(Un)Sustainable Politics in a Changing World

69th PSA Annual International Conference

15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Centre, #PSA19 Nottingham Trent University PSA members are invited to attend the PSA Annual Assembly Tuesday 16 April 2019 Bowden Room, Nottingham Conference Centre

The Annual Assembly is an opportunity for members to participate in setting the future priorities of YOUR Association. Members are encouraged to submit questions, concerns and ideas at this open forum. This is an exciting time for the PSA! The past year has included acquiring and moving into new office premises, launching a new website, curating topical events in partnership with the British Library and increased activities in education, publications and with our specialist groups. The PSA Trustees look forward to talking with you at the Annual Assembly!

16.45 - 17.00 Annual Assembly Welcome Drinks 17.00 - 18.00 Annual Assembly 18.00 - 18.30 Annual Assembly Drinks Reception Welcome to Nottingham!

Dear Conference Delegate,

I am delighted to welcome you to Nottingham for this 69th Annual Conference of the Political Studies Association (PSA). We are expecting up to 800 participants with the conference continuing to evolve and innovate and hopefully achieving a quite rare combination of quality and quantity. The PSA conference offers academic researchers from across the discipline the opportunity to share their research, constructively challenge each other’s findings and hone best practice. The PSA Conference continues to grow each year and is a leading international annual conference in the discipline. The theme this year, ‘(Un)sustainable Politics in a Changing World’, brings together leading academics from across the world to consider the current state (crisis?) of politics, , elections, political leadership and representation. I’m sure you will have your own favourites on this wide-ranging programme, but allow me to draw your attention to a few highlights. Wondering what’s the latest from Westminster? Don’t miss the Monday keynote by the Rt. Hon. MP, Speaker of the House of Commons, reflecting on “Politics in an Anti-Politics Age”. Please do also join us for the annual conference drinks reception afterwards. For the latest on , earlier in the day, come along to “Explaining Brexit: ‘Known Knowns’ and Unanticipated Consequences” panel, including the Rt. Hon. Kenneth Clarke, QC MP, Father of the House of Commons. The Annual Dinner features a Q&A with Kamal Ahmed, Editorial Director of BBC News, and so for those attending please come armed with topical questions and discussion points! The PSA is absolutely delighted to welcome Professor Cynthia Enloe as our keynote speaker on Tuesday. Her topic, “Boys Don’t Always Have to be Boys: The Local and Global Politics of Exposing and Challenging Patriarchal Impunity”, presents attendees with a rare opportunity to learn from one of the leading international relations experts in the world. Awareness of privilege within the profession and the challenges that poses to inclusivity is a theme of a number of panel discussions. The new PSA Race, Migration and Intersectionality Specialist Group launches on Monday with a discussion on “Britain’s Ethnic Minorities’ Political Participation and Representation”. There are roundtables on “Gender and the Profession”; "The Politics of Recognition and Recognition of Politics Speakers”; and a public event on Sunday which asks the question, “Is it Time to Lower the to 16?”. In November the PSA launched the Diverse Voices Doctoral Scholarship Fund and the Monday morning plenary offers attendees the opportunity to feed into the work of the Diverse Voices Chair’s Commission. In order to develop a profession inclusive of diverse voices, we need to think about how we encourage a range of GCSE and A-Level students to study Politics at university, how we nurture and support undergraduate and graduate students from diverse backgrounds as well as how we as an organization can set aspirational goals for scholarship fund raising. We welcome all attendees who are concerned about inclusivity in the study of politics as well as the profession to come along to this discussion. On Tuesday morning, all those involved in departmental leadership are invited to a networking breakfast to share plans for professional development and outreach activities and discuss upcoming opportunities for collaboration. For those just starting out in the profession, the PSA Early Career Network invites you to a reception and social event on Tuesday evening. With the REF looming, and careers increasingly defined by research outputs, this conference offers you ample opportunity to engage with various journal editors, including the always popular "Meet the Editors" Roundtable on Tuesday morning sponsored by the PSA Early Career Network. All four PSA journals are hosting panels featuring some of the best work published this year and I’m sure all the editors would be happy to chat with you about article placement and offer publishing advice. As engaged members of the PSA who care about the future of the organization and your role in it, I invite you to attend the PSA Annual Assembly. With the purchase of a new office space in Camden, the launch of the new PSA website and new membership outreach, the PSA has had a very busy year. The Annual Assembly is your opportunity to help us plan for next year and to ensure that we are providing quality membership services to support all those across the profession. Those in attendance will be offered a drink in order to toast the end of a successful year and the exciting opportunities in our future! What a fantastic conference programme! I am immensely grateful to our conference convenors at Nottingham Trent University, Dr Marianna Poberezhskaya and Dr Imad El-Anis, as well as Avnish Patel (PSA Events & Marketing Manager) and the rest of the PSA staff for their unbelievably hard work. I know you will thank them yourselves when you see them at the conference, or even buy them a drink! If you see me, or any of the PSA Trustees, please do come up and say hello! We hope you have a great conference. Sincerely,

Professor Angelia Wilson Chair, Political Studies Association of the UK

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 3 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Programme

Sunday 14 April 2019

15:30-17:30 Is it Time to Lower the Voting Age to 16? THiNK Meeting Space, Speakers: Afua Acheampong (Vice President, Nottingham Trent University Students Cobden Chambers Union), Lillian Greenwood MP (Member of Parliament for Nottingham South, Dr Joe Greenwood (YouGov and LSE), Eliza Larmond (Nottingham Youth Cabinet and Children’s Partnership Board) and Natalie Robinson (UK Youth Parliament alumni and Nottingham Youth Cabinet mentor) Chair: Dr Andy Mycock (Leverhulme Trust ‘Lowering the Voting Age Across the UK’ Project)

Monday 15 April 2019 08:00-17:30 Registration 08:30-09:15 Welcome Breakfast for New Attendees Old Chemistry Theatre Sponsored by the PSA Early Career Network 09:30-11:00 Panel Session 1 See page 26 09:30-11:00 Explaining Brexit: ‘Known Knowns’ and Unanticipated Consequences Lecture Theatre 2 Panellists: Rt Hon Kenneth Clarke QC MP (Member of Parliament for Rushcliffe), Professor Rob Ford (), Roland Freudenstein (Wilfried Marten Centre for European Studies, Brussels), Professor David Phinnemore (Queen’s University Belfast) and Jill Rutter (Institute for Government) Chair: Dr Michael O’Neill (Nottingham Trent University) 11:00-11:30 Refreshments 11:30-12:10 Plenary: PSA Diverse Voices Doctoral Scholarships and Strengthening Academia Lecture Theatre 3 Panellists: Neema Begum (University of Manchester and Convenor of PSA Race, Migration and Intersectionality Specialist Group), Professor Claire Dunlop ( and PSA Equality & Diversity Lead) and Professor Karen Salt () Chair: Professor Angelia Wilson (PSA Chair) 11:30-12:30 A Short Introduction to Mindfulness (Lunch provided) Knight Room Speaker: Esther Triffit (Nottingham Trent University) 12:30-13:30 Keynote Lecture: ‘Politics in an Anti-Politics Age’ Lecture Theatre 2 Speaker: Rt Hon John Bercow MP (Speaker, House of Commons) Chair: Professor Angelia Wilson (PSA Chair) 12:30-13:30 Lunch Break* 12:30-13:30 PSA Specialist Group Meetings (see page 23 for details) 13:30-14:30 Plenary: Can Environmental Institutions Still be Leaders in Times of Uncertainty? Lecture Theatre 3 Panellists: Natalie Bennett (), Dr Marit Hammond (Co-convenor, PSA Environmental Politics Specialist Group and Keele University), Corli Pretorius (UN Environment Programme – World Conservation Monitoring Centre) and Kirsty Schneeberger MBE (ClientEarth) Chair: Dr Paul Tobin (University of Manchester and PSA Trustee) 13:30-14:30 Politics Meet the Editors Workshop Lecture Theatre 8 Featuring: Professor Roger Awan-Scully (Cardiff University and Trustee, PSA), Dr Nivi Manchanda and Dr James Strong (Editors-in-Chief, Politics) 13:30-14:30 Political Studies Panel: Pluralism in Political Studies: The Politics of Recognition and Lecture Theatre 9 the Recognition of Politics Speakers Speakers: Dr Brenda González Ginocchio and Dr Liam Stanley (University of Sheffield) Discussants: Dr Frances Amery (University of Bath), Professor Gerry Stoker (University of Southampton) and Professor Angelia Wilson (Chair, PSA) Chair: Professor Andrew Hindmoor (Co-editor, Political Studies) 14:45-16:15 Panel Session 2 See page 28 14:45-16:15 Sustaining in : Economic Implications and Regime Consequences in N25 Comparative Perspective Convened by the PSA Turkish Politics Specialist Group Speakers: Dr Odul Celep (Isik University), Dr Seda Demiralp (Isik University) and Silvia Fuselli (Johns Hopkins University) and Dr Toygar Sinan Baykan (Kirklareli University) Chair: Dr Yaprak Gursoy (Aston University)

* PLEASE NOTE THAT LUNCH IS NOT PROVIDED UNLESS AT SPECIFIED EVENTS DURING THIS PERIOD

4 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 16:15-16:30 Refreshments 16:30-18:00 Panel Session 3 See page 30 16:30-18:00 Roundtable: Britain’s Ethnic Minorities’ Political Participation and Representation Lecture Theatre 2 Convened by the PSA Race, Migration and Intersectionality Specialist Group Speakers: Areeq Chowdhury (WebRoots Democracy), Eviane Cheng Leidig (University of Oslo), Abena Oppong-Asare (former Councillor for Bexley, 2014-18) and Professor Maria Sobolewska (University of Manchester) Chair: Neema Begum (University of Manchester) 18:00-19:00 PSA Annual Conference Drinks Reception Newton Forum outside Lecture Theatre 2

Tuesday 16 April 2019 08:30-17:00 Registration 08: 30 - 09:15 Departmental Leadership Networking Breakfast Old Chemistry Theatre 09:30-11:00 Panel Session 4 See page 33 09:30-11:00 Strengthening Parliamentary Democracy Lecture Theatre 3 Convened by the PSA Parliaments Specialist Group Speakers: Gordana Comic (Deputy Speaker, National Assembly, of Serbia), Meg Munn (Global Partners Governance and former Member of Parliament), Greg Power (Global Partners Governance) and Zoe Oliver-Watts (Global Partners Governance) Chair: Dr Marc Geddes (University of Edinburgh) 09:30-11:00 Are We All Environmentalists Now? The Influence of Environmentalism on Individual N28 and State-based Actors Convened by the PSA Environmental Politics Specialist Group Speakers: Professor Elizabeth Bomberg (University of Edinburgh), Dr Peter Eckersley (Nottingham Trent University), Dr Matthew Lockwood (University of Exeter), Dr Paul Tobin (University of Manchester and PSA Trustee) Chair: Dr Shashi van de Graaff (University of Queensland) 09:30-11:00 Publishing Roundtable: Meet the Editors Lecture Theatre 2 Sponsored by the PSA Early Career Network Contributing Editors: Dr Alan Convery ( British Journal of Politics and IR ), Professor Claire Dunlop (Public Policy and Administration), Professor Justin Fisher (Political Studies Review), Professor Andrew Hindmoor (Political Studies), Dr Nivi Manchanda and Dr James Strong (Politics), Dr Felicity Matthews (Policy & Politics) and Professor Tony Zito (Environmental Politics) Chair: Sumedh Rao (PSA Early Career Network Chair) 11:00-11:30 Refreshments 11:30-12:30 Plenary: ‘Boys Don't Always Have to Be Boys: The Local and Global Politics of Lecture Theatre 2 Exposing and Challenging Patriarchal Impunity’ Speaker: Professor Cynthia Enloe (Clark University) Chair: Dr Rose Gann (Nottingham Trent University and PSA Trustee) 12:30-13:30 Lunch Break* 12:30-13:30 British Journal of Politics and International Relations Article of the Year Roundtable: Lecture Theatre 4 ‘Drone Strikes, Media Assessment and Responsibility’ Article Co-author: Professor Graeme A.M. Davies () Respondents: Dr Ingvild Bode (), Dr Catarina Thompson (University of Exeter) and Professor Rob Johns () Chair: Dr Alan Convery (Deputy Editor, BJPIR) (Lunch provided) 12:30-13:30 Women and Politics Specialist Group Lunch in Honour of Professor Cynthia Enloe Bowden Room 12:30-13:30 PSA Early Career Network Speed Mentoring Hooley Room 12:30-13:30 PSA Specialist Group Meetings (see page 23 for details)

Continues

* PLEASE NOTE THAT LUNCH IS NOT PROVIDED UNLESS AT SPECIFIED EVENTS DURING THIS PERIOD

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 5 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Programme

13:30-15:00 Panel Session 5 See page 36 15:00-15:15 Refreshments 15:15-16:45 Panel Session 6 See page 39 15:15-16:45 Political Studies Review Panel: Gender and the Profession: An Update of the Lecture Theatre 2 Composition of UK Political Science Departments by Gender Speakers: Dr Sadiya Akram (Manchester Metropolitan University), Dr Stephen Bates (University of Birmingham), Dr Manjeet Ramgotra (SOAS University of ) and Dr Zoe Pflaeger Young () Discussant: Professor Claire Dunlop (University of Exeter) Chair: Dr Jennifer Thomson (University of Bath) 15:15-16:45 Roundtable: Cultural Backlash - Youth Political Action in a Time of Austerity N24 Convened by the PSA Young People’s Politics Specialist Group Panellists: Matt Henn (Nottingham Trent University), Professor Pippa Norris (Harvard University - via video link), Dr Sarah Pickard (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3), Professor Alistair Ross (London Metropolitan University) and Dr James Sloam (Royal Holloway, University of London) Chair: Dr James Weinberg (University of Sheffield) 16:45-17:00 PSA Annual Assembly Welcome Drinks Bowden Room 17:00-18:00 PSA Annual Assembly Bowden Room 18:00-18:30 PSA Annual Assembly Drinks Reception Bowden Room 18:00-19:15 PSA Early Career Network Drinks Reception and Talk Old Chemistry Theatre 19:15-23:00 PSA Early Career Network Social Angel Microbrewery, Stoney St 19:00-19:45 PSA Annual Conference Dinner Drinks Reception (Ticket only) St Mary’s Church 19:45-23:00 PSA Annual Conference Dinner (Ticket only) St Mary’s Church (featuring a Q&A with Kamal Ahmed, Editorial Director, BBC News)

Wednesday 17 April 2019 08:30-13:15 Registration 09.00-10.30 Panel Session 7 See page 41 09:00-10:30 The New American Politics: Understanding Trump N31 Speakers: Fatemah Alzubairi (Kuwait University), Dr John Callahan (New College) and Dr Matthew Mokhefi-Ashton (Nottingham Trent University) Chair: Wayde Marsh (University of Notre Dame) 09:00-10:30 Roundtable: The Politics and Security of Bowden Room Speakers: Ted Antill ( Police), Shamsher Chohan (Communities Inc.), Dr Katerina Krulisova (Nottingham Trent University) and Helen Voce (Nottingham Women’s Centre) Chair: Professor Cynthia Enloe (Clark University) 10.30-11.00 Refreshments 11:00-12:30 Panel Session 8 See page 43 11:00-12:30 Is the UK Unsustainable? Brexit, Territorial Politics and the Constitution Lecture Theatre 2 Convened by UK in a Changing Europe Speakers: Professor John Denham (University of Winchester), Professor John Garry (Queen’s University Belfast), Professor Nicola McEwen (University of Edinburgh) and Dr Rachel Minto (Cardiff University) Chair: Professor Dan Wincott (UK in a Changing Europe and Cardiff University) 12:30-13:30 Lunch Break* 12:30-13:30 PSA Specialist Groups Meetings (see page 23 for details) 12:30-13:30 PSA Specialist Groups Convenors’ Lunch Bowden Room 13:30-15:00 Panel Session 9 See page 44 15:00-15:15 Refreshments 15:15-16:45 Panel Session 10 See page 46 16:45 Conference close

* PLEASE NOTE THAT LUNCH IS NOT PROVIDED UNLESS AT SPECIFIED EVENTS DURING THIS PERIOD

6 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Programme Highlights

MONDAY 15TH APRIL Explaining Brexit: ‘Known Knowns’ and Unanticipated Consequences 09:30 - 11:00, Lecture Theatre 2 Featuring: RT HON PROFESSOR KENNETH CLARKE DAVID PHINNEMORE QC MP Queen’s University Member of Parliament Belfast for Rushcliffe

