EWIS 2020 Workshops
WS A: Anxiety in International Relations
WS AB: Applying Feminist Institutionalist Approaches to the Study of International Relations
WS B: Being Precise, Becoming Collateral: Cultures of Military Precision
WS BA: Breaking Bad/Making Good: Fostering Ethical Leadership Out of Political Crises
WS C: Contested Connections: Infrastructures, Capitalism, and Geopolitics
WS D: Democratic Security: Concepts, Practices and Consequences
WS E: Making the State-System Unfamiliar: The Dynamics of the Global Empire-System, 1856-1955
WS F: ‘Fields’ of IR: (Epistemic) Violence, Real-Life Encounters and Methodologies
WS G: Global Governance in the Digital Age
WS GA: Global Affairs’ Academic Writing Workshop
WS H: (Re-)Imagining Security: Between Science, Technology and Fiction
WS I: Intelligence in Contemporary Times: Towards a Transversal Research Agenda
WS J: Security Knowledge Production through ‘North-South’ Coalitions and Negotiations
WS K: Peace in Plural: Decolonial (and) Feminist Approaches to Peace(-building)
WS L: The Local Lives of International Organization – Researching IOs “in the Field”
WS M: Multiplicity: IR’s Strangely Familiar Common Ground
WS N: Non-Western Agency in World Politics: Decentering Objects, Perceptions and Theories
WS P: Prudence in World Politics (CEEISA)
WS Q: Post-Growth in World Politics: Exploring the Strange within the Familiar
WS R: Change in EU-Russia Relations. Integrating New Approaches
WS S: Status Symbols in World Politics
WS T: The Commercial in/for IR: Authority and Legitimacy of Private Tech Companies
WS V: A Transatlantic Divide? Strangeness and Familiarity in European Approaches to Remote Warfare
WS W: Walls and Wars: The Militarization of Contemporary Border Security Policies
WS X: Prevention between Security and Social Politics – Spaces of Contestation
WS Y: Strangeness as an Asset: Self-Reflexivity in Global Social and Development Policy