiva y respetuosa de la ideas.

TILJNext year will be the 50th anniversary of the Texas International Law Journal (“TILJ”)! That is a truly outstanding achievement, and the editors of the TILJ have published this call for papers for the 50th anniversary issue of the Journal:

THE TEXAS INTERNATIONAL LAW JOURNAL (TILJ)

What: Call for Papers, Fifty Years of International Law Scholarship

Who: The Texas International Law Journal (“TILJ”) at The University of Texas School of Law

Deadline: Paper submissions due January 1, 2015 for publication in fall of 2015.

The Texas International Law Journal will be celebrating its 50th year in 2015. As a part of this celebration, the Journal will be publishing a special 50th Anniversary Issue as part of Volume 50.

This special issue will bridge the Journal’s storied history with its bright future. In addition to republishing a few seminal articles from its past, the Journal is seeking authors who are leaders in their respective fields of international law to comment on the most significant developments in international law over the past fifty years while also offering their perspective about the most significant developments or issues arising in the near future.

Papers may address any topic in international or comparative law, but ideally we would receive a submission in each of the following areas to provide the broadest perspective:Ÿ Treaty Law
ŸŸ; International Human Rights Law; Private International Law; Jurisdiction Ÿ; International Legal Theory.

Special topics to consider:ŸŸ International Commercial LawŸ; International Criminal Law; Law of the SeaŸŸ; Law of Armed Conflict.

Decolonization Fifty Years Later—The effects of colonization and its unwinding still reverberate around the world today, radically shaping legal institutions and defining nations’ and states’ views of the law in an international context. This topic would incorporate recent world events in the discussion.

International Justice and National Sovereignty—The international legal system imposes more regulations and guidelines than ever before. This topic examines the challenges confronted by constitutional governments, democracies, et al. with the increasing obligations imposed by international legal structures (e.g., the International Criminal Court, WTO, independent commercial arbitration agreements or treaties, etc.).

If there is an article (8,000-20,000 words), or even a brief comment (4,000-7,000 words), that you would like to publish in our special 50th Anniversary issue, we invite you to send it to submissions@tilj.org for consideration. It will be an honor to publish one of your articles in our upcoming volume. All submissions must be original, unpublished works. TILJ accepts submissions electronically via ExpressO and by e-mail at submissions@tilj.org. For more information on TILJ submission and editorial policies please see http://www.tilj.org/submissions.

ABOUT THE TEXAS INTERNATIONAL LAW JOURNAL (TILJ)

Founded in 1965, the Texas International Law Journal is a student edited and managed legal journal comprised of students of the University of Texas at Austin School of Law. The Journal seeks to advance the study, practice, and awareness of international and comparative law. TILJ (ISSN: 0163-7479) is a 501 (c)(3) organization that publishes three issues of high quality secondary source material annually and hosts scholarly symposia as well as activities and online engagement committed to promoting international legal understanding and debate.

Check out this interesting, intellectually stimulating workshop on «The Judicialization of International Relations»!

The journal International Organization and Northwestern University’s Buffett Center for International and Comparative Studies invite applications for a workshop to be held June 12-13, 2015.

Karen Alter and Erik Voeten, with the support of IO’s editorial board, will convene this workshop. Interested participants should submit a proposal of no more than 500 words by December 1, 2014 to judicializationconference@gmail.com.

We especially welcome the following types of proposals:

  • Studies that examine whether states, international institutions, firms or other nonstate actors act differently in the shadow of adjudication
  • Studies comparing politics in non-judicialized to judicialized contexts
  • Studies of the impact of judicialization across countries, regions or issue areas
  • Studies that analyze whether and when adjudicators are becoming consequential creators of international law
  • Examinations of the potential counter-responses to the increased authority of judicial institutions. For example, how and when do state actors successfully seek to influence adjudicators or otherwise reduce their jurisdiction or authority?
  • Analyses of whether international law differentially influences states depending on how much authority domestic judicial bodies have to utilize international law.
  • Inquiries into the larger theoretical implications of the emergence of these judicial actors.
  • Studies that provide generalizable insight into the practices, processes, politics and decision-making of adjudicatory bodies that have an international or transnational jurisdiction.