ROLAND PROFESSOR JILL FREUDENSTEIN ROB FORD RUTTER Wilfried Marten Centre University of Institute for for European Studies Manchester Government

Plenary: PSA Diverse Voices Doctoral Scholarships and Strengthening Academia Keynote Lecture: Politics 11:30 - 12:10, Lecture Theatre 3 in an Anti-Politics Age Featuring: 12:30 - 13:30, Lecture Theatre 2 NEEMA BEGUM RT HON University of Manchester and Convenor of PSA Race, JOHN BERCOW MP Migration and Intersectionality Specialist Group Speaker of the House PROFESSOR CLAIRE DUNLOP of Commons University of Exeter and PSA Equality & Diversity Lead PROFESSOR KAREN SALT University of Nottingham

Plenary: Can Environmental Institutions Still be Leaders in Times of Uncertainty? 13:30 - 14:30, Lecture Theatre 3 Featuring: NATALIE DR MARIT BENNETT HAMMOND The Green Co-convenor, PSA Environmental Party Politics Specialist Group and Keele University CORLI KIRSTY PRETORIUS SCHNEEBERGER MBE UN Environment ClientEarth Programme – World Conservation Monitoring Centre

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 7 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Programme Highlights

TUESDAY 16TH APRIL Strengthening Parliamentary Democracy 09:30 - 11:00, Lecture Theatre 3

Featuring: GORDANA COMIC MEG MUNN Deputy Speaker of the Global Partners Governance National Assembly, and former Member of Republic of Serbia Parliament (2001 - 2015)

Plenary: Boys Don’t Always Have to be Boys: The Local and Global Politics of Exposing and Challenging Patriarchal Impunity 11:30 - 12:30, Lecture Theatre 2 (followed by lunch hosted by the PSA Women and Politics Specialist Group in the Bowden Room) PROFESSOR CYNTHIA ENLOE Clark University

PSA Conference Dinner 2019 (Ticket Only) From 19:00, St Mary’s Church Featuring a Q & A with Kamal Ahmed, Editorial Director, BBC News

WEDNESDAY 17TH APRIL Is the UK Sustainable? Brexit, Territorial Politics and the Constitution 11:00 - 12:30, Lecture Theatre 2

Featuring: PROFESSOR PROFESSOR JOHN DENHAM NICOLA MCEWEN University of Winchester University of Edinburgh

8 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Academic Convenors’ Details

DR MARIANNA POBEREZHSKAYA Dr Marianna Poberezhskaya is a Lecturer in Politics and International Relations in the Department of Politics and International Relations at Nottingham Trent University. She received her PhD in Politics and IR from the University of Nottingham (2013) which was followed by a Postdoctoral Lecturing Fellowship at the University of East Anglia. Marianna’s primary area of expertise is climate change policy and environmental communication in the post-Soviet space. She is particularly interested in the way the states are able to shape climate change discourse in the region. Marianna has extensive experience of building relationships with a range of stakeholders, including policy-makers, scholars, environmental activists and representatives of the major international organisations. Marianna was recently awarded a British Council Researcher Links Grant for organising an international workshop on ‘Sustainable Energy and Climate Change in Russia: Policies, Discourses and Narratives’. She is the author of a monograph, Communicating Climate Change in Russia: State and Propaganda (Routledge, 2016) and a co-editor of Climate Change Discourse in Russia (Routledge Focus, 2018). Marianna has published numerous research articles in journals such as Environmental Communication, Global Environmental Change, Public Understanding of Science and East European Politics. She is currently working on a project exploring climate change narratives in Central Asia.

DR IMAD EL-ANIS Dr Imad El-Anis is a Senior Lecturer in International Relations in the Department of Politics and International Relations at Nottingham Trent University. His current research focuses on several aspects of the political economy of the Middle East and North Africa, including economic integration and political cooperation in the region, energy security and nuclear energy proliferation, freshwater scarcity and foreign policy and economic neoliberalism and public dissent. His work is most closely associated with critical versions of liberal institutionalism, commercial institutional peace theory, and small states theory. He is the author of Jordan and the United States: The Political Economy of Trade and Economic Reform in the Middle East (Tauris Academic Studies, 2011). He has also co-authored several books including A New A–Z of International Relations Theory (I.B. Tauris 2015); and International Political Economy in the 21st Century: Contemporary Issues and Analyses, 2nd ed. (Routledge, 2017). He has authored numerous research articles for international outlets including Cambridge Review of International Affairs and Journal of Developing Societies and several book chapters for leading publishing houses including Palgrave Macmillan and Routledge. Imad is currently writing a monograph on the political economy of Jordan. He appears regularly as an expert on Middle Eastern affairs in major international media.

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 9 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Academic Convenors’ Details

Welcome from the Department of Politics and International Relations at Nottingham Trent University.

The Department of Politics and International Relations is delighted to welcome you to the 69th Annual International Conference of the Political Studies Association of the UK. Politics and International Relations have been taught for some years at NTU, but the Department bringing these two subjects together was only formed in 2012. Since its formation, the Department has grown in size and currently has 24 academic staff, 430 undergraduate students and a growing number of taught post-graduate and PhD students. The Department has a strong track record of excellence in teaching with high student satisfaction at both undergraduate and post-graduate levels. NSS overall satisfaction for undergraduate courses in the Department in 2018 averaged 92% and at taught masters level 95%. The Department is keen to develop its research capacity and has strengths in two distinct areas – Citizenship & Democracy and International Security. The Citizenship, Democracy and Transformation research group brings staff together who are exploring challenges facing contemporary especially as these challenges relate to young people, environmental concerns and/or . The International Security and Sustainability research group examines a range of issues relating to security such as: terrorism, energy security, female security, resource scarcity, democracy (and the threats to it), political violence, nuclear technology proliferation, human security, migration, refugees and displaced people, climate change and related environmental issues, insurgency and civil wars and radicalisation and counter- radicalisation. The Department has recently launched a fully online distance learning Masters’ course in International Relations and is currently developing new undergraduate and post-graduate provision in the areas of international security and public policy. The rapid and unpredictable change currently taking place in the world of politics within the UK, Europe and further afield, alongside our research interests in young people and political engagement, climate change, gender politics, terrorism and radicalisation, informed our conference theme of (Un)sustainable Politics in a Changing World. We hope that you enjoy the plenary sessions and conference papers as well as the many additional activities offered on the conference programme. On behalf of Marianna, Imad and all staff in the Department, I warmly welcome you to the PSA's Annual International Conference 2019.

Dr Rose Gann Head of Department, Politics and International Relations Nottingham Trent University

10 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Attendee Information

Points of Contact Accessibility PSA staff can be contacted via emailing [email protected] The NCC has achieved the CredAble Provider mark and all throughout the conference. In case of emergency, please call rooms and facilities are accessible by wheelchair via ramps, the PSA staff on +44 (0)7469191541. PSA staff and trustees lifts and power assisted doors. Elements such as lift buttons will be identifiable by their metallic badges and conference are also rendered in braille and mobility impaired delegates assistants by their branded PSA t-shirts. also have their own personal evacuation plan, so they are For PSA membership-related enquiries please email taken care of in the event of an emergency. [email protected]. • Stairs to all floors are accessed from the Newton Forum. To request a conference certificate please email • Lifts to all floors are at the far end of the Newton Forum. There [email protected], providing your institution address, are six lifts, A – F. To call a lift, press the level number you require paper(s) and/or chairing details. and wait for the lift letter to show on the display panel. Once inside the lift, the level(s) where it will stop are shown on display strips by Registration Area the doors. To activate the visual and auditory lift announcement The registration area will be located in the Newton Forum press the wheelchair logo followed by the level required. (Level 1) at the Nottingham Conference Centre (NCC) and will • Note: The main Goldsmith Street entrance/exit is on Level 1 be staffed during the following hours: • Attendees should advise the PSA of any specific access Monday 15 April: 08:00 - 17:30 requirements; all venues will be happy to go through their Tuesday 16 April: 08:30 - 17:00 emergency arrangements in more detail, if requested. Wednesday 17 April: 08:30 - 16:45 Audio-Visual Equipment & Support PLEASE ACCESS THE NCC VIA THE GOLDSMITH STREET • All rooms have presenter consoles with integrated PCs. We ENTRANCE recommend using a USB/Pen Drive to upload your presentations, but you can also connect using your own laptop. Name Badges and Onsite Registration • All conference rooms are fitted with either wall-mounted It is essential that attendees check in at the registration area flatscreens or ceiling-mounted digital projectors/screens which to collect their name badges and conference packs. are linked to a lectern with HDMI and VGA connections for your laptop. Attendees will have received an email via • It is recommended that presenters bring their own VGA, HDMI, [email protected] with a unique bar Mac adaptors, power cables, phone chargers and international code: power adaptors. • Print this email or have it displayed on your smart phone • There will be dedicated onsite support from an IT/AV technician upon arrival. and conference assistants will be on hand during the conference. • Scan the barcode on the email at a badge station. Presenting a Paper or Chairing a Panel? • Collect your badge, lanyard and conference pack • All panel participants should arrive at their scheduled room Attendees are required to wear their name badges at all times, at least 10 minutes before the session commences to ensure for security reasons. You will not be allowed into a panel or that everyone is ready to start promptly. plenary event without your name badge. • Please refer to the AV Equipment & Support section for further details regarding venue facilities. All presentations Venues should be uploaded in advance of the panel commencing. The PSA Conference will be held primarily at the NCC. The full • Panel sessions will run for 90 minutes and should be list of venues is as follows: structured to allow a maximum of 60 minutes for all Nottingham Conference Centre, presentations, plus at least 30 minutes for discussion and Goldsmith Street, Nottingham NG1 4BU audience questions. Some panels will feature discussants St Mary’s Church, , Nottingham NG1 1HN and panel chairs should ensure that they have 5 minutes to (Annual Conference Dinner, 16 April) speak, with opportunity for responses. • The vast majority of panels have three or four papers, Angel Microbrewery, 7 Stoney St, The , providing paper-givers a maximum of 15-20 minutes to Nottingham NG1 1LG (PSA ECN Social, 16 April) present (but panel chairs should adjust accordingly). THiNK Meeting Space, Cobden Chambers, off Pelham St, • Some panels will have fewer papers and so will have longer Nottingham NG1 2ED (pre-conference event on 14 April) for each presentation and/or questions. See page 15 - 16 for venue maps • Panel chairs should also factor in time for arrivals, introductions, switching between presentations whilst also Twitter ensuring paper-givers stick to their allocated time. If you’re interested in tweeting about the conference the hashtag will be #PSA19. Follow us @PolStudiesAssoc. Exhibitors Publishers will be exhibiting during the conference in the Conference App Newton Forum. Please take the time to visit the stands. Tea The PSA Annual Conference app is now available to download, and coffee will be served here during the refreshment breaks. allowing you to access the full schedule and build your own See page 17 for further information personal conference itinerary. Cloakroom Facilities 1. Download the Ex Ordo app on your phone from either the • The Potter Room (Level 1) at the NCC is available as a App Store (iOS) or the Google Play Store (Android) cloakroom throughout the conference. 2. The installation process will take a few minutes. Once the • Please note that attendees leave personal items in cloakroom app is installed, click the Ex Ordo icon that now appears on areas entirely at their own risk – Nottingham Conference your phone screen. Centre, Nottingham Trent University and the PSA accept no 3. You can now search for the guide. To find the guide type in responsibility for items which are lost or damaged. 'PSA 2019' into the search box Conference Dinner 4. If you would like to receive notifications from the This year’s dinner will be held at St Mary’s Church on Tuesday conference organisers and interact with other users of the 16th April from 19:00. You will have been sent a confirmation guide you will have to log in. NOTE: You have to create a new email if you purchased a ticket. Due to problems in previous account for logging into the guide (your Ex Ordo credentials years with ‘gatecrashers’ please do not turn up if you have not won't be recognised in the mobile app when you try to log purchased a ticket. Please inform PSA staff of any dietary in). requirements or allergies if you have not done so already.

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 11 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Attendee Information Internet & Wi-Fi Access Lactation/Nursing Room Internet access is available to conference attendees via NCC Wi-Fi: A private space for nursing mothers is available near the Network: NottinghamConferenceCentre Sillitoe and Knight Rooms on Level 3. Userame: politicalstudies Password: 5257Kr Prayer Room The password is case sensitive – if your browser is not loading once N25M (Level 2) will be available for conference attendees to connected please type 1.1.1.1 into your browser URL and press enter. use. Exploring Nottingham and Transport Medical Nottingham can easily be explored on foot, with many attractions, • The closest walk-in service for a health problem that is shops and eateries all within a few minutes of each other. urgent but not life-threatening is the Nottingham NHS • For further details on exploring Nottingham visit: Urgent Care Centre, Seaton House, City Link, Nottingham https://www.visit-nottinghamshire.co.uk/ NG2 4LA (Tel: 0115 883 8500). • For comprehensive travel information, including car parking, • The nearest hospital with A&E Services is Nottingham University visit: www.nottinghamconferencecentre.co.uk/location Hospitals NHS Trust - Queen's Medical Centre Campus, Derby • A local map is available on page 14. Road, Nottingham NG7 2UH (Tel: 029 2074 7747). • Discounted tram tickets: Print the voucher via the PSA Conference webpage entitling you to travel on NET Trams ATM for just £2 return. There is a Santander ATM located inside the Newton Forum Conference Wellbeing (Level 0) beneath the Goldsmith St entrance. • The Knight Room at the NCC (Level 3) will be a dedicated Refreshment and Lunch Breaks space for attendees to relax during the conference, helping • Refreshments: Tea and coffee will be served in the Newton to enhance focus and engagement, reduce stress and Forum (Level 0) during the refreshment breaks encourage mindfulness. Please refer to p.24 regarding • Lunch and snacks: There are a number of options for activities and events taking place in the Knight Room. attendees within the NCC: • On Site Massage Therapy: A qualified head and shoulder Dine Arkwright (Level 0): Accredited outlet serving freshly pre- massage therapist will be onsite to provide acupressure pared hot breakfasts, lunches, snacks and drinks (08:30 - 14:30). massage treatments – please see p.24 for further details. Cafe Newton (Level 1): Serving sandwiches, pastries, snacks • NTU Sports are providing conference attendees access to and drinks (08:30 - 17:00). gym, fitness classes and sports facilities. Please see p.25 for • Water dispensers and fountains are available throughout the further details. venue.

