For many of our members, EISA’s annual Pan-European Conference on International Relations (PEC) is a special event. In addition to hosting hundreds of intellectually stimulating panels and roundtables (not to mention our famous Grand Reception), PECs are designed as a collection of thematic ‘sections’ that give organisational power to EISA members. Regular sections are nominated and organised by ‘section chairs’, who act as curators and put together a set of thematically coherent panels as part of the conference programme. At each PEC, approximately 75–90 scholars act as section chairs.
We have prepared the following FAQ for those who are interested in acting as a section chair. If you have other questions, do feel free to get in touch with us at info@eisa-net.org.
What are the responsibilities of Regular Section chairs?
Prospective chairs design and propose thematic sections in line with the general PEC conference call. Section proposals contain a brief overview of the proposed theme, a discussion of why and how the proposed theme is relevant to the general PEC call, and a provisional list of 5–10 panels/roundtables.
Once the proposals are accepted, section calls are posted on the PEC website and section chairs are tasked with populating their section panels. Some section chairs handpick their participants and submit a fully formed list of panels/roundtables with participants. This might be a good idea if you are part of an established network of scholars working on a particular topic. Others prefer a more open approach and design their panels based on individual paper/panel submissions they receive through the PEC submission portal. This is a great way to bring new scholars into existing networks, or kickstart an entirely new group of research collaborators.
Regular section chairs are then tasked with finalising and submitting their list of panels/roundtables to PEC programme chairs before the conference registration closes in April/May.
How much work is involved?
While it might sound like being a Regular Section chair is a time-intensive enterprise, many of the tasks they undertake are spread across a long period of time. There are certain deadlines that section chairs need to adhere to (e.g. abstract submission, conference registration, etc.), but they do not need to actively work on their sections from January to September. Section chairs are likely to receive questions from their participants or will communicate regularly with PEC programme chairs, but these are likely to be concentrated around certain deadlines as detailed below.
Here’s what the schedule for Regular Section chairs generally look like:
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- September: Call for section chairs is published: Prospective section chairs design and submit their section proposals.
- December: Abstract submission opens: Section chairs start receiving paper/panel proposals and work on populating their sections.
- February: Abstract submission deadline.
- March: Section chairs finalise accepting paper/panel proposals.
- April: Acceptance Emails Sent / Registration Opens: Section chairs finalise their section programmes and submit them to PEC programme chairs.
- May: Registration deadline for participants in the programme.
- September: Time to enjoy the PEC!
What are the benefits of being a Regular Section chair?
EISA members act as section chairs for different reasons. Some are interested in creating new networks of scholarship around particular topics and developments in the discipline, and they use their sections as platforms to generate such networks. Some sections represent significant constituencies within the EISA community (such as Global Health and Critical Military Studies), and PECs function as a regular meeting space for scholars who are active in those networks. From time to time, sections are designed with a focus on creating a specific output (e.g. a special issue, edited collection, etc.) and they function as a workshop.
Conference Secretariat
C-IN
Prague Congress Centre
5. kvetna 65
140 21 Prague 4
Czech Republic
Tel.: +420 296 219 600
Website: www.c-in.eu