For more information, see: http://www.cics.northwestern.edu/groups/ioil/2015Workshop.html

SYIL
The editors of the SYbIL welcome submissions from all members of the academic community for consideration for the General Articles and Spanish Practice section of the forthcoming volume of the Yearbook. The SYbIL also welcomes references from authors in order to review their recent published books.
The SYbIL editorial process is subject to a double-blind peer review process, seeking to enhance the quality of research by providing authors with feedback on submitted materials and constructive suggestions for consideration and revision where appropriate. The review process is conducted under strict considerations of anonymity in order to ensure absolute objectivity. The editors of the SYbIL will never disclose the identities of reviewers to authors or other reviewers, nor will the editors disclose the identities of authors to the reviewers.
The Call for Papers for Vol. 18 is still open. Manuscripts dealing with any topic of interest in the field of Public and Private International Law and International relations should be submitted to the editors by 31 October 2014. The manuscripts shall compulsory conform to the Style Guide of the SYbIL (available here).Please, remember that your manuscript MUST be submitted to the Editor’s email address at editor@sybil.es. Please, do not use any other email address. Visit our website section for authors at http://www.sybil.es/sybil/for-authors/.

European Society of International Law Research Forum

Academy of European Law, European University Institute, Florence

14 – 15 May 2015

Call for Papers

The 2015 ESIL Research Forum will take place on 14 and 15 May 2015, at the European University Institute in Florence. With the transition to Annual Conferences, the Society will maintain the Research Forum in a smaller but more intensive format. The Research Forum is re-launched as a scholarly conference which promotes engagement with research in progress by members of the Society. From 2015, it will be convened at least once a year and is organized around a broad The Research Forum targets in particular scholars at an early stage of their careers, especially advanced PhD students and post-doctoral  researchers. All ESIL members are invited to attend the Research Forum as audience members.

Approximately 10-15 papers will be selected from among the submissions, and during the Research Forum paper presenters will receive comments on their papers from members of the ESIL Executive Board and invited experts.

This year, the Research Forum calls for papers addressing the following set of issues in international law:

The Use of Force

Statehood, Secession, the Creation of States

The Legitimacy and Illegitimacy of Governments and States

Territories and Boundaries

We stress that papers which address any dimensions of the call, including through interdisciplinary research and methods, and through historical, theoretical or empirical approaches, will be given serious consideration. We welcome papers that propose to redefine or re-imagine our understanding of the terms of the call and their meaning in the current Abstracts of not more than 750 words should be submitted by interested applicants to ESIL-RF2015@EUI.eu by Monday 1 December 2014. Please include the following information: name, affiliation, email address, and whether you are an ESIL member. Applicants should also send a one-page curriculum vitae with the abstract. Papers should be unpublished at the time of the presentation.

Successful applicants will be notified by email by 15 January 2015. Complete drafts of papers will be required by 15 April 2015. Following review, selected papers will be published in the ESIL SSRN Paper Series.

Successful applicants will be expected to bear the costs of their own travel and accommodation. Partial financial support may be available on a needs basis for a limited number of scholars. Scholars selected to present a paper who have exhausted other potential sources of funds can submit a request to the Selection Committee for financial support with an explanation of why they are in need of assistance.

Once selected, applicants will be informed of several hotels that offer preferential rates to Research Forum participants. Lunch on both days will be provided, and a dinner for presenters, commentators and ESIL Executive Board members will be hosted by the Academy of European Law on the evening of 14 May.

SLADI_COL_2014
La Tercera Conferencia Bienal de la Sociedad Latinoamericana de Derecho Internacional SLADI-LASIL, tendrá lugar en la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad Externado de Colombia, los días 14, 15 y 16 de agosto de 2014. El tema general de la conferencia es “América Latina y la jurisdicción internacional”. Aquí está la convocatoria.