Nearby Places to Eat and Drink COFFEE & TEA The Dice Cup Boardgame Café 22 Fletcher Gate, Nottingham NG1 2FZ 200 Degrees Coffee, vegan food and snacks and board (9 minutes’ walk from venue) Award-winning independent coffee shop games (das-kino.co.uk) in the heart of the city centre 68-70 Road, Nottingham NG1 3GY 400 Rabbits 16 Flying Horse Walk, Nottingham NG1 2HN (6 minutes’ walk from venue) Specialty tequila and mezcal cocktail bar (6 minutes’ walk from venue) (www.dicecupcafe.co.uk) hidden down a back street in the heart of (200degs.com/nottingham-flying- Kitty Café the city centre horse-walk) A café dedicated to all things feline, 15-16 Hurts Yard, Nottingham NG1 6JD complete with real cats (booking is advised) (4 minutes’ walk from venue) Copper Café 31-37 Friar Lane, Nottingham NG1 6DD (www.fourhundredrabbits.co.uk) Coffee, tea, cocktails and late-night food (7 minutes’ walk from venue) 27-33 Market Street, Nottingham NG1 6HX Tilt (www.kittycafe.co.uk/locations/nottingham) (2 minutes’ walk from venue) Intimate and candle-lit old world setting for inventive cocktails and nightly live (www.coppercafe.co.uk) White Rabbit Tea House Tea and coffee served in fine china with blues music. Costa Coffee homemade cakes 9 Pelham Street, Nottingham NG1 2EH Very near the NCC and ideal for meetings 5 Bridlesmith Walk, Nottingham NG1 2HB (7 minutes’ walk from venue) Goldsmith St, Nottingham NG1 5JJ (8 minutes’ walk from venue) (www.tiltbar.co.uk) (1 minutes’ walk from the venue and near (www.whiterabbitteahouse.com) Canalhouse Royal Centre tram stop) BARS Grade II listed building next to the canal Café Nero Saint Bar featuring a wide range of craft and world beers Very near the NCC Housed in the exclusive Lace Market 48-52 Canal Street, Nottingham NG1 7EH 35 Forman Street, Nottingham NG1 4AA Hotel, Saint Bar offers high-end brunch, (15 minutes’ walk from venue) (3 minutes’ walk from venue – opposite afternoon tea and cocktails (www.castlerockbrewery.co.uk/pubs/the- Corner House cinema) 29-33 High Pavement, Nottingham NG1 1HE canalhouse) Ugly Bread Bakery (12 minutes’ walk from venue) The Bell Inn Ugly by name, deliciously attractive by (www.lacemarkethotel.co.uk/dining) Classy, modernised pub from 1437 nature. Fresh coffee and freshly-baked The Ned Ludd offering live jazz and open mic nights, ciabattas and deli favourites. Gastropub and craft beers plus cellar cave tours. 21 Market Street, Nottingham NG1 6HX 27 Friar Lane, Nottingham NG1 6DA 18 Angel Row, Nottingham NG1 6HL (3 minutes’ walk from venue) (8 minutes’ walk from venue) (5 minutes’ walk from venue) The Specialty Coffee Shop The Horn in Hand (www.greeneking-pubs.co.uk/pubs/ Award-winning daytime café selling food, Sports bar with obligatory burgers and beer nottinghamshire/bell-inn) coffee and afternoon tea 17 Goldsmith Street, Nottingham NG1 5JT The Sir John Borlase Warren 50 Friar Lane, Nottingham NG1 6DQ (1-minute walk from venue) Classic pub with “the finest beer garden (7 minutes’ walk from venue) (www.social-squirrel.com/ in Nottingham” offering real ales, ciders, (www.thespecialtycoffeeshop.com) thehorninhandnottingham) wines and food Starbucks Das Kino 1 Ilkeston Road, Nottingham NG7 3GD 1 South Parade, Nottingham NG1 2JS German bar with a range of beers, cocktails, (10 minutes’ walk from venue) (5 minutes’ walk from venue) pizza, bar snacks and a ping pong table (www.sirjohnborlasewarren.co.uk)

12 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Ye Old Trip to Jerusalem Zaap Thai Pret a Manger Nottingham’s most famous watering hole, For a more laid-back dining experience, Sandwich chain which also sells soups, an ancient pub built into stone caves with Zaap Thai promises authentic street salads and hot drinks a charming, wonky interior and resident food in a Bangkok-themed setting, with 10 High Street, Nottingham NG1 2ET ghosts, plus food and outdoor seating more than 80 dishes to choose from (and (6 minutes’ walk from venue) Brewhouse Yard 1, Nottingham NG1 6AD they offer bespoke seasoning so you get Annie’s Burger Shack (12 minutes’ walk from venue) exactly the flavor you want) Indulgent American burger experience (www.greeneking-pubs.co.uk/pubs/ 6 Bromley Place, Nottingham NG1 6JG featuring such unlikely combos as a nottinghamshire/ye-olde-trip-to-jerusalem) (6 minutes’ walk from venue) half-pounder with peanut butter and BRITISH FOOD (zaapthai.co.uk) jelly. Bonus: all burgers can be made The Ottar Café Yamas Meze and Tapas vegetarian or vegan. Home cooked food made from local Mediterranean and Greek food to share, 5 Broadway, Nottingham NG1 1PR ingredients, served with European wines, in a warm and cosy setting (11 minutes’ walk from venue) craft beers or British gin 5 Thurland Street, Nottingham NG1 3DR (anniesburgershack.com) , Weekday Cross, (8 minutes’ walk from venue) Pizza Hut Nottingham NG1 2GB (www.yamas.co.uk) Chain restaurant offering a range of (10 minutes’ walk from venue) Petit Paris pizza and salads (www.nottinghamcontemporary.org/visit/ Casual-yet-elegant restaurant serving The Corner House, Forman Street, ottar-at-contemporary) authentic French (and Italian) cuisine in a Nottingham NG1 4DB The Orange Tree friendly atmosphere (3 minutes’ walk from venue) Popular arty eatery with affordable lunch 2 Kings Walk, Nottingham NG1 2AE Oscar and Rosie’s options. Features a seasonal menu sourced (3 minutes’ walk from venue) Pizza by the metre (yes, you read that from local ingredients, including a range (petitparisnottingham.co.uk) correctly), with fresh toppings and of burgers as well as vegan and gluten free The Alchemist homemade sauces. options A local institution, The Alchemist serves 8 Stoney Street, Nottingham NG1 1LP 38 Shakespeare Street, Nottingham NG1 everything from a full English breakfast (9 minutes’ walk from venue) 4FQ to Peking Duck, and many offerings from (www.oscarandrosies.com) (2 minutes’ walk from venue) the countries in between. The main Nandos (www.orangetreenottingham.co.uk/food) reason to visit, however, is the ambience: Chain restaurant specializing in flame- ’s Great British Kitchen The Alchemist takes its inspiration from grilled chicken Upscale fish n chips, and gin local folklore and history; they also pride 12 Angel Row, Nottingham NG1 6HL Queen Street, Nottingham NG1 2BL themselves on being master mixologists (5 minutes’ walk from venue) (3 minutes’ walk from venue) and offer a range of cocktails. Open until VEGETARIAN AND midnight. (www.georgesgreatbritishkitchen.co.uk/ VEGAN FOOD nottingham-restaurant) 11 King Street, Nottingham NG1 2AY Angel Microbrewery The Larder on Goosegate (5 minutes’ walk from venue) (thealchemist.uk.com) Free house and organic kitchen with a British and European cuisine in an elegant good vegan menu and a range of beers, setting. This Grade II-listed building was the Sexy Mamma Love Spaghetti If the name doesn’t convince you then ales and ciders home of the very first Boots the Chemist 7 Stoney Street, Nottingham NG1 1LG (but today’s menu offers something a little the menu should: classic, just-like- mamma-makes Italian favourites served (9 minutes’ walk from venue) more upmarket than a meal deal!) (www.angelmicrobrewery.com) 1st Goosegate, Nottingham, NG1 1FF in a vibrant and authentic setting. 12 Hounds Gate (12 minutes’ walk from venue) 3 Heathcote Street, Nottingham NG1 3AF Daytime dining offering healthy and (www.thelarderongoosegate.co.uk) (12 minutes’ walk from venue) delicious vegetarian and vegan dishes. World Service Restaurant Bill’s Restaurant Contemporary European chain dishing up Although it’s not exclusively vegetarian Fine dining British restaurant housed in a it offers a good variety of meat-free 17th-century building, with a la carte menu separate breakfast, afternoon tea, lunch and dinner menus. Outdoor seating. options, all made from fresh ingredients. and a relaxed lounge bar 12 Hounds Gate, Nottingham NG1 7DA , Castle Gate, Nottingham 15 Queen Street, Nottingham NG1 2BL (3 minutes’ walk from venue) (7 minutes’ walk from venue) NG1 6AF (www.no12houndsgate.co.uk) (10 minutes’ walk from venue) The Lobster Pot Baresca (www.worldservicerestaurant.com) Relaxed seafood restaurant offering Spanish-style tapas restaurant offering Hart’s Hotel and Restaurant a range of classic and contemporary international dishes a somewhat pioneering vegetarian menu Fine dining British restaurant house in the including quinoa salad, sweet potato quarter of the old hospital – a la carte menu 199 Mansfield Road, Nottingham NG1 3FS (10 minutes’ walk from venue) tagine and beetroot falafel. Standard Hill, Park Row, Nottingham 9 Byard Lane, Nottingham NG1 2GJ NG1 6GN (www.lobsterpotnottingham.co.uk/ nottingham) (10 minutes’ walk from venue) (9 minutes’ walk from venue) (www.barescatapas.co.uk) (www.hartsnottingham.co.uk/ Café Coco Tang harts-kitchen) Arty, authentic restaurant offering HALAL Fothergills authentic Vietnamese dishes and Anoki Indian Restaurant Nice bistro-pub opposite . boasting a roof garden Intimate, high-end restaurant with stylish Good to sit outside if weather permits! 8 Byard Lane, Nottingham NG1 2GJ modern decor and a contemporary take 5-7 Castle Road, Nottingham NG1 6AA (9 minutes’ walk from venue) on classic Indian dishes. Open late. (10 minutes’ walk from venue) (www.cocotang.co.uk/cafe) Gothic House, Barker Gate, Nottingham (www.eversosensible.com/fothergills) Mogal E Azam NG1 1JU (11 minutes’ walk from venue) WORLD FOOD Long-established, family-run Indian restaurant featuring all your favour- (www.anoki.co.uk) Calcutta Club ites alongside some tantalizing house Marrakesh Award-winning high-end Indian restaurant specialties Moroccan and Middle-Eastern bar and with emphasis on exquisitely-crafted dishes Royal Centre, 7-9 Goldsmith Street, Not- restaurant which caters for halal diets. and exemplary customer service tingham NG1 5JS (adjacent to venue) Also promises a belly dancer. 8-10 Maid Marian Way, Nottingham NG1 6HS (www.mogaleazam.co.uk) 6 Chapel Bar, Nottingham NG1 6JQ (8 minutes’ walk from venue) (5 minutes’ walk from venue) (www.calcutta-club.co.uk) (marrakeshnottingham.co.uk) A team of conference assistants will be on hand throughout the conference to address any concerns or questions you may have! PSA staff and trustees will also be easily identifiable by their metallic badges.

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 13 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Nottingham Map nottingham

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R A E , West Bridgford, Ashby De-La Zouch (A453), Birmingham (M42), WA B TERW N O M AY T E A 47 O R ADOW ST Notts County FC, Nottingham Forest FC, M Riverside Retail Park, Castle Marina Retail Park, S A S WAY Nottingham Trent University Clifton Campus EN WA D Trent Bridge Cricket Ground, Loughborough, TERW E MEADOWS WA AY U Tram to: NG2 Business Park, Y ST A National Water Sports Centre, Newark (A46), Q 6

3 Lenton Lane, QMC, University of 0 Leicester (A46), Grantham (A52) 45 A Nottingham, Nottingham Science Tram to: The Meadows, Park, Highfields, Beeston, Central Compton Acres, Wilford, CATTLE MARKET RD College (Beeston), , Toton Lane P&R Clifton Centre, Clifton P&R

Information points (H4) 18 Public offices, community Places of worship Tram stops National Express Travel Centre (L8) 1 /Rescue Rooms/Stealth (F5) 19 centres and facilities Central Methodist Mission (G8) 66 Lace Market (H8) (Temporary location.) TRCH - Theatre Royal and (I6) 67 BBC East Midlands (K10) 43 Congregational Church (M8) NCT Travel Centre (H6) 2 Royal Concert Hall (G5, G6) 20 (E3) 68 Nottingham Trent University (E4) Citizens Advice Bureau (L7) 44 Friends Meeting House NET Travel Centre (H6) 3 Motorpoint Arena (H10, H11) 21 (F2) 69 (H6) Council House/ Heart Church Nottingham Railway Station 4 Royal Centre (G5) (H7) 45 Islamic Centre/Central Mosque (E9) 70 (L8, M8) Places of interest and Nottingham Register Office 46 Nottingham Buddhist Centre (I8) 71 Car parks Nottingham Tourism Centre (H7) 5 key attractions Crown and County Courts (K8) St Andrew’s with Castle Gate (URC) (F5) 72 Fire Station (N10) 47 Arndale (Maid Marian Way) (K6) Victoria Bus Station Travel Centre (D7) 6 Arboretum (C3, D3) 22 St Barnabas RC Cathederal (G3) 73 HMRC - Inland Revenue (L6, M6) 48 Broadmarsh East (Temporary) (K8) Bonington Art Gallery (E5) 23 St Mary’s Church (J9) 74 Main shopping locations International Community Centre (D6) 49 Castle (Canal St) (K7) Brewhouse Yard (Museum of Nott’m Life) (K5) 24 (G5) 50 St Nicholas’ Church (J6) 75 Cowan Street (F9) Bridlesmith Gate (I7) 25 Job Centre (Parliament Street) Brian Clough statue (H6) 76 (L8, L9) 51 St Peter’s (and St James’) Church (I7) Curzon Street (E9) Intu Broadmarsh (J7, K7) 7 (J8) 26 Job Centre (Loxley House) Synagogue (E5) 77 Huntingdon Street (E8) Clumber Street (G7, H7) (I10, I11) 27 Loxley House - Nottingham (L8, L9) 52 Unitarian Chapel (I10) 78 Lace Market (I8) Cobden Chambers (H8) 8 (J9) 28 City Council William Booth Memorial Hall (F9) 79 Manvers Street (I12) Derby Road (G2, G3) National Videogame Arcade (GameCity) (H9) 29 Magistrates’ Court (L5, M5) 53 5453 Motorpoint Arena (K12) Exchange, The (H7) 9 Nottingham Castle* NHS Urgent Care Centre ( K11) 55 Mount Street (H4) Flying Horse Walk (H7) 10 *Closed from April 2018 until 2020 (K4) 30 Nottingham Central Library (H5) Transport Nottingham Arena (Brook St) (G10) Hockley (H9, H10) for renovations (J5) 31 Nottinghamshire Archives (L6) 56 57 Nottingham Station (M9) Lister Gate (J7) Nottingham Contemporary (J8) 32 Police - Central Station, Byron House (F6) Bus station 58 Sheriff’s Lodge (Temporary) (K10) Intu (E7, F7) 11 /Left Lion (H7) 33 Post Office (G6) Victoria (E7) 80 59 Sneinton Market Square (G12) Victoria Market (F7) 12 Old Market Square (H6) 34 Public Toilets (Greyhound St) (H7) St James Street (I5) West End Arcade (H5) Robin Hood Legacy (J5) 35 The Samaritans of Nottingham (F3) 60 Stoney Street (I9) Robin Hood statue (J5) 36 Victoria Leisure Centre (E6) 61 Nottingham Railway Station (L8, M8) 4 Entertainment Talbot Street (F4) Sky Mirror (H3) 37 YMCA ( G11) 62 Albert Hall (H4) 13 Trinity Square (F7) Sneinton Square ( G11) 38 Citycard Cycle Hire (mobile phone) & Media Centre (G9) 14 Centres of learning Upper Parliament Street (G5) Speakers’ Corner (H6) 39 15 Cornerhouse, The (F6, G6) Trinity Square (F7) 40 Central College (K6) 63 Citycard Cycle Hubs Victoria Centre North (D7) 16 64 (I8) Victoria Clock Tower/Emett Water Clock (E7) 4041 New College Nottingham (H9) Victoria Centre South (F8) 21 17 65 (H8) Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem (PH) (K5) 42 Nottingham Trent University (D4, E4, E5, F5) Wollaton Street (Crowne Plaza) (G5) 22

0040 PLW 02 2018

14 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Venue

The Nottingham Conference Centre Please access the NCC via Goldsmith St rather than the Burton St entrance.

The PSA Annual International Conference 2019 will be held in the following lecture theatres, rooms and spaces within the Nottingham Conference Centre:

LEVEL 0: Newton Forum, LEVEL 1: Newton Forum, LEVEL 2: Adams, Bowden, LEVEL 3: Knight, N31, N32A, Lecture Theatres Booth Room, Lecture Hooley, N22A, N22B, N23A, N32B, N33A, N33B, N34, 7, 8 and 9 Theatres 2,3,4,5 and 6 N23B, N25M (Prayer Room), N35, N36A and N36B N26A, N26B, N27A and N27B

s s Dine Arkwright E LT 6 LT 5 LT 4 NCC Level 1 LT 10 LT 9 w s s BENEFACTORS’ COURT s s s s s PSA Conference s Exhibitor Space Dine X Arkwright Registration Area E MAIN STAIRS E X v E XLT 6 LT 5FORUMLT, 4LEVEL 0 v LT 10 LT 9 FORUM, LEVEL 1 w s s s BENEFACTORS’ COURT CENTRAL s CENTRAL COURT GALLERY s s s PSA Conference X s Exhibitor Space s s Registration Area E MAIN STAIRS E X v E X FORUM, LEVEL 0 v FORUM, LEVEL 1 NEWTON Old Chemistry q s BALCONY CENTRAL s CENTRAL COURT Theatre GALLERY LT 1 LT 2 LT 3 s LT 7 LT 8 s E s s s s NEWTON Old Chemistry q s s BALCONY Theatre LT 1 LT 2 LT 3 LT 7 LT 8 s s s s s ss s s s

A115 A115 Key Key Goldsmith Conference venue Food and drink NCC Level 0 Street Goldsmith Entrance Conference venue Food and drink Street Entrance s s Dine Arkwright E LT 6 LT 5 LT 4 LT 10 LT 9 w s s BENEFACTORS’ COURT s s s PSA Conference X s Exhibitor Space Registration Area MAIN STAIRS E X v E X FORUM, LEVEL 0 v FORUM, LEVEL 1 s CENTRAL s CENTRAL COURT GALLERY s s E

NEWTON Old Chemistry q BALCONY Theatre LT 1 LT 2 LT 3 LT 7 LT 8 s s s s s s s s

A115 Key

Goldsmith Conference venue Food and drink Street Entrance Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 15 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 D R

H G

ROU 200m O B D O O NORTH A W 6 0 W A M V E D A R RY S N L H E ET S H Y E D E F U R E R I S T E N T S N W T R EET L P I R D E W N LST S E GIL G T L T R O D E O E ST D O N A P DE N MP S D H A S T T R

G E E Nottingham Trent L T A University SH AKESPEA S G RE STRE S ET H O S L O D . S S Trinity M H P U IT E Square S C H R E L W S Alfreton Road: A STREET ST M T ER OO R A610 to M1 R C R I Victoria U E ST E E HA N L E ET D T (North, Junction 26) ND C TO Shopping T Talbot O S BUR Centre O P Street T N N A612 (Southwell, Newark) A S T ST T MEN LF S Royal RL IA R T ER PA ET STREET Centre LOW O TALBOT D N P REET C R R ST LUM L IL D ENT L KESTON R WOLLATO AM E N I M D EET RL W STR A EY H P A B CKL D HO T DER R R E ROA BY PE U R KET OA P R RBY D U O E P S D S T S National T PELHAM ST Derby Road: T Ice Centre / Nottingham A S T

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A Centre T T Nottingham E Coach Station E E Castle and T R L E O TRE S T S N Museum LIN P AL COL CAN D O P N Conference Venue T REE R ST O L C NA A CA A D D R D R HR ET D G RI R H RE G ST 5 H A6 0 N A 60 3 G ROU N O A O I 200m 2 ROU T 6 Hucknall D 5 Wilford StreB et: A453/ A A614 Doncaster 1 O T ROU 200m 4 D GT S AR 1 B 0 V O B 200mE OD A61 L B A M1 Junction 26 OO U NORTH M1 (South, Junction 68 0 O A D Nottingham 4 WO B NORTH O 6 8 A 6 O 2 LE T O W A A T6 NORTH 6 0 A 1 24), Nottingham 6 SB W E W A 6 0 Conference SN C M 1 WA 0 NO H D V E 0 T W D M T AD A A E A AD S East Midlands I U A V R M N P DRY O NU N O O ER A H G R V L S Centre C E R E T D RY T A N S SR R E H H N H L D S E F TRE E E RY N S KNAL H R Y T U E A E S H R E R Airport, A42/M42H E I T D L E DE S F N M R D G E YS 0 Mile 1T T E H U QU E W R N E R HA N T S E D E F I T D L U Y S T ET E L P U N E R R R W N I I R Y T S R E D D N T O S E T W E L P N LST ET S A W D T R RE N (Birmingham), I London Road: E SGIL D P T L H IE R ET W L N G E T L S R P R T LST E R I E R O D ET L RD L E GIL W N G D E S S O 0 KmT 1 L LST T R O E GIL O T D G D O H B T LE E ST O A60 to Loughborough, R R N O A50 (Stoke-on-Trent)O A E T D D O N D E D E P E D S F O P S N T D A D O R E P M E S N H A DN A S O PE L S T D N W ANSF P AMD Leicester H P S D S T M I T O H A S T R O M T O W G T R E G R E E W L D G E E T Nottingham Trent L A E T Nottingham Trent L R Nottingham Trent SH A S T University AKESPE A I University SH A ARE S S S S G KESPE TRE E S University SH AKES ARE S T S H E GO PEARE S TRE G L STRE ET S H O S E O D . T H O L S S O DS . Trinity L S H O U A D M . S S H P Trinity U S M E TrinitySquare S I H 6 RD M T P U C I E R P Square S E VA I TH E Square S C R 1 E L T W E S L C H S R M E U Alfreton Road: LA STREEHT T W S T W 0 O Alfreton Road: 6 L R REET S OO M S B Alfreton Road: 8 AR CE SRTEET S T R M T R Y A610 to M1 6 A U ERST T OO I Victoria T R B R R OO ST E D A610 to M1 RE A EC E I L Victoria R A610 to M1 R H UC R NSTI Victoria E E Bus station D E C UA E ET D NottinghamST L T ConferenceE Centre GOR (North, Junction 26) ND HA E TON L Shopping R E E T RE (North, Junction 26)A HC ET D N T E ND D TO T O RA (North, Junction 26) C Talbot ET Shopping T G ND S TO O BUR O Shopping T Talbot S O Centre Talbot T BUR N R O P Street S BUR Centre P T N Centre O O P StreetStreet T N DFO N N S T A612 (Southwell, Newark) A N N S T S A612 (Southwell, Newark) S T EN T A612 (Southwell, Newark) AAL O S AMT NST S F T Royal T T IENME LL R S ST Royal AARLMIA RING FF Royal PIRL Railway station RRE T T Centre One-way streetWPERARLPA DB RD EET T STREET CentreCentre LEROWER TTOO ARL TALBBOOT STSRTEREETET LOWLO D ON C TATALBL OT EET C D D R NN P TERTEET C C R R R P P TTRSTER LUM L I RRD NS S LUM LUM L L L 514 LIKES DD NETNT L L E ILLKKEETON R WOLLAT EME E E LVD SS W O A TTONON R RD WOOLLALTAOTON T ALMIAM W DD NN EE IR M I M W STEREETET AL L EY W H STSRTR R R A B CKL A6 APA Pedestrian street EY EY H H No entry A O D P P A B B CKLHCKL T D R R O O Victoria Shopping Centre OA DD ER E E H H T T B R R DD R R R EERR Y EPE E E U OAOA B R KET RR BYY O PPP R U U RR A KET KET OO D PUP R R O OAD RBY AAD O O ONR E RBYRBY D U U P S D E S LKEST Royal Concert Hall and TheatreDDE Royal P P S S 609 I S S A T S T Nottingham S T S National T PELHAM ST National T PELHAM ST National D T PELHAM ST

A Playhouse National Ice CentreDerby /Road: Nottingham Arena Buses, taxis, cyclistsT andT blue badgeIce holders CentreIceIce Centre Centre / / / Tram route and stops

Derby Road: ST T Derby Road: S T

City centre Nottingham A AS T O Nottingham I S

Nottingham Market I A Trent FM ArenaS

A6200 to M1 Market R RI Trent FM Arena S R A6200A6200 to to M1 M1 2 Market TO TOOR Trent FM Arena

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C A ST A A GRR T P P A L T GS TT T G C P R L G T S T G P R L T S T G Broadmarsh I E E I R E A A I R A R L A R R

A R A L A L T Queen’s T N E T E A F T E Shopping Centre N I A E E N T E F S F E P II A TT E W R A E W W R G A NT W W 52 Medical Y F R S GG W PAVEME ENTT O A A FF D S LO WPPAAVVEEMMEN L O O E Y AA DS E LLOOW L L E YY N D T L EE B N L Centre U N A TT L V O UU G AAI Notts County FC I B I I H OO GG S HH S S A R P E T P T T L EE E D Nottingham Broadmarsh T LL E E M1 Junction 25, Derby S TT R BroadmarshBroadmarsh Forest FC A SS R R Shopping G S C AA ShoppingShopping

G G CC A Centre N CentreCentre D R 0 T A A E 5 T T R I Trent Bridge 62 Nottingham E CT oach Station E T N E E T E A Nottingham CCoachoach Station Station E N E E L G Castle and T R E E O E T L L U Trent A Castle and RE TT S R R T EE O O STO R 6 Museum N S RREE L S T T N Q I TT P A S O Museum L SS N N L N D EE Bridge 0 A1 Grantham Museum CO LLIINN PP CA AAL L A 1 L N D B O L A N O D 3 Cricket 1 CCO CCA O D N O 5 P 2 N 5 N 005 4 A T Ground PP EE R TR TT O R A6 A S EE R L C REE A A O N STTR O CA L A S L C D A C A N A A CAAN R A C A T D RI E D R R TRE

L S T E 05 E T A A6 0 3 RI RI N RE E

O 6 N IO T RE N A 2 T S T 6 Hucknall 05 5 Wilford Street: A453/ A S A A614 Doncaster D 1A6 0 05 3 T N A A61 6 4 3 GT N S O N A AR 0 I 0

U N O V A 26 6 L B Hucknall E A 5 Wilford Street: A453/ T I A61 L D 2 A T 6 M1 Junction 26 Hucknall A614 Doncaster U D 1 A 5M1 (South,Wilford Junction Street: A453/ T A 68 0 A614 Doncaster AR 11 4 GT S T O 0 4 V 4 GT S 6 B E AR 1 O 0 D G B V A61 8 E M1A Junction 26 B 2 L L E T A M1 (South, Junction A61 A U 0 6 L R M1 JunctionA 26 68 T A 1 S O U 24), M1Nottingham (South, Junction 6 68 0 4 E 6 A B BO SN O 1 6 C 84 E B O H 2 6 T A NO H D 8 L E O F 0 2 T A T6 LE T 1 24), Nottingham D L A 6 0 T AD A A SBT6 E East Midlands SN A I I U1 AS R 24), Nottingham P 6 N O C B E O 1 NU O A SN B NO G H R C D E W 1 0 6 N T C T SR H R D E N B6 7 9 0 OT T H AD A East Midlands TRE E AD I KNAL U AD H A R PE D T T N A D O S Airport,East A42/M42 Midlands O A NU I R U O G R P M D 0 Mile 1 QU O O N G C RO SR NU O T Clifton Bridge HA M N R N G H D C L U R T TRE E SR R Y KNAL R H D E N T H A A D O S (Birmingham),Airport, A42/M42 TRE E D KNAL H E London Road: R A M R D G 0 Mile 1 S Airport, A42/M42 QU T L H D IE R R P HA M NR D G 0 Mile 1 ET QU L D L U HA E R S N RD L O 0 Km 1 O YD L OU D R R DH YA B O D A50(Birmingham), (Stoke-on-Trent) A60 toLondon Loughborough, Road: L L HA IE RO R P D D E D F (Birmingham), London Road: L L IE ET SHR RD L OR 0 Km 1 R P U L T O L ET R S HW RD L ANSF BO 0 Km 1 O A50 (Stoke-on-Trent) LeicesterA60 to Loughborough, H E O B I O A60 to Loughborough, R D O M D NottinghamF A50 (Stoke-on-Trent) Conference Centre ON R G D E O W D F W ANSF O L R O W Leicester W D ANSF O I L Leicester O M O I H O OR W I M W B O DS W E W R D R 6 R R I A S O I DE 8 6 RS River Trent O 1 LEVA E A A U D Burton Street 0 0 O 86 A B D 6 E A 6 Y R B D D VA D 6 1 GOR LE R A D Nottingham Conference Centre Bus station N R RE U VA A 0 RA 6 D 1 G BO LE O 8 0 Y U R B6 6 D O A B O D 68 Nottingham Conference Centre Bus station DFO GORY B D R RE N A L RA G GOR O O D Nottingham Conference Centre Bus station R RE R T A RA G R RING O One-way street Railway station DFO R N B RD ARL N Nottingham DFO ON G C T

RING O O T One-way street Railway station 514 DB RD

RING LVD Railway station T N ARL One-way street A B RD CARL A6 No entry F Victoria ShoppingI Centre C Pedestrian street I 514 5 LVD OAD L 514 LKEST ONR R LVD Royal Concert Hall and Theatre Royal A6 No entry 2 0 A609 I Nottingham Victoria Shopping Centre Pedestrian street C A6 NG1 4BU Pedestrian street No entry 6 OADD Victoria Shopping Centre A LKEST ONR A Playhouse 2 National Ice Centre / Nottingham Arena Buses, taxis, cyclists and blue badge holders Tram route and stops 3 A609 I ONR OADO City ceRoyntreal Concert Hall and Theatre Royal 609 I LKEST R Nottingham Royal Concert5 Hall and Theatre Royal 2 5 A Y DNottingham 61 B A Playhouse A National Ice Centre / Nottingham Arena A Buses, taxis, cyclists and blue badge holders Tram route and stops 4 R O DNottingham Castle City centre D E R A Playhouse National Ice Centre / Nottingham ArenaOA Buses, taxis, cyclists and blue badge holders Tram route and stops A D O and Museum City centre E R 12 P General parking City Information Point 0 BYR RD ID A6 2 R Y NottinghamU CastleLEVA LES D 61 620 E B TLE BO DA OA A A DER CANottinghamS and Museum Castle E R AD P General parking City Information Point 0D BroadmarshD ID O W Queen’s and MuseumEVAR ES E R P General parking City Information Point 6200 ST BShoppingOUL CentreD AL ID A P STLE EVAR D ES +44 (0)115 848 8000 A52 Medical Y CA OUL L I 620 E TLE B Broadmarsh DA CentreA B CAS E L Queen’s T V Broadmarsh B S P I Shopping CentreNotts County FC River Trent Queen’sA T R F A52 Medical YS Shopping Centre E D Nottingham A A M1 Junction 25, Derby P O A52 MedicalCentre BY E 5 BE IV Notts County FC Forest FC River Trent 2 S 6 Centre AB R E B V Notts County FC R N I River Trent M1 Junction 25, DerbyD R D Nottingham0 [email protected] A R 0 R E 5 IN Trent Bridge 62 D N E D A NottinghamForest FC M1 Junction 25, Derby G S M1 South Junction 24, U TrentForest FCA R N STO S 6 D R Q 0 O E 5 R EE R I Trent Bridge Bridge2 0 A1 Grantham N N 6 1 B A E A A42/M42 Birmingham, N D R 3 0 1 G E 5 R I D Trent Bridge Cricket2 D N 5 U 6 Trent A N R E A 52 005 STO G 4 Ground 6 A O Q A50 Stoke-on-Trent Loughborough, Leicester U TrentBridge 0 A6 EE A A A1 Grantham B STO R A 1 3 6 O A Q Cricket 1 D Bridge 0 A1 Grantham EE 60 5 B A 1 63 52 005 4 Ground 1 A D Cricket 5 A6 A E L 2

O 5 005 4 N Ground A A A6 A L U www.nottinghamconferencecentre.co.ukNottingham Conference Centre RD G A O E L 6

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D Nottingham Conference Centre B ON G A R O 6 L R H O R B 8 River Trent O N A D NG1 4BU R NottinghamBurton Street 6 0 R G O E A O D A 8 T N O River Trent D N A A D Burton Street F A 0 I O

E A I L 5 D L N R R A 2 0 D C N A O NG1Nottingham 4BU 6 2 L A G 3 O R T 5 5 N A N Nottingham 4 F A I A I O 5 G L T R C A 2 0 N NG1 4BU F 6 I +44 (0)115 848 8000 I 5 A 2 3 L W 5 R 5 C 2 0 +44NG1 (0)115 4BU 848 8000 6 A 4 I A 2 A 3 L 5 5 F A A A 4 O 52 6 A W [email protected] R [email protected] 0 +44 (0)115 848 8000 D M1 South Junction 24, I W L R A42/M42 Birmingham, F +44 (0)115 848 8000 A A I D O 52 A50 Stoke-on-Trent L 6 Loughborough, Leicester R F A [email protected] 0 60 A A 6 M1 South Junction 24, O D 52 6 R R www.nottinghamconferencecentre.co.ukenquiries@nottinghamconferencecentre.co.uk A42/M42 Birmingham, 0 www.nottinghamconferencecentre.co.uk D M1A50 South Stoke-on-Trent Junction 24, D Loughborough, Leicester A42/M42 Birmingham, R A606 D Loughborough, Leicester 5614/08/12 A50 Stoke-on-Trent A www.nottinghamconferencecentre.co.uk 606 www.nottinghamconferencecentre.co.uk 165614/08/12Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 5614/08/12Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Exhibitors

A number of publishers will be exhibiting during the conference in the Newton Forum within the NCC. Please take the time to visit the stands. Tea and coffee will also be served here during the refreshment breaks.

The following publishers will be exhibiting at the PSA Conference:

The Political Studies Association would like to thank the above exhibitors for their support at the 2019 Annual Conference.

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 17 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 LOOKING FOR A MEETING SPACE? WE CAN HELP!