Call for Papers: The Latin American Society of International Law has issued a call for papers for its third biannual conference, which will be hosted by the Universidad Externado de Colombia, on August 14-16, 2014. The theme is «Latin-America and the International Jurisdiction.»

A welcomed academic initiative of the Court: an open call for papers for a session on the ICJ and the UN within the conference in celebration of the Centenary of the Peace Palace. Here is the information:

The International Court of Justice will host a conference in celebration of the Centenary of the Peace Palace on Monday, 23 September 2013. The programme will include four sessions:

1. A Century of International Justice, and Perspectives for the Future
2. The Role of the International Court of Justice for Enhancing the Rule of Law
3. The International Court of Justice and the International Legal System
4. The International Court of Justice and the United Nations: Relationship of the ICJ with other UN Organs.

Speakers for the first three sessions have been invited by the Court. Speakers for the fourth session will be selected on the basis of abstracts submitted in response to this Call for Papers.

Possible topics to be addressed by the papers are: (a) the role and relevance of Article 36 (3) of the Charter of the United Nations; (b) advisory opinions requested by United Nations organs; (c) the review by the Court of the legality of acts of United Nations organs; (d) the role of other United Nations organs for the implementation of the Court’s judgments.

Senior and junior scholars of any nationality are eligible to apply. Abstracts, in either English or French, should be no more than 2500 words in length and must be received by the Court by Wednesday, 10 July 2013. Only one abstract per author may be submitted. Abstracts received after the deadline will not be considered.

The selection of papers by a panel of three judges of the Court will take place on an anonymous basis. Abstracts should therefore not contain the authors’ contact details. They should however be accompanied by a cover letter providing this information, as well as by a curriculum vitae.

Applications should be sent to:

International Court of Justice
Attn: Jenny Grote Stoutenburg
Peace Palace
Carnegieplein 2
2517 KJ The Hague
The Netherlands

Selected speakers will be notified no later than Monday, 22 July 2013. Full papers must be received by the Court by Monday, 9 September 2013. The papers must be unpublished and ready to be included in proceedings which may later be published.

Unfortunately, the International Court of Justice is not in a position to meet travel and accommodation costs for any speaker at the Conference. The selected papers of those who will not be able to attend the Conference may be included in the proceedings.

Es un anuncio de SUR – REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE DERECHOS HUMANOS, que me parece una publicación excelente, que aparece simultáneamente en tres idiomas. Las propuestas se pueden presentar en español, inglés o portugués.

SUR – REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE DERECHOS HUMANOS

¿De qué manera se incorporan los derechos humanos a la política exterior de las potencias emergentes?

¿Podría considerarse que la promoción y protección de los derechos humanos es un tema de interés nacional?

¿Qué impacto tiene la política exterior de los países del Sur Global sobre los derechos humanos a nivel mundial?

¡Es momento de debatir estas y otras cuestiones que versan sobre el tópico “Política Exterior y Derechos Humanos!

Solicitación de artículos

Conectas Derechos Humanos, Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, CIVICUS: Worldwide Alliance for Citizen Participation y Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development invitan a académicos y profesionales a presentar artículos para la edición 19 de la Revista Sur, a ser publicada en diciembre de 2013, cuyo tema central será Política Exterior y Derechos Humanos. Más informaciones aquí.

Fecha límite: 15 de Junio de 2013

***

SUR – INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL ON HUMAN RIGHTS

 How are human rights incorporated into foreign policies of emerging and rising powers?

Could the promotion and protection of human rights abroad be considered an issue of national interest?

What is the impact of Global South countries’ foreign policy on human rights globally?

 It’s time to debate these and other questions addressing the topic of «Foreing Policy and Human Rights»!

Call for papers:

Conectas Human RightsCommonwealth Human Rights InitiativeCIVICUS: Worldwide Alliance for Citizen Participation and Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development invite scholars and practitioners to submit articles for Sur Journal’s Issue No. 19, to be published in December 2013, with a focus on Foreign Policy and Human Rights. For more information, click here.