The Political Studies Association has two meeting rooms available for hire! The PSA office is conveniently located in Camden Town and situated close to the underground. Our meeting rooms are ideal for businesses, charities and even individuals looking for a quiet office space to work. MAIN FACILITIES: • Quiet and modern space • Free wi-fi (high speed broadband) • AV facilities • Complimentary hot and cold beverages • 5 min walk from Camden Town and Mornington Crescent stations • Capacity of up to 24 people across two rooms. ROOM HIRE RATES:*

Learned Societies/ PSA Other Charities/ Members Organisations Public Sector

£20 (small room)/ One Hour £30 / £45 £40 / £60 £30 (large combined room)

Half Day £60 / £90 £90 / £135 £120 / £180

Full Day £100 / £150 £160 / £240 £220 / £330

* Refreshments inclusive of room hire rate

Please contact the PSA Office at [email protected] regarding availability and bookings.

For further details please visit: www.psa.ac.uk/venue-hire-psa

18 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 PSA Anti-Harassment and Discrimination Policy

The PSA is committed to providing a welcoming professional environment in which everyone is treated with dignity and respect, regardless of sex, gender, sexual orientation, race, religion, age or disability. The PSA recognises a shared responsibility of attendees to establish and uphold that environment for the benefit of all. Harassment of conference participants undermines the principles of equality, diversity and freedom of expression at the foundations of our conference and constitutes professional misconduct.

What constitutes harassment? Harassment is “unwanted conduct related to a protected characteristic which has the purpose (intentional) or effect (unintentional) of violating a person’s dignity or creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating, or offensive environment for that individual.” Unprofessional behaviour that violates the PSA’s Code of Conduct may include, but is not limited to: • Inappropriate actions or comments related to a protected characteristic including sex, gender, sexual orientation, race, religion or belief, age or disability • Sexual harassment or intimidation (including unwelcome sexual attention, pressure to engage in unwanted sexual activity, physical or virtual stalking, and sexual assault including unwelcome touching or groping) • Threatening speech or actions (including threats of physical harm and professional reputational damage)

How do I report an incident? Incidents can be reported in person or by email ([email protected]). The PSA has two options through which participants can pursue a complaint: Stage 1. Notice If you do not wish to enter into a formal complaint and investigation process, then the PSA can issue a notice. In this case, the PSA will contact the person who is the subject of the complaint, inform them a complaint has been made, and remind them of the PSA’s anti-harassment policy. No further action will be taken. All parties will be treated with strict confidentially. Stage 2. Formal Complaint A formal complaint should be made in writing and include full details of the incident(s). An investigation will be conducted in every case where a formal complaint is made. Further guidance on submitting a formal complaint and what happens next is available in the full anti-harassment policy and from PSA staff/trustees. In all cases, the PSA will make every effort to protect complainants from retaliation. If the PSA considers that there is a risk of immediate physical harm or danger, we will act to ensure the safety of conference participants regardless of whether a formal complaint is pursued. This policy applies to everyone attending conference (including delegates, staff, exhibitors, and all other attendees) and to all conference venues and events (including formal meetings and social events). Nothing in this policy shall be construed as a restriction on the ability of PSA members and conference participants to constructively critique one another’s work, unless this intersects with the above.

The full policy is available on the PSA website.

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 19 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 PSA Policy on Free Speech and Conduct at Meetings

An increasing number of events jointly or singly organized by the PSA are open to the general public. These include lectures/discussions, specialist group events, student & teacher focused events, public events, media briefings, public lectures as well as the PSA annual conference, etc. The Political Studies Association has in place a code of conduct and anti-harassment policy for its members. However, this policy does not explicitly cover situations where attendees may wish to demonstrate or carry out a protest. These policies will apply to all attendees.

Expectations of all event participants These expectations include: • Not interrupting or heckling or verbally abusing invited speakers or contributors from the audience. • Respecting the authority of the event chair who will try to allow as many people to participate as possible. • Not recording in audio and/or visual form any PSA event without the express prior permission of the PSA. • Continued non-compliance following a warning may lead to PSA staff, trustees or venue security staff asking the individual(s) concerned to leave the premises.

The PSA will make clear to all those participating that civility and courtesy is expected from them at all times. The chair, convenor or host of the event will deal with any breaches of these expectations and will have the full support of the PSA in doing so.

Freedom of expression In February 2019 the Equality and Human Rights Commission produced ‘Freedom of expression: a guide for higher education providers and students' unions in England and ’: www.equalityhumanrights.com/sites/default/files/freedom-of-expression-guide-for-higher- education-providers-and-students-unions-england-and-wales.pdf While this only applies to England and Wales and to activities taking place within higher education institutions, the PSA will, where appropriate, make reference to this guidance in relation to its own position on free speech at PSA events.

Protests and demonstrations Disruptive behaviour includes, but is not limited to, purposely blocking the view of others at an event; noise or action that disrupts the ability of the audience to hear or disrupting essential operations at the event. Anyone who wishes to stage a demonstration or protest at any PSA event should contact the PSA office in advance for approval and to discuss any operational and safety issues. The PSA will use its professional judgement, taking into account all relevant circumstances and the need for a range of opinions to be heard, in deciding whether to allow a demonstration or protest to proceed.

20 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 The PSA’s 59 Specialist Groups provide a research focus for members covering a vast range of fields within the discipline and act as an important vehicle for connecting with academics, policy-makers and practitioners in the UK and beyond. As the beating heart of the Association, Specialist Groups are playing a central role in Nottingham, convening over 100 panels at this year’s conference. American Politics Global Justice and Human Rights Political Violence and Terrorism Anarchist Studies Greek Politics Politics and History Anti-Politics Interpretive Political Science Politics and Policy in Southeast and Art and Politics Irish Politics Group East Asia British and Comparative Political Economy (BCPE) Italian Politics Politics and Religion British Idealism Labour Movements Politics of Property Britishness Latin American Politics Politics of South Asia Caribbean Politics Liberals and Populism Communism Local Politics Public Policy and Administration Comparative European Politics Marxism Qualitative Research Conservatism Studies Media and Politics Race, Migration and Intersectionality Contemporary Aristotelian Studies Modern Rhetoric and Politics Corruption and Political Misconduct (CPM) Nordic Politics Security and Intelligence Development Politics Parliaments Space, Governance and Politics Elections, Public Opinion and Parties (EPOP) Participatory and Deliberative Democracy Sport and Politics Environmental Politics Political Leadership State Theory Ethnopolitics Political Marketing Territorial Politics Executive Politics and Governance Political Methodology Turkish Politics French Politics and Policy Political Psychology Women and Politics German Politics Political Thought Young People's Politics SPECIALIST GROUP ACTIVITIES

Photos (Top row, from left): Women and Politics SG: A Hundred Years of Women’s Suffrage: Looking Back, Moving Forwards, Houses of Parliament, 22-23 May 2018; Participatory and Deliberative Democracy SG: Participatory Spaces in Perspective conference, Centre for the Study of Democracy, 5-7 September 2018; Anarchist Studies SG: ASN 5th International Conference - Decolonisation, Loughborough University, 12-14 September 2018. (Middle row, from left): Parliaments SG: PSA Parliaments 2018 Conference: Making Sense of Parliaments, Stormont, Belfast, 8-9 November 2018;Development Politics SG: Liberating Comparisons Workshop, University of Edinburgh, 8 December 2017; Media and Politics SG: MPG Annual Conference - Political Reversals and Renewals, University of Nottingham, 8-9 November 2018. (Bottom row, from left): Conservatism Studies SG: TRIN International Development Impact Event, Conservative Party Conference, 4 October 2018; Modern Liberty SG: Positive Freedom in a Changing World, Manchester Political Theory Workshop, September 2018; American Politics SG: APG Annual Conference “The Trump Effect: A Remade America and a Remade World?”, UEA, 3-5 January 2019; What’s Happening? 2019: PSA Specialist Group event on “Brexit: Towards the Break-up of the Union?”, British Academy, 24 January 2019.

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 21 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 PSA Specialist Groups PSA SPECIALIST GROUP MEETINGS

Outside of the PSA Annual Conference, Specialist Groups are busy year-round providing networking opportunities to members, running their own workshops and conferences, supporting early career academics, publishing blogs and journals and collaborating on research. Joining a Specialist Group is a fantastic way to get more involved with the PSA and network with fellow academics. If you’d like to know more about a group or get involved then please do drop in to a Specialist Group meeting, which will be held during the lunch breaks at PSA Conference:

Monday 15th April, 12.30 - 13.30 *Unless stated otherwise

Specialist Group Room Specialist Group Room

British Idealism ...... N22A Race, Migration and Intersectionality ...... N35

Communism ...... N23A Security and Intelligence ...... N27A

Conservatism Studies ...... N26A Territorial Politics ...... N33A

Development Politics...... N34 The following SGs will meet from 11:30-12:30:

Greek Politics ...... N24 German Politics ...... N22B

PDD ...... LT4 Local Politics ...... N33B

Politics and Religion ...... LT8 Space, Governance and Politics ...... N32B

Populism ...... N21 Women and Politics ...... Bowden Room

Media and Politics* (meeting from 18:00-20:00) ...... Mogal E Azam Restaurant (opposite conference venue)

Tuesday 16th April, 12.30 - 13.30 *Unless stated otherwise

Specialist Group Room Specialist Group Room

Anarchist Studies...... LT9 Global Justice and Human Rights ...... N26A

EPOP ...... LT5 Environmental Politics...... N28

Irish Politics ...... N36B Rhetoric and Politics ...... LT8

Italian Politics...... N23A Interpretative Political Science...... N22A

Labour Movements ...... N35 PPA ...... LT6

Marxism ...... N27A Ethnopolitics ...... N32A

Political Thought...... LT7 Young People’s Politics...... N24

Turkish Politics* (meeting from 15:15-16:45) ...... N25

Visit the Specialist Group stand Wednesday 17th April, 12.30 - 13.30 in the Exhibitors’ Hall, pop by

Specialist Group Room a Specialist Group lunchtime meeting or visit: Political Psychology ...... N23B www.psa.ac.uk/psa-communities/ Politics and Policy in SE Asia and E Asia ...... LT9 specialist-groups Specialist Group Conveners’ Lunch ...... Hooley Room to find out more or join a group.

22 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 The PSA Early Career Network in Nottingham

ECN Committee Members Sumedh Rao (left) and Joe Greenwood (right) after the Demystifying Early Career Academia event in Manchester, March 2019

The PSA Early Career Network (ECN), which replaced the former Postgraduate Network in 2016, aims to support all postgraduate, postdoctoral and early career academics within the PSA. Since its launch, the ECN has gone from strength to strength. Its current elected committee (Sumedh Rao, Joe Greenwood, Alexandra Bulat, Ellie Martus and Nick Dickinson) have been working to continue and extend the fantastic work of the previous committee and promote the interests of those academics who share in the precarious character of a life entering academia, through a lively programme of events and opportunities. The Network is committed to investing in the postgraduate and early career pipeline, encouraging equality and diversity, and strengthening academic networks across career stages. The ECN has lined up a series of events in Nottingham which attendees from all professional backgrounds and career stages are encouraged to attend: WELCOME BREAKFAST PUBLISHING ECN DRINKS RECEPTION Monday 15th April, ROUNDTABLE: & TALK 08:30 - 09:15, Old Chemistry MEET THE Tuesday 16th April, 18.00 - 19.15, Theatre, NCC EDITORS Old Chemistry Theatre, NCC The ECN are delighted to welcome so Tuesday 16th April, In keeping with tradition, the ECN would many early career academics to the like to welcome its members – and PSA Conference. We are aware that 09:30 - 11:00, academics at all stages of their career – to for many of you, this may be your first Lecture Theatre 2, a reception on the second evening of the international conference. To help you NCC conference. Drinks will be provided and you get some quick-fix answers about how will get the opportunity to meet colleagues The ECN is acutely aware to navigate the conference, we have in the discipline from across the country that the mystic world of teamed up with the PSA's Membership and beyond. publishing and the 'pressure Committee to host this welcome to publish' are the source breakfast. Pastries and refreshments ECN ALTERNATIVE SOCIAL of great anxiety for early will be accompanied by the sage Tuesday 16th April, career academics. Chaired wisdom of PSA trustees and seasoned 19:30 onwards, The Angel conference goers. We look forward to by ECN Chair Sumedh seeing you there! Rao, this roundtable aims Freehouse & Microbrewery to demystify the process The ECN looks forward to welcoming you ECN SPEED MENTORING and answer your questions to our third annual alternative social. For about how and where to Tuesday 16th April, 12:30 - those of you who are unable to attend the get published. Colleagues - main (ticketed) conference dinner, the ECN 13:30, Hooley Room, NCC both junior and senior - are is hosting an alternative social event for After the success of previous years, invited to hear editors from academics at all stages of their career. The the ECN speed mentoring session journals answer questions ECN has reserved a private space at the returns. At this event you will have directly related to publishing Angel Freehouse & Microbrewery, a venue the opportunity to network with, and as an early career academic. in the heart of the city and only a short walk ask for feedback/advice from senior If you're not sure how to from the conference venue. The Angel is a scholars in the discipline. Participants 'target' a journal, tick the Nottingham landmark and has great food will sit for 5 minutes at a time with right boxes for editors, deal and drink, as well as vegan, vegetarian and each mentor before circulating. with rejections, respond to meat versions of nearly all dishes, offering Come prepared with questions about reviewers' comments, make creative and tasty plant-based alternatives CVs, publishing, the job market, comments as a reviewer, or to traditional pub fare. One of the only collaboration, impact, REF and TEF, stay ahead of the curve, then pubs where you can choose to have fish, and general life in academia! this is the event for you. vegetarian or vegan fish and chips!

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 23 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Mental Health and Wellbeing at the PSA Conference

Mental health refers to our emotional, psychological, and social well-being. It affects how we think, feel, and act, and helps determine how we handle stress, relate to others and make choices. Just as everyone has physical health that can become unwell sometimes, we all have mental health too. Lots of people are affected by poor mental health – each year, approximately 1 in 4 people in the UK will experience a mental health issue. For those in academia, this figure is unfortunately even higher – research from RAND Europe found that 37% of academics reported that they were living with a mental health problem, with job insecurity, stress, and increased workloads cited as some of the main contributing factors. Academic conferences are often very busy, stressful environments which can exacerbate some mental health problems. Though not a long-term solution, taking some time to unwind can help improve individual wellbeing, so the PSA has organised a programme of free activities across the three days of Annual Conference to help attendees de-stress:

Wellbeing Room (Knight Room, Level 3, NCC) A quiet space available for attendees throughout conference (please note that this will be in use for the activities during the lunchtime sessions below). Please do not use this room to conduct meetings!

Access to NTU Sports We are delighted that NTU Sports are providing conference attendees access to gym, fitness classes and sports facilities from 07:00 - 21:00, 15 - 17 April at a discounted day rate of £5 per person. Please see p. 25 for further details and class times.

A Short Introduction to Mindfulness Lunchtime talk by Esther Triffit, Nottingham Trent University (Monday 15 April, 11:30 - 12:30, Knight Room - lunch provided).

Lunchtime Yoga and Mindfulness Session (all abilities welcome) Tuesday 16 April and Wednesday 17 April, 12:30 - 13:30, Knight Room.

On Site Massage Therapy Sarah Allen, a qualified head and shoulder massage therapist from Hands on at Work, will be on site to provide acupressure massage treatments. These are delivered ‘over clothing’ and using a portable massage chair, helping attendees to refocus and feel refreshed (Monday 15 April and Tuesday 16 April, 12:00 - 13:30, Newton Forum; 13:45 - 17:00, Knight Room).

Running Club (all abilities welcome) PSA trustee Matt Wood invites conference attendees to participate – meet at the entrance to the Crowne Plaza Hotel (Wollaton St) at 07:30 on Tuesday 16th April for a 5k run.

Positivity Wall Studies have shown that actively practicing mindfulness and gratitude for the small things has a positive effect on mental wellbeing – so come and take a moment to reflect and add a note to our Positivity Wall (Level 0, NCC).

The PSA recognises that while these activities can often help to improve wellbeing and alleviate symptoms of poor mental health, they are of course not a solution to the underlying causes behind mental health problems. The PSA is committed to working towards an academic environment that puts an end to stigma, takes mental health seriously and tackles the root causes behind the growing mental health crisis in academia and beyond.

24 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Mental Health and Wellbeing at the PSA Conference

NTU SPORTS We are delighted that NTU Sports are providing conference attendees access to gym, fitness classes and sports facilities from 07:00 - 21:00 during 15 - 17 April at a discounted day rate of £5 per person. The classes scheduled to be going ahead are listed below but are subject to fitness instructor availability and please check the following link for further details: www.ntu.ac.uk/sport/facilities-and-gyms/ city-sports-centre

How to book and pay: Conference attendees (who are not NTU Sport members) can book on the day of the class by calling 0115 848 4066, or in person at the City Sports Centre reception desk (please show your name badge as proof of conference attendance). Please pay and collect your ticket from the reception desk five minutes prior to the class starting.

Location: City Sports Centre, NTU Students Union, Shakespeare Street, Nottingham, NG1 4GH.

GYM AND FITNESS BLAST CLASSES CLASSES (TBC – check NTU Sports website for further details)

MONDAY 15TH APRIL MONDAY 15TH APRIL

07:45 - 08:30 ...... Strength Yoga 07:15 - 07:40 ...... Power Burn (Shape/Cardio)

12:15 - 13:00...... Pilates 12:15 - 12:45 ...... Fighting Fit (Combat/Cardio)

13:00 - 13:30 ...... Core & Abs 17:10 - 17:30 ...... Tabata (Conditioning)

17:35 - 18:00 ...... X-Fit (Cardio)

19:05 - 19:35...... Relentless (Strength)

19:40 - 20:00...... Legs, Bums and Tums (Muscle) TUESDAY 16TH APRIL TUESDAY 16TH APRIL

07:45 - 08:30 ...... Bootcamp 07:15 - 07:40 ...... HIIT Conditioning (Conditioning)

12:15 - 13:00...... Spin 12:15 - 12:45 ...... Power Burn (Shape/Cardio)

13:00 - 13:30 ...... Yoga 17:10 - 17:30 ...... Core & Abs (Conditioning)

17:35 - 18:00 ...... Fighting Fit (Combat/Cardio)

19:05 - 19:35...... Power Burn (Shape/Cardio)

19:40 - 20:00...... Tabata (Cardio) WEDNESDAY 17TH APRIL WEDNESDAY 17TH APRIL

07:45 - 08:30 ...... Yoga 07:15 - 07:40 ...... Fighting Fit (Combat/Cardio)

12:15 - 13:00...... HIIT Attack 12:15 - 12:45 ...... Pump and Flex (Shape)

13:00 - 13:30 ...... Kettlebells 17:10 - 17:30 ...... Tabata (Cardio)

17:15 - 18:00 ...... Spin 17:35 - 18:00 ...... Legs, Bums and Tums (Shape)

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 25 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers Whilst we have made every endeavour to ensure that the information printed in the programme is up-to-date and accurate, please do be aware that last-minute changes and / or rescheduling, which is beyond our control, may cause discrepancies. If this situation should arise with any of the following panels the PSA extends its apologies to conference participants; PSA staff and conference assistants are on hand at all times to answer any questions regarding the programme. Session 1 Monday 15 April 09:30-11:00 Roundtable: Explaining Brexit: ’Known The State of the World’s Bureaucracies Knowns’ and Unanticipated Consequences Chair: Dr. Gareth Mott (Nottingham Trent University) Chair: Dr. Michael O’Neill (Nottingham Trent University) Room: N31 Room: Lecture Theatre 2, Newton Building Moritz Wassum (University of Strathclyde) Varieties of Competi- tion Enforcement Practices in the ? A Comparison Rt Hon Kenneth Clarke QC MP (House of Commons) of Germany and the Professor Rob Ford (University of Manchester) Dr. Don S. Lee (University of Nottingham) Bureaucratic Quality and Roland Freudenstein (Wilfried Marten Centre for European Studies) Civil Servants’ Career Advancement in Presidential Cabinets Professor David Phinnemore (Queen’s University Belfast) Professor Andrew Thompson (University of Edinburgh), Professor Jill Rutter (Institute for Government) Michael Bauer (German University of Administrative Sciences, Speyer), Professor Sara Connolly (University of East Anglia), The European Radical Left and Populist Professor Hussein Kassim (University of East Anglia), Professor Rhetoric: Communication, Strategy and Brigid Laffan (European University Institute) The New Working Ideology I Methods of the European Commission as Administrative Reform: Where You Stand Depends On Where You Sit Chair: Dr. Giorgos Charalambous (University of Nicosia) Specialist Group: Communism and Populism Justice and the Politics of Asylum Room: N23A Chair: Dr Oliver Harrison (Nottingham Trent University) Seda Can (Kutahya Dumlupinar University and Hacettepe Univer- Specialist Group: Global Justice and Human Rights sity) Questioning the Potentials and Dilemmas of Left Populism: Room: Lecture Theatre 7 Political Participation of Turkish-Belgian Citizens Dr. Udit Bhatia (University of Oxford) The Global South and its Dr. Daniel Keith (), Professor Luke March Hermeneutical Duty to Asylum Seekers (University of Edinburgh) Radical Left Populism in Europe: Left-wing Dr. Mollie Gerver (University of Essex) Expanding Refuge Populists or Socialists? Dr. Sarah Fine (King’s College London) The Outraged Conscience of Mankind: Asylum, Refugees, and a Human Right to International India’s Emergence in a Changing World Freedom of Movement Order, I Chair: Dr. Indrajit Roy (University of York) The Political Economy of Greece in Specialist Group: Development Politics; Politics of South Asia Comparative Perspective: Beyond the Room: N34 Crisis? Dr. Jivanta Schottli (Dublin City University) The Allure of the Chair: Dr. Vasiliki Tsagkroni (Leiden University) Indo-Pacific, India’s Contribution to Ocean Governance Specialist Group: Greek Politics Reiko Kanazawa (University of Exeter) India and the World Bank: Room: N24 Mutual Goals within Broader Politics Dr. Fabio Leone (University of Bologna) The Indian Military Modern- Dr. Mustafa Kutlay (City, University of London) Crisis, Policy ization, the Strategic Restraint and the Modi’s Government Entrepreneurs and Reform Cycles: Comparative Analysis of Greece and Turkey The Politics of Parliamentary Elections Dr. Chloe Vlassopoulos (University of Picardie J. Verne, CURAPP/ CNRS) From Lignite to Renewable Energy? Continuing Unsustain- Chair: Dr. Francesca Silvestri (Nottingham Trent University) ability vs. Energy Transition in Greece Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Professor John Ryan (LSE) Eurozone Crisis Part Two: Italy May Will Kitson (University of York), Dr. Jim Buller (University of York) Be Too Big to Fail - What Are the Lessons From the Greek Experi- Understanding the Differing Political Performances of the Scottish ence? National Party and Plaid Cymru: A Statecraft Approach Lawrence McKay (University of Manchester) Proof Communication The Drama of Politics Matters: Linking Inputs and Outputs in Westminster MPs’ Constitu- Chair: Dr. Natalie Martin (Nottingham Trent University ency Communications Specialist Group: Media and Politics Professor Stephen Farrall (University of Derby), Dr. Phil Jones Room: Lecture Theatre 1 (University of Sheffield), Dr. Emily Gray (University of Sheffield) What Was Thatcher’s Legacy? Dr. Katy Parry (University of Leeds) Bodyguard (BBC, 2018): What Chris Butler (University of Manchester) How Do Governing Parties is ‘Quality’ Drama’s Problem with Politicians and War Veterans? Respond to Public Opinion? The Strange Case of the Liberal Demo- Dr. Beth Johnson (University of Leeds) Drama and Politics: Actors crats and Tuition Fees and Activism Professor Kay Richardson (University of Liverpool) The Queen’s Sustainability: Theories and Discourses Many Bodies Ellen Watts (Royal Holloway, University of London) Celebrities as Chair: Heather Alberro (Nottingham Trent University) Political Representatives: Capital, Credibility and Continuity Room: N28 Scott Leatham (De Montfort University) The Spectacle of Sustain- Deliberative Democracy: Actors, Processes ability in the Post-Ecological Era: A Discourse-Theoretical Critique of and Narratives Green Consumerism Chair: Dr. Chris Caswill (Manchester Institute of Innovation Olivia Kinnear (Deakin University) Critical Spiritual (Progressive) Politics: Auroville and the Australian Religious Response to Climate Research) Change Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Daniel Zimmer (Cornell University) Ecological Crisis and the Lure Cyril Velikanov (Independent Researcher, affiliated to the “Memo- of Humanity: Rethinking Global Solidarity with Latour, Hamilton, rial Society”, Moscow) Direct Deliberative Democracy: A Project of a and Chakrabarty New Socio-Technical System

26 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Bettina Lange (Radboud University Nijmegen) Not Green and Not Dr. Johanna Schnabel (University of Kent), Dr. Paolo Dardanelli Fair : (Un)Sustainable Transport Policies in the UK (University of Kent) More Money for less Flexibility? The Politics of Professor Ewan Sutherland (LINK Centre, University of the Conditional Grants in , Canada, and the United States. Witwatersrand) Consultations of the Public and Stakeholders in the Dr. Bettina Petersohn (Swansea University) Innovation in Local Telecommunications Sector Government Cooperation? City Deals and Combined Authorities in England The Politics of Religion: Identity, Dr. Yvonne Hegele (University of Hanover) Bureaucratic Intergov- Movements National Politics ernmental Relations in the UK During Brexit Negotiations Professor Nicola McEwen (University of Edinburgh) Brexit and UK Chair: Dr. Ekaterina Kolpinskaya (University of Swansea) Intergovernmental Relations Room: Lecture Theatre 8 Wayde Marsh (University of Notre Dame) The Devil You Know: Race, Gender and Intersectionality Negative Partisanship and Negative Religious-Secular Identity Chair: Neema Begum (University of Manchester) Dr. Joanildo Burity (Fundação Joaquim Nabuco) Public Religion Specialist Group: Women and Politics; Ethnicity, Race and and Democratic Demise: Brazilian Cases Intersectionality Dr. Jenneth Parker (The Schumacher Institute) and Re- ligious Fundamentalism: Systems-analytic Tools to Expose Dynamic Room: Bowden Room Relationships of Power Dr. Nicole Martin (University of Manchester) Does Gender Matter for the Political Behaviour of Ethnic Minorities in Britain? Populism and Brexit Leah McCabe (University of Edinburgh) Framing, Intersectionality Chair: Dr. Andy Knott (University of Brighton) and Policy Change: Domestic Abuse Policy-making in Since 1998 Specialist Group: Populism Dr. Rahime Suleymanoglu Kurum (Istanbul Gedik University), Room: N21 Professor Bahar Rumelili (Koc University) Changing Nature and Dr. Aurelien Mondon (University of Bath), Dr. Aaron Winter (Uni- Norms in Turkish Diplomacy: A Gender-Based Analysis versity of East London), Katy Brown (University of Bath) Populism and the Mainstreaming of the Far Right Historical and Contemporary Dr. Marina Prentoulis (University of East Anglia) The People’s Vote: Parliamentary Processes Challenges to the Labour Rhetoric Carola Schoor (Maastricht University) Political Style of Speeches Chair: Dr. Martin Monahan (Nottingham Trent University) Before, During and After Brexit Room: Hooley Room Dr. Dan Taylor (Goldsmiths, University of London) Brexit Along the Dr. Andreja Pegan (Northumbria University) Evidence on Insti- A13: A Giant Metaphor for Nowhere? tutional Theory and Brexit: Administrative Organisation in the Common Assembly 1952-1956 Regulation and Reform in a Comparative Professor Jim Jose (University of Newcastle) What Do They Think Context They Know? Australian Politicians and the Ghosts of Thinkers Past Chair: Dr. John Connolly (University of the West of Scotland) Dr. Diana Stirbu (London Metropolitan University) Strengthening the National Assembly for Wales Through Strategic Re-positioning Specialist Group: Public Policy and Administration Room: Lecture Theatre 6 Corruption and Political Misconduct: Dr. Fabrizio De Francesco (University of Strathclyde) Enhancing Evidence From Around the World International Regulatory Cooperation. Is the OECD a Global Leader of Policy Benchmarking? Chair: Dr. Janka Lloyd (Nottingham Trent University) Dr. Masahiro Mogaki (Keio University) The Sustainable Dominance Room: N27B of the Core in the Changing State and World: the Politics of the Dr. Wojciech Ostrowski (University of Westminster) Polish-Russian Transforming Regulatory State in Japan. Energy Relationship: Cooperation, Breakdown and Rapprochement Dr. Ahmed Badran (Qatar University) Smart and Sustainable Cities: Dr. Ilia Xypolia (University of Aberdeen) The Politics of Corruption Regulatory and Policy Implications for the State of Qatar in Neoliberal Governance: The Role of Transparency International Franklin De Vrieze (Westminster Foundation for Democracy) Spaces of Governance and Contestation 1 Parliament’s Relationship to Anti-Corruption Agencies in Countries Chair: Dr. Arianna Giovannini (De Montfort University) in Transition Specialist Groups: Space, Governance and Politics; Local Politics Room: N32B Dr. Dave Mckenna (Publicgov), Professor Catherine Farrell (Uni- versity of South Wales) Setting the Stage: Scenic Design and the Monday 15 April 13:30-14:30 Performance of Public Governance Meetings Dr. Joanie Willett (University of Exeter) The Deep Story of Leave Voters Affective Assemblages: Implications for Political Decentrali- Political Studies Panel: Pluralism sation in the UK in Political Studies: The Politics of Dr. Madeleine Pill (University of ), Dr. Valeria Guarner- Recognition and the Recognition of Politics os-Meza (De Montfort University) The Everyday Local State? Open- ing up and Closing Down Informality in Local Governance Speakers Professor Janice Morphet (University College London) Is Austerity’s Leg- Chair: Professor Andrew Hindmoor (University of Sheffield) acy a Reinvigoration of Local Authority Leadership? The Case of Housing Discussants: Dr. Fran Amery (University of Bath), Professor Intergovernmental Relations in a Changing Gerry Stoker (University of Southampton), Professor Angelia Wilson (Chair, PSA) World Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Chair: Professor Jonathan Bradbury (Swansea University) Dr. Liam Stanley (University of Sheffield), Dr. Brenda Gonzalez Specialist Group: Territorial Politics Ginocchio (University of Sheffield) Pluralism in Political Studies: Room: N33A The Politics of Recognition and the Recognition of Politics Speakers

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 27 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