Deadline: June 15, 2013

***

SUR – REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE DIREITOS HUMANOS

Como os direitos humanos são incorporados à política externa das potências emergentes e ascendentes?

Será que a promoção e proteção dos direitos humanos no exterior pode ser considerado um tema de interesse nacional?

Qual é o impacto global da política externa dos países do Sul Global nos direitos humanos?

É tempo de debater estas e outras questões que versam sobre o tópico «Política externa e Direitos Humanos»!
Chamada de Artigos

Conectas Direitos Humanos, Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, CIVICUS: Worldwide Alliance for Citizen Participation e Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development convidam estudiosos e profissionais a enviar artigos para a 19ª edição da Revista Sur, a ser publicada em dezembro de 2013, cujo foco será a Política Externa e os Direitos Humanos. Mais informações aqui.
Data limite: 15 de junho de 2013

The Changing Nature of International Environmental Law: Evolving Approaches of the United States and the European Union

Joint Symposium ASIL/ESIL International Environmental Law Interest Groups

The Graduate Institute – Geneva

Institut de hautes études internationales et du développement | Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies

22-23 November 2013

Call for Papers – Deadline: Friday, 3 May 2013

The International Environmental Law Interest Groups of the American Society of International Law and the European Society of International Law are delighted to announce that their First Joint Symposium will take place on 22-23 November 2013 at the Graduate Institute in Geneva. The Co-Chairs and Convenors of the Interest Groups join in thanking the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies and our host, Professor Jorge Viñuales, Director of the Programme on Environmental Studies of the Institute’s Centre for International Environmental Studies, for their kind generosity in providing a venue and refreshments for the Symposium.

Symposium Theme

International Environmental Law is not in the same space that it occupied in 1972 when it burst forth on the international agenda with the Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment. For some time we have been witnessing a fundamental shift in the nature of international environmental law (IEL) from both theoretical and practical perspectives. Many reasons might lay behind this shift. For a start, IEL has had to innovate its way around the “sovereignty barrier” – foundational principles and norms of general international law that continue to uphold a state-based system of international politics and law that is often seen as counter-productive to solving global and regional environmental problems. IEL has done this, in part, through science driven norms, non-consensus decision-making, and a focus on promoting compliance rather than labeling action wrongful with a view to invoking state responsibility.

Then too, IEL has experienced “bottom up” influence from developments in national approaches to environmental protection. Increasingly, IEL has adopted of “second generation” national regulatory techniques including the use of markets, flexibility mechanisms, and privatization. In addition, the underlying reality, which IEL is trying to co-ordinate and steer, is changing. The reality of significant environmental impacts associated with global markets and international investment flows appears to call for a more normatively expansive and inclusive approach. The increasing influence of host of non-state actors such as transnational corporations and expert non-governmental organizations raise questions about participation in and the legitimacy of decision-making and compliance processes.

An emerging new approach to IEL ought to enable us to understand the way various types of soft norms and non-state action influence (or not) the behavior states and key actors beyond states. In this context, most pollution and conservation problems need to be addressed outside of the traditional state system, in what is increasingly described as a multi-level governance framework, with various types of actors having an influence how these norms develop and are supervised. Environmental law approaches and methods have become globalized in various ways, not only by states borrowing from other jurisdictions, but also because e.g. multilateral environmental agreements MEA’s harmonize the way environmental governance is done in various jurisdictions. These environmental law principles and approaches not only travel between national jurisdictions but they also migrate between various levels of governance.

At the same time these macro changes have been influencing the nature of IEL, the approaches to and practice of IEL by the United States and European states is also shifting. Due to their environmental footprint, their economic and geopolitical power, and their technological and financial resources, the US and the EU have a critical impact on the world’s environment, as well as a distinctive ability to shape global environmental politics. Meanwhile, and despite common interests, these two elephants are often said to have developed different approaches to IEL. Notwithstanding strong support for early environmental agreements, the US position over the past two decades has been described as one of disengagement and withdrawal, shying away from binding environmental commitments and favouring unilateral and domestic environmental policies. In contrast, Europe is commonly thought to be a consistent supporter of multilateralism and of legally binding environmental agreements. Additionally, the US and the EU have exhibited marked differences in relation to key IEL principles, from precaution to differential treatment.

The aim of the Symposium, then, is twofold. First, it aims to engage in a search for more sophisticated, nuanced and complex approaches to environmental problem solving and underlying theory of IEL based on the changing nature of the field. Following last year’s Rio+ 20 Conference, we are well placed to consider potential paradigm changers, including whether the concept of sustainable development is still the best idea around which to organize legal protection of the global environment; whether alternative concepts/models might be more effective in stopping environmental harm and improving environmental quality; whether the current preoccupation with “implementation” best serves global environmental protection; and whether international law is up to the regulatory challenges posed by continuing world population growth and increasing consumption.

Secondly, the Symposium also seeks to intensify the transatlantic debate about these important questions, as well as to bring experts from various disciplines and backgrounds to discuss cutting-edge research in the field of IEL. As President Obama begins his second term in office, it seems an opportune time to not only consider the changing nature of IEL, but also to revisit and explore anew the nature, the extent, and indeed the reality of this transatlantic divide and its significance for the development of IEL. Do IEL scholars make too much of US/EU divergences? How do these divergences manifest in specific environmental regimes? What role, if any, do academic, scholarly or theoretical traditions play in the perception of the EU/US divide? Has the Obama administration worked to widen or narrow this divide?

Call for Proposals and Abstracts

The Co-Chairs and Convenors cordially invite the submission of proposals and abstracts on the theme of The Changing Nature of International Environmental Law: Evolving Approaches of the United States and the European Union. Papers presented at the Symposium will be selected through a competitive process. The selection process will be based exclusively on the scholarly merit of proposals received and priority will be given to unpublished papers and work in progress. We welcome proposals from practitioners, diplomats, academics and graduate students that are attentive to one or more aspects of the Symposium theme outlined below.

Each submission should include an abstract of the proposed presentation of no more than 700 words in English or French and a short CV in English or French. Applications should be submitted in a WORD or PDF format. They should be emailed to both Alejandra Torres Camprubi (atorrescamprubi@yahoo.es) and Timo Koivurova (timo.koivurova@ulapland.fi). Please indicate “2013 ASIL/ESIL Symposium” in the subject line of the email.

Deadline

The deadline for submission of proposals is Friday, 3 May 2013. The outcome of the selection process will be notified to all applicants by Monday, 3 June 2013. After selection, each presenter will be expected to produce a draft paper by Monday, 2 September 2013 for circulation among the other Symposium participants.

Basic Symposium details

It is anticipated that the Symposium will run for one day and a half. It will commence on Friday, 22 November 2013 at noon and will run until 5.30 pm on the first day. It will conclude on Saturday, 23 November 2013, but the day will be full with a 9.00 am start and a 5.00 pm wrap up.

The organizers envision a total of six panels – two panels on the first day and four panels on the second – with each panel comprised of four presenters. The contours of each panel will be determined based on proposals and abstracts that are accepted.

Publication

We believe that publishers will be interested in publishing the proceedings of the Symposium in an edited volume. The organizers reserve the right to publish the selected papers. Before publication, all papers will be submitted to peer-review.

Inquiries

For all inquiries, please contact Alejandra Torres Camprubi (atorrescamprubi@yahoo.es) and Timo Koivurova (timo.koivurova@ulapland.fi).

¿A dónde va América Latina en el

Derecho Económico Internacional?

28 y 29 de octubre de 2013

Lima, Perú

Convocatoria para Artículos

La Red Latinoamericana de Derecho Económico Internacional (RED LAT-DEI), la Universidad de Chile y la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Perú, con el apoyo de la Society of International Economic Law, la Sociedad Latinoamericana para el Derecho Internacional, y el Word Trade Institute de la Universidad de Berna, convocan a la presentación de artículos para la Segunda Conferencia Bianual de la RED LAT-DEI “¿A Dónde Va América Latina en el Derecho Económico Internacional?” A desarrollarse el 28 y 29 de octubre de 2013, en Lima, Perú.