Session 2 Monday 15 April 14:45-16:15 Roundtable on Paul Goodman Electoral Spending and Candidate Selection Chair: Professor Ruth Kinna (Loughborough University) Chair: Chris Butler (University of Manchester) Specialist Group: Anarchist Studies Network Specialist Group: Elections, Public Opinions and Parties Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Dr. Matthew Adams (Loughborough University) Alan Duggan (Trinity College Dublin) Is the Devil in the Detail? Dr. Samuele Grassi (Monash University) Investigation Into Differential Campaign Spending Effects Using Professor Ruth Kinna (Loughborough University) Dis-aggregated Data From Thirteen British and Irish Elections Professor Carl Levy (Goldsmiths, University of London) Marc S Jacob (University of Edinburgh) What Do Parties’ Statements Professor Judith Suissa (University College London) of Account Tell? A Spatial Approach to Study Party Finance Structures Dr. Nicole Martin (University of Manchester) Still Not Easy Being The European Radical Left and Populist Black: The Continued Struggle of Ethnic Minority Candidates to Get Rhetoric: Communication, Strategy and Elected in UK General Elections Ideology II New Advances in the Study of Pro- Chair: Dr. Giorgos Charalambous (University of Nicosia) Environmental Behaviour Change Specialist Group: Communism and Populism Chair: Dr. Clare Saunders (University of Exeter) Room: N23A Specialist Group: Environmental Politics Dr. Samuele Mazzolini (University of Bath) An Italian Populist Left? Room: N28 A Difficult Job Dr. Roger Tyers (University of Southampton) Migration and Be- Dr. Jacopo Custodi (Scuola Normale Superiore) Podemos and haviour Change: Can Green Norms Cross Borders? the Imagined Nation. The Construction of Spain in the Political Dr. Sally Russell (University of Leeds) Examining the Role of Emo- Discourse of Pablo Iglesias tion as a Driver of Pro-environmental Behaviour Dr. Paolo Chiocchetti (Independent Researcher) “Make Way for the Dr. Clare Saunders (University of Exeter), Professor Fiona Hack- People!” Left-wing Populism in the Rhetoric of Jean-Luc Mélen- ney (University of Wolverhampton), Dr. Joanie Willett (University chon’s 2012 and 2017 Presidential Campaigns of Exeter), Dr. Irene Griffin (University of Exeter) Designing a Sen- sibility for Sustainable Clothing: The Role of Craft in Encouraging Conservative Party Actors and Campaigns Pro-environmental Behaviour Change Dr. Milena Buchs (University of Leeds) Carbon Reduction Be- Chair: Dr. Marija Taflaga (Australian National University) haviours: Spillover From Work to Home? Specialist Group: Conservatism Studies Dr. Dan Bloomfield (University of Exeter), Dr. Clare Saunders Room: N26A (University of Exeter) Carbon Pledging: Eight Years on Justin Jackson (University of Cambridge) The Conservative Party , Ethnopolitics and the and Referendums Dr. Penny Andrews (Sheffield University)Chuck Chequers, #matty- Politicisation of Identity moomoos and Cleverly’s Law: Tories Do Social Chair: Dr. Nataliya Danilova (University of Aberdeen) Dr. Stephen Thornton (Cardiff University) From Rab Butler to Dami- Room: N32A an Green: the Peculiar Position of the First Secretary of State Dr. Muzaffer Kutlay (University of Kent) Resilience of Bulgarian Ethnic Model: From ‘Double Moderation’ to ‘Double Challenge’ Aristotelianism and Contemporary Political Eilish Boschert () Weaponising Ritual: Political Philosophy Involvement in ’s Community-Specific Rituals and its Impact on Peace Chair: Dr. Tony Burns (University of Nottingham) Antonella Patteri (Birkbeck, University of London) “The Will is on Specialist Group: Contemporary Aristotelian Studies the Bus”: Reinventing Security within Migrants’ Struggles in Calais Room: Lecture Theatre 7 and Dunkirk Dr. Andrius Bielskis (Kaunas University of Technology) Aristote- Coordination and Implementation in lianism and Critical Theory Dr. Tony Burns (University of Nottingham) Radical Aristotelianism Government and the Value of Equality Chair: Dr. Eva Zemandl (Nottingham Trent University) Dr. Eleni Leontsini (University of Ioannina) Egalitarian Aristotelian- Discussants: Eva Zemandl (Nottingham Trent University) and ism: Justice, Common Interest and the Art of Politics Sandra L. Resodihardjo (Radboud University) India’s Emergence in a Changing World Specialist Group: Executive Politics and Governance Room: N31 Order, II Katerina Glyniadaki (LSE) Discretion of Top of Discretion? Judges, Chair: Dr. Sagarika Dutt (Nottingham Trent University) Caseworkers, Lawyers and the Black Box of Asylum Decision-making Specialist Groups: Development Politics; Politics of South Professor Perri 6 (Queen Mary University of London), Dr. Eva Asia Heims (University of York) Coordination and Buffering Among Room: N34 Executive Departments: Understanding the Trajectory of Changing Settlements Between Imperatives in British Government, 1850s-1914 Dr. Filippo Boni (University of Birmingham) India’s Responses to Dr. Ruth Dixon (University of Oxfo) How Differing World-views China’s Belt and Road Initiative: Domestic Balancing, Regional Shape Inter-organizational Relationships Engagement and Global Containment Dr. Slobodan Tomic (University College Dublin), Edwin Alblas Dr. Iram Ahmad (Kinnaird College for Women University) India’s (University College Dublin) The Impact of Budget Changes on Imple- Strategy towards South Asia and Its Influence on China’s Policy of mentation Patterns of Environmental Agencies? Belt and Road Initiative Professor Kai Wegrich (Hertie School of Governance), Professor Ann George (University of Leicester) Conflicting or Contested: Mark Hallerberg (Hertie School of Governance) The Lifecycles of Pub- China’s Military Rise and Indian Identity Constructions lic Innovation Labs: Why Are They Created, and Why Do They Close?

28 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Southern Europe After the Storm: Political Theory and the Participatory Sovereignty, Democracy and Workplace Euroscepticism Chair: Dr. Dannica Fleuss (Helmut Schmidt Universitat) Chair: Dr. Vasiliki Tsagkroni (Leiden University) Specialist Group: Political Thought and Participatory; Specialist Group: Greek Politics Deliberative Democracy Room: N24 Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Dr. Susannah Verney (National and Kapodistrian University of Ath- Amelia Horgan (University of Essex) What’s Wrong with Work? ens) Is the Storm Over? Popular Euroscepticism in Southern Europe Dr. Robin Jervis (University of Brighton) Developmental Freedom in the Aftermath of the Eurozone Crisis and Worker Ownership Dr. Christos Iliadis (University of the Aegean), Dr. Giorgos Orlando Lazar (University of Oxford) Up Close and Personal: Domi- Katsambekis (Loughborough University), Dr. Giannis Balabanidis nation, Agency, and the Problem of Many Masters (University of the Aegean) Transformations of National & Popular Dr. Paul Raekstad (University of Amsterdam) Freedom in the Sovereignty in Times of Crisis: The Case of Greece Workplace Yani Kartalis (University of Lisbon) ‘Democracies without Choice’ in Southern Europe: Parties and Parliamentary Mandate Fulfillment Religion and Politics: Ideology, Identity and before and after the Eurozone Crisis (2000-2017) Public Space Contemporary Debates in Northern Ireland: Chair: Dr. Ben Clements (University of Leicester) Specialist Group: Politics and Religion Questions of Power-sharing and Gender Room: Lecture Theatre 8 Chair: Dr. Alan Greer (University of the West of England) Dr. Steven Kettell (University of Warwick) The New Religion of Specialist Group: Irish Politics Brexit Room: N36B Dr. Stuart McAnulla (University of Leeds) Mixing Politics and Reli- gion in New Public Spaces: the Case of the ‘Intellectual Dark Web’ Dr. Máire Braniff (Ulster University), Dr. Sophie Whiting (University Suzana Ibisi (Keele University) The Regulation of Religious Sym- of Bath), Dr. Johnny Byrne (Ulster University) The ‘Poster-Boy’ bols in the English Public Space of the Peace Process? Public Order Policing and Masculinities in Andrew Barclay (University of Manchester) Tory, But Not Conser- Post-Agreement Northern Ireland vative: The Ideological Leanings of Dr. Cera Murtagh (Villanova University), Dr. Allison McCulloch (Brandon University) Beyond the Core: How Ethnic Parties Confront Populism and the EAI Dilemma of Power-Sharing Dr. Matthew Whiting (University of Birmingham) From Peace to Chair: Dr. Emmy Eklundh (King’s College London) Polarisation? The Fate of Power Sharing in Northern Ireland Specialist Group: Populism Room: N21 The Digital Pioneers: Political Campaigning Dr. Bice Maiguashca (University of Exeter) Resisting the ‘Populist Online Hype’: A Feminist Critique Chair: Dr. James Dennis (University of Portsmouth) Dr. Tuija Saresma (University of Jyväskylä) Masculinity, Misogyny, and Gender Populism in Right-Wing Populist Mobilization Specialist Group: Media and Politics Dr. Emmy Eklundh (King’s College London) Populism, Sovereignty, Room: Lecture Theatre 1 Masculinity: A Decolonial Critique Dr. James Dennis (University of Portsmouth) The New Politics? Social Media and Political Participation in Momentum The Politics and Economics of Financial Dr. Ana Langer (University of Glasgow), Dr. Luke Temple (Universi- (Un)Sustainability in Local Government - ty of Sheffield) Innovating from the Orbit: Satellite Campaigns and Democracy Part 1 Dr. James Morrison (Robert Gordon University), Dr. Fiona McKay Chair: Dr. Joseph Drew (University of Technology Sydney) (Robert Gordon University) Shouting from the Margins or Leading Room: Lecture Theatre 6 the Charge? How Online Campaigning by Single Issue Political Voices from Scotland Has Helped Re-Set Media-Political Agendas Dr. Joseph Drew (University of Technology Sydney) Sort[ition]ing Across the UK Out Local Government Financial Sustainability Xing Huang (University of East Anglia) Digital Activism, Slacktivism Dr. Carolyn Tran (International College of Management Sydney), and Collective Identity: China’s LGBTQ Activism and #Woshitongx- Professor Brian Dollery (University of New England) Examining inglian# on Weibo Efficiency Differentials by Council Type in South Australian Local Government: An Environmentally Adjusted Meta-Frontier DEA Opening Up Parliament: From Public Claims Approach Dr. Yunji Kim (U Wisconsin-Madison), Austin Aldag (Cornell Uni- to Expert Knowledge versity), Professor Mildred Warner (Cornell University) Pragmatic Chair: Dr. Louise Thompson (University of Surrey) Municipalism: US Local Governments’ Response to Fiscal Stress Specialist Group: Parliaments Professor Andrew Sancton (University of Western Ontario) Non-partisan City Councils: Full-time Councillors, Incumbency, Term Room: Lecture Theatre 3 Limits, and Council Sizes Dr. Marc Geddes (University of Edinburgh) Evidence Practices in the House of Commons Populism and Oversight in Security Dr. Felicity Matthews (University of Sheffield)Making Sense of Chair: Dr. Robert Dover (University of Leicester) How MPs Engage with Parliamentary e-Petitions Dr. Danielle Beswick (University of Birmingham), Dr. Stephen Els- Specialist Group: Security and Intelligence tub (Newcastle University) Between Diversity, Representation and Room: N27A ‘Best Evidence’: Rethinking Select Committee Evidence-Gathering Bohdana Kurylo (University College London) Populism as a Securi- Practices tisation Style Professor Cristina Leston-Bandeira (University of Leeds) How Dr. Andrew Defty (University of Lincoln) ‘Familiar but not Intimate’: Parliaments Have Dealt with the Upsurge of E-Petitions Executive Oversight of the UK Intelligence and Security Agencies

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 29 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

Dr. Robert Dover (University of Leicester) The Impact of Populism Busra Nisa Sarac (University of Portsmouth) Consequences of and on Government Security and Intelligence Agencies Responses to ISIS’s Gender-Based Violence Against Yezidi Women Sana Rahim (University of Leicester) Imperial Oversight? The Posi- Mansur Muhammad Bello (Federal University Gusau), Adamu tion of Nuclear Scientists and Engineers in Pakistan Ismail (Federal Polytechnic Kaura Namoda) The Role of Community Stakeholders in Co-Creation of Public Value: The Case of Co-produc- Spaces of Governance and Contestation 2 tion of Female Child Education in Nigeria Chair: Professor Steven Griggs (De Montfort University) Parliamentary Politics: Internal and Specialist Group: Space, Governance and Politics Room: N32B External Relations Neil Barnett (Leeds Beckett University), Dr. Arianna Giovannini Chair: Alexandra Bulat (University College London) (De Montfort University), Professor Steven Griggs (De Montfort Room: Hooley Room University) Spaces of Local Politics: Chief Officers and the Naviga- Dr. Martin Battle (California Polytechnic State University, San Luis tion of Multiple Geographies Obispo) Committee Assignment in the Scottish Parliament Dr. Rick Harmes (University of Exeter) Localism and Multi-Level Professor Ewan Sutherland (LINK Centre, University of the Witwa- Governance on the Indian Sub-continent – The Case of Kerala tersrand) The Parliament of South Africa: Overseeing the Regula- Dr. Valeria Guarneros-Meza (De Montfort University), Dr. Gisea tion of Telecommunication Markets Zaremberg (Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales - Mexi- Lawrence McKay (University of Manchester) Austerity: The Best co), Lourdes Gallardo (CCiudadano) Informality in the Governance Thing That Ever Happened to Labour MPs? How the Local Impact of of Space: The Mining Town of Cananea, Mexico Cuts Can Increase Trust The Institutional Implications of Brexit The Political Economy of Brexit Chair: Dr. Coree Brown Swan (University of Edinburgh) Chair: Dr. Thomas Loughran (University of Huddersfield) Specialist Group: Territorial Politics Room: N35 Room: N33A Dr. Kostas Maronitis (Leeds Trinity University), Dr. Denny Penche- Dr. Jonathan Evershed (University College Cork), Professor Mary va (University of ) Automation and Immigration: Discussions C. Murphy (University College Cork) The Irish Question Redux: of Growth and Productivity After Brexit Brexit and the Politics of Union on the Island of Ireland Dr. Christopher Byrne (Leeds Beckett University) Neoliberal Politi- Professor Daniel Wincott (Cardiff University) Constitutional Foun- cal Authority and the Challenges of Brexit and Corbynism dations Chris Stafford (University of Nottingham) British MPs After The Professor Janice Morphet (University College London) The Recen- EU Membership Referendum: Principles, Party Politics and Public tralisation of the UK state: Brexit’s Other Agenda? Opinion Dr. Simon Usherwood (University of Surrey) The Limits to Princi- Sustaining Populism in Turkey: Economic pled Negotiation in Article 50 Implications and Regime Consequences in Dr. Tim Oliver (Loughborough University) London Calling Brexit: Europe’s Global City in an Era of Brexit Comparative Perspective Chair: Dr. Yaprak Gursoy (Aston University) Electoral Processes Across Divergent Specialist Group: Turkish Politics Electoral Systems Room: N25 Chair: Will King (University of Exeter) Dr. Toygar Sinan Baykan (Kirklareli University) Populism and the Room: N27B “bourgeoisie”: The Case of Turkey Professor Susan Banducci (University of Exeter), Gregory Stride Dr. Seda Demiralp (Isik University) Populism and Democratic (University of Exeter) Voter Id Pilot and Turnout in 2018 Local Backsliding in Turkey: Economic Foundations of the and Elections Democracy Dr. Ekaterina Kolpinskaya (University of Swansea), Dr. Gabriel Silvia Fuselli (Johns Hopkins University) Populism and the Politics Katz-Wisel (University of Exeter) Alternative Voters’ Belief System of Welfare in Europe and Turkey in Britain Dr. Odul Celep (Isik University) Right-Wing Authoritarian Populism Will King (University of Exeter), Dr. Henry Jarrett (University of in Turkey: A Comparison with Western Europe and North America Exeter) Comparing STV Transfer Votes in Divided and Non-Divided Societies Women’s Voices and Political Representation Chair: Dr. Katerina Krulisova (Nottingham Trent University) Room: Bowden Room

Dr. Mona Morgan-Collins (Durham University), Grace Natusch (LSE) Suffrage, Turnout and the Community: How Were Early Wom- en Voters Mobilized? Session 3 Monday 15 April 16:30-18:00 Anarchist Organisational Theory Analysing Conservatism and Conservative Chair: Lukas Slothuus (University of Edinburgh) Parties Specialist Group: Anarchist Studies Chair: Dr. Danny Rye (Liverpool Hope University) Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Specialist Group: Conservatism Studies Hazel Perry (De Montfort University) A Space for Radical Politics: Room: N26A The Evolution of the Anarchist Bookfair Dr. Christopher Fear (University of Hull) How Conservatism Sur- Dr. Maarit Laihonen (Aalto University) The Politics of Organising vives Discontinuity: A Reply to Richard Bourke Beyond Politics: Climate action in Europe Dr. Marija Taflaga (Australian National University) How Do Parties