PLAZO: 30 Mayo de 2013

COMUNICACIÓN DE LOS RESULTADOS: 30 Junio de 2013

ENTREGA PAPERS: 15 Septiembre de 2013

Entre el 28 y el 29 de octubre de 2013 tendrá lugar la Segunda Conferencia Bianual de la Red Latinoamericana de Derecho Económico Internacional en conjunto con la Universidad de Chile y la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Perú, en Lima, Perú. La conferencia cuenta con el apoyo de la Society of International Economic Law, la Sociedad Latinoamericana para el Derecho Internacional (www.lasil-sladi.org), y el Word Trade Institute de la Universidad de Berna.

El tema de la conferencia será: “¿A dónde va América Latina en el Derecho Económico Internacional?” Les invitamos a reunirse con reconocidos expertos en derecho económico internacional de diferentes partes del mundo para discutir sobre el estado y futuro de esta área del derecho en nuestra región. Contaremos con la participación de representantes de la Organización Mundial del Comercio, organizaciones económicas y de integración Latinoamericana, entre otros.

La primera conferencia bianual tuvo lugar en la Universidad Externado de Colombia, el 8 y 9 de septiembre de 2011. En la conferencia participaron algunos de los más importantes expertos en derecho internacional económico de la región, entre ellos miembros del Tribunal Permanente de Revisión del MERCOSUR, jueces del Tribunal de Justicia de la Comunidad Andina y del Órgano de Apelación de la OMC, más de 115 académicos, abogados y representantes de organizaciones internacionales. Las ponencias y artículos entregados en la conferencia han sido editados por los co-directores de la Red y el Departamento de Derecho Económico de la Universidad Externado de Colombia, y publicados en un libro que se encuentra ya disponible al público. La conferencia contará con mesas individuales y conferencias magistrales en formato de plenaria. Cada mesa tendrá un moderador y, según el caso, comentaristas.

Las propuestas para mesas o presentaciones individuales podrán presentarse en Portugués o Español en los siguientes tópicos, u otros relacionados con el tema de la Conferencia:

– derecho económico internacional (comercio, inversión, derecho financiero o monetario) en Latinoamérica o con un enfoque sobre Latinoamérica y sus vínculos con otras regiones;

– las instituciones de integración en Latinoamérica, su fragmentación y/o coherencia con otras instituciones globales;

– teoría jurídica de las relaciones económicas internacionales.

Las propuestas enviadas por estudiantes de Maestría o pregrado podrán ser elegibles como posters o sesiones.

Las propuestas deben ser entregadas antes del 30 mayo de 2013.

Para postular, solicitamos a los interesados enviar por correo electrónico un resumen de no más de 300 palabras con el tema a tratar en su ponencia, nombre, afiliación y breve biografía o CV. En caso de ser escogida, un borrador avanzado del artículo que desarrolla la propuesta debe entregarse antes del 15 de septiembre de 2013.

Por favor, indicar si el trabajo ha sido publicado, es un documento de trabajo o es inédito. Con la presentación de la propuesta se acepta que el artículo que entregará podrá ser publicado y reproducido en el segundo libro de memorias de la misma, por la institución que defina la Red LAT-DEI. Para efectos de la publicación, el artículo será de entre 20 y 30 paginas máximo.

La postulación de mesas debe contar con un título y resumen de la mesa, conferencistas comprometidos, información sobre ellos (tal como su afiliación) y los títulos y resúmenes de las presentaciones individuales. Los conferencistas deben estar de acuerdo con el título de su charla y confirmar su interés y disposición en participar.

Preferiblemente las mesas deben representar (si el tema lo requiere) la diversidad de opiniones existentes y países.

Les pedimos enviar las propuestas vía e-mail a jmalvarez@etb.net.co

Los resultados serán anunciados en Junio de 2013. Las propuestas serán leídas por dos árbitros o miembros del comité organizador, conformado por los directores de la Red, representantes de las universidades organizadoras y el Comité Ejecutivo de la Red.