30 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Institutionalise Policy Making? The British Conservatives and the The Future of the German Left Liberal Party of Australia Compared Jack Newman (University of Leeds) Cameron’s Conservatives and Chair: Dr. John Callahan (New England College) the Ontology of UK Welfare Reform Specialist Group: German Politics Room: N22B Roundtable: Normative Political Ideas Dr. Hartwig Pautz (University of the West of Scotland), Dr. Dieter Between the Global South and Global North Plehwe (Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin/ Berlin Social Science Cen- ter) Why Are There no Progressive Think Tanks in Germany? Chair: Dr. Daniel Paget (University of Oxford) Chantal Sullivan-Thomsett (University of Leeds) The German Specialist Group: Development Politics Greens as ‘the Leading Force of the Left-centre’: “Radical” Pragma- Room: N34 tism or Gentrified Protest? Dr. Portia Roelofs (LSE) Luke John Davies (Aston University) JUSOS Rising? Youth Wing Dr. Indrajit Roy (University of York) Impact on SPD Parliamentarian Recruitment Dr. Stephanie Diepeveen (University of Cambridge) Dr. Daniel Paget (Oxford University) Northern Ireland: Dealing With the Past Dr. Maha Rafi Atal (Copenhagen Business School) and Discussing the Future McDonald Lewanika (LSE) Sa’eed Husaini (University of Oxford) Chair: Dr. Alan Greer (University of the West of England) Specialist Group: Irish Politics EPOP and the Communism Specialist Room: N36B Group Professor Feargal Cochrane (University of Kent), Professor Neo- phytos Loizides (University of Kent), Dr. Laura Sudulich (Universi- Chair: Dr. Daniel Keith (University of York) ty of Kent), Dr. Edward Morgan-jones (University of Kent) What are Specialist Groups: Elections, Public Opinion and Parties; Northern Ireland Citizens’ Preferences for Border Arrangements Populism and Communism after Brexit? Evidence from a Conjoint Survey Experiment Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Amanda Hall (University of St Andrews) The More They Stay the Dr. Giorgos Charalambous (University of Nicosia) On the Organi- Same? Understanding Cycles of Violence in Northern Ireland sational Face of the Radical Left: An Examination of Patterns in the Dr. Muiris Mac Carthaigh (Queen’s University Belfast) The Role of Internal Democracy of European Radical Left Parties Apologies in Dealing with the Past in Ireland Dr. Raul Gomez (University of Liverpool), Dr. Luis Ramiro (UNED, Spain) Voting for the Radical Left in Western Europe: Socio-struc- Populist Parties in Government: Suffering, tural Versus Attitudinal Explanations Surviving or Thriving? Dr. Luis Ramiro (UNED, Spain), Professor Laura Morales (Sciences Chair: Dr. Antonella Seddone (University of Turin) Po), Dr. Raul Gomez (University of Liverpool), Professor Jaime Aja-Valle (University of Cordoba) Explaining Radical Left Party Specialist Group: Italian Politics Activism: The Case of United Left in Spain Room: N23A Fred Paxton (European University Institute), Dr. Timothy Peace Radical Environmental Politics for the (University of Glasgow) Representing the People(s)? A Comparison Anthropocene of the Front National in Power at the Local Level of Government in the North and South of France Chair: Shashi van de Graaff (University of Exeter) Dr. Daniele Albertazzi (University of Birmingham), Donatella Specialist Group: Environmental Politics Bonansinga (University of Birmingham) “More Siblings, More Room: N28 Problems”? Mapping Strategies of Competition among Western European Populists Today Dr. Kevin Love (Nottingham Trent University), Heather Alberro Dr. Eliska Drapalova (Hertie School of Governance) Cities as Lab- (Nottingham Trent University) Resisting Biological Annihilation: The oratories of Populism. Sources and Consequences for Success of Politics of Loss Populist Parties in Czech Cities James McIntyre (Loughborough University) Saving the World by Taking it Easy: On the Utopian Convergence of Post-Work Politics and Radical Ecology Local Service Delivery and the ‘New Heather Alberro (Nottingham Trent University) Towards a Cos- Municipalism’ mo-Politics? A Critical Analysis of the Nonhuman ‘Other’ in Ecotopi- Chair: Dr. Peter Eckersley (Nottingham Trent University) an Socio-Political Formations Specialist Group: Local Politics Scott Leatham (De Montfort University) The Spectacle of Sustain- ability in the Post-Ecological Era: A Discourse-Theoretical Critique of Room: N33B Green Consumerism Dr. Peter Eckersley (Nottingham Trent University) Austerity, Politi- cal Control and Outsourcing in English Local Government (Regulatory) Policy-Making Dynamics Dr. Bethany Rex (University of the Arts London) Asset Transfer as Across Countries Revealing of Emerging Orthodoxies About Public Cultural Provision Nick Plumb (Locality) Keep It Local: a Manifestation of ‘New Munici- Chair: Professor Perri 6 (Queen Mary University of palism’ London) Discussant: Lydie Cabane (University of Leiden) and Luca Politicians, Partisanship and the Press Bellodi (University College London) Chair: Professor Dominic Wring (Loughborough University) Specialist Group: Executive Politics and Governance Specialist Group: Media and Politics Room: N31 Room: Lecture Theatre 1 Jose Maria Valenzuela (University of Oxford) Market Institutions Graham Moorby (Sheffield Hallam University) The Labour Party and State Ownership: the Construction of Economic Governance in and the Media 1983-1997 the Electricity Sector in Mexico Dr. Mercy Ette (University of Huddersfield) Framing a ‘Special Nick Or (University of Southampton) How Policy Agendas Change Relationship’: An Analysis of the New York Times Coverage of the When Autocracies Liberalise: The Case of Hong Kong, 1975-2016 UK-US Relationship

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 31 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

Dr. Allaina Kilby (Swansea University) Satirical News and Advocacy The Politics and Economics of Financial Strategies Professor Dominic Wring (Loughborough University), (Un)Sustainability in Local Government - Part 2 Professor David Deacon (Loughborough University) Partial Ac- Chair: Dr. Joseph Drew (University of Technology Sydney) counts: A Century of Press Partisanship Room: Lecture Theatre 6 Researching Parliament (House of Dr. Joseph Drew (University of Technology Sydney) Restraining Local Leviathan: Exit, Voice and Sortition Commons Academic Fellows) Dana McQuestin (University of Technology Sydney), Dr. Joseph Chair: Sean Haughey (University of Liverpool) Drew (University of Technology Sydney) The Price of Populism: Specialist Group: Parliaments Directly Elected Mayors and Expenditure in Local Government Professor Masato Miyazaki (Saitama University) Fiscal Sustainabil- Room: Lecture Theatre 3 ity and Municipal Amalgamations in Japan Dr. Catherine Bochel (University of Lincoln) Parliament and Public Dr. Paulo Caldas (Technical University of Lisbon), Diogo Ferreira (CE- Engagement RIS / Instituto Superior Técnico) Economies of Scope in Portuguese Professor Margaret Arnott (University of the West of Scotland) Local Government Using an Augmented Hicks-Moorsteen Approach Brexit, Scotland & Devolution: The Future Role of the UK Parliament Roundtable: Britain’s Ethnic Minorities’ Dr. Hannah White (Institute for Government), Dr. Alice Lilly (Insti- Political Participation and Representation tute for Government) Parliamentary Monitor: Increasing the Value of Parliamentary Data Chair: Neema Begum (University of Manchester) Dr. Mark Bennister (University of Lincoln) Up Close Observation in Specialist Group: Race, Migration and Intersectionality The Everyday Life of Parliament Room: Lecture Theatre 2 Eviane Cheng Leidig (University of Oslo) Protest in Democratic Theory and Practice: Areeq Chowdhury (WebRoots Democracy) Deliberative, Participatory and Agonistic Abena Oppong-Asare (former Councillor for Bexley, 2014-18) Perspectives Professor Maria Sobolewska (University of Manchester) Professor Anthony Heath (University of Oxford) Chair: Hans Asenbaum (Universität Bremen) Specialist Group: Participatory and Deliberative The Changing Face of Security: Commercial Democracy Military Actors in a Globalised World Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Chair: Dr. Nicholas Lees (University of Liverpool) Professor William Smith (The Chinese University of Hong Kong) Specialist Group: Security and Intelligence Studies Civil Disobedience: Deliberative or Participatory? Room: N27A Dr. Nicole Curato (University of Canberra) Deliberation, Interrupted Leila-Clare Kellgren-Parker (University of Liverpool) Dr. Amanda Machin (University of Witten/Herdecke) Out of Order: Vanessa Gottwick (University of Liverpool) Bodies of Environmental Protest Charlotte Penel (University of Liverpool) Religion and Politics: Participation and Spaces of Governance and Contestation 3 Engagement Chair: Neil Barnett (University of Leeds) Specialist Group: Space, Governance and Politics Chair: Dr. Stuart McAnulla (University of Leeds) Room: N32B Specialist Group: Politics and Religion Room: Lecture Theatre 8 Professor Steven Griggs (De Montfort University), Professor David Howarth (University of Essex) A City of Two Tales: Austerity, Dr. Daniel Allington (King’s College London) ‘Conspirituality’ and Collaboration and Representational Practices in Nantes the Rediscovery of Mystical, Antisemitic, and Authoritarian Reli- Konstantinos Roussos (University of Essex) The Political Praxis giopolitics of the Commons: Sites of Commoning and Neoliberal Politics In Dr. Christopher Raymond (Queen’s University Belfast) Religious Crisis-ridden Greece. Support for Religious Political Parties Jimena Vazquez (University of Essex) The Political Lack of the Dr. Siobhan McAndrew (University of Bristol) A Relational Sociol- Digital Subject ogy of Political Values and Political Culture in Britain, 1981-2017: Dr. Ben Whitham (De Montfort University) A Revolution of Values Exploring Values Divides and New Populism in White Supremacist Capitalist Patriarchy? Reading the Crisis of Dr. Ekaterina Kolpinskaya (University of Swansea) The Declining Western Liberal Democracy With Bell Hooks Role of Religion on Social Capital: a Generational Analysis Balancing Brexit: The Challenge for Populism(s) in Opposition/Populism(s) in Statewide and Sub-state Political Parties Power 1 Chair: Dr. Tim Oliver (Loughborough University London) Chair: Dr. Andy Knott (University of Brighton) Specialist Group: Territorial Politics Specialist Group: Populism Room: N33A Room: N21 Dr. Coree Brown Swan (University of Edinburgh) A Better Brexit?: Giorgos Venizelos (Scuola Normale Superiore) Populism(s) in Pow- Labour, Devolution, and the Challenges of Brexit er: a Framework of Analysis of Antithetical Populisms In Power and Patrick Utz (University of Edinburgh) Party responses to the (De) Insights From the Case of SYRIZA Europeanization of State Borders Dr. Josefin Graef (Hertie School of Governance, Berlin) The Effect Judith Sijstermans (University of Edinburg) Nationalist and of Populism’s Presence on Parliamentary Democracy: An Analysis Regionalist Party Relationships Across Europe: Comparing the Scot- of Debates in the German Bundestag tish National Party and Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya Grigoris Markou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki) From Jack Sheldon (University of Cambridge), Professor Michael Kenny ‘Enemies’ to Allies: The Radical Left and Radical Right Coalition in (University of Cambridge) Precious but Poorly Understood: The Greece Union in Contemporary Conservative Politics

32 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Turkey’s Unsustainable Multiple Identities? Georgios Kyroglou (Nottingham Trent University), Professor Matt Henn (Nottingham Trent University) Political Consumerism as a The Interaction Between Domestic, Neoliberal Response to Youth Political Disengagement: Evidence Regional and International Influences from Focus Groups in the UK and Greece Chair: Professor Rabia Karakaya Polat (Isik University) Developments in British Politics Specialist Group: Turkish Politics Chair: Dr. Eva Zemandl (Nottingham Trent University) Room: N25 Room: N32A Dr. Mustafa Kutlay (City, University of London) Politics of State Capitalism in a Shifting International Order: Turkish Case in Per- Dr. Wang Leung Ting (LSE) Prior Career as a Source of Policy spective Expertise: How Former Professions of British MPs Shape Their Issue Dr. Yaprak Gursoy (Aston University) Turkish Politicians’ Percep- Attention in the House of Commons Steven Daniels (University of Liverpool) Revisiting Colliery Clo- tions of the UK from 1973 to Brexit: A Model and an Example sures in the Thatcher Era: NUM South Yorkshire vs. UDM Notting- Marc Sinan Winrow (LSE) Diffuse and Direct Constituent Power: hamshire, 1986-87 The Emergence of in Turkey, 1918 – 1923 Bradley Allsop (University of Lincoln) Under Neolib- Young People and Lifestyle Politics eral Hegemony Chair: Dr. Sarah Pickard (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Political Science in Action Paris 3) Chair: Dr. Nathan Jones (Nottingham Trent University) Specialist Group: Young People’s Politics Room: N27B Room: N24 Dr. Matthew Wall (Swansea University) A Fool’s Errand or a Leigh Ingham (Newcastle University) New Politics in School: The Necessary Step? Assessing the Role of Election Forecasting in the Rise of Feminist Societies Evolution of Political Science Dr. Benjamin Bowman (Manchester Metropolitan University) The Professor Keith Dowding (Australian National University) Can a Playground in Austerity: Exploring the Impact of On Young People’s Case Study Test a Theory? Types and Tokens in Social Explanation Everyday Politics Dr. Gergana Dimova (University of Winchester) Frontiers of Dem- Dena Arya (University of Edinburgh) A Youth Practitioner’s View of ocratic Research and Innovation: Critical Overview of 23 “Turns” in Young People’s Politics Democratic Theory Session 4 Tuesday 16 April 09:30-11:00 Publishing Roundtable: Meet the Editors Dr. Indrajit Roy (University of York) Dr. Vinicius Rodrigues Vieira (Universadade de Sao Paulo) Chair: Professor Claire Dunlop (University of Exeter) Dr. Jan Knoerich (King’s College London) Room: Lecture Theatre 2 Contributing Editors: Dr. Alan Convery (British Journal of Politics Cabinets, Coalitions and Policy Agendas and International Relations), Professor Claire Dunlop (Public Chair: Dr. Chrysa Lamprinakou (University of Strathclyde) Policy & Administration), Professor Justin Fisher (Political Studies Review), Professor Andrew Hindmoor (Political Studies), Dr. Nivi Specialist Group: Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Manchanda (Political Studies), Dr. James Strong (Political Studies), Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Dr. Felicity Matthews (Policy & Politics), Professor Anthony Zito Dr. Tom Quinn (University of Essex) Party Systems and Cabinet (Environmental Politics) Forms Christiane Andersen (University College London) If You Can’t Beat Frontiers of Anarchist State Theory Them Join Them: Network Effects in Pre-Electoral Coalitions Chair: Professor Ruth Kinna (Loughborough University) Chris Butler (University of Manchester) Are Governments Re- Specialist Group: Anarchist Studies Network sponsive or Vote-maximising? A Study of UK Governmental Policy Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Agendas and the Preferences of Party Supporters Dr. Uri Gordon (Durham University) Theorising Alienated Violence Dr. Paul Raekstad (University of Amsterdam) Anarchist Critiques Are We All Environmentalists Now? of Taking (Capitalist) State Power: A Rational Reconstruction The Influence of Environmentalism on Dr. Thomas Swann (Loughborough University) Lessons from Iceland: Individual and State-based Actors An anarchist critique of state-based democratic constitutionalizing Chair: Shashi van de Graaff (University of Exeter) Conservatism and International Specialist Group: Environmental Politics Dimensions Room: N28 Chair: Dr. Christopher Fear (University of Hull) Dr. Peter Eckersley (Nottingham Trent University), Dr. Paul Tobin Specialist Group: Conservatism Studies (University of Manchester), Professor Charlotte Burns (University Room: N26A of Sheffield) Policy Dismantling in a Multilevel Context: The Case of Dr. Anthony Ridge-Newman (Liverpool Hope University) Environmental Protection in the EU Sergey Medvedev (Dublin Institute of Technology) Dr. Matthew Lockwood (University of Exeter) Credible Carbon Dr. Danny Rye (Liverpool Hope University) Commitment: Majoritarian and Proportional Visions Dr. Danielle Beswick (University of Birmingham) Dr. Paul Tobin (University of Manchester) The Carbon Neutral Luke Moore (University of Oxford) State: Reconceptualising the Green State Towards Climate Mitiga- tion Emerging Markets, Emerging Politics: Professor Elizabeth Bomberg (University of Edinburgh) Everyday Exploring Global Development Futures Environmentalism and Faith Based Groups: The Case of Eco-Con- gregations Chair: Dr. Indrajit Roy (University of York) Dr. Ben Clements (University of Leicester), Professor Neil Carter Specialist Group: Developmental Politics (University of York) Greener and Greener? A Long-term Perspective Room: N34 on the British Public and Environmental Issues

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 33 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

Germany’s Leading Role in Europe: Is It Professor David Bates (Canterbury Christ Church University) Abjection and Populism Sustainable? Martin Noel (Ecole des Hautes etudes en Sciences Sociales) Eth- Chair: Dr. Josefin Graef (Hertie School of Governance, Berlin) no-cultural Populism in Turkey or How to Impose Neoliberalism in Specialist Group: German Politics the Guise of Islamic Brotherhood Room: N22B Professor Paul Smith (George Mason University) US Populism Now: a political-economic approach Dr. Rainer Hillebrand (Fulda University of Applied Sciences) Sus- tainability and Rent-seeking: A Public Choice Analysis of Germany’s Public Engagement and Engaging Publics Climate Protection Policy Professor Lothar Funk (University of Applied Sciences Düsseldorf) Chair: Dr. Jen Birks (University of Nottingham) Lasting German Hegemony in E(M)U: Reality or Myth? Specialist Group: Media and Politics Professor John Ryan (LSE) Germany’s Leading Role in Europe is Room: Lecture Theatre 1 under Question Dr. Narisong Huhe (University of Strathclyde), Dr. Mark Shephard (University of Strathclyde) An Experimental Exploration of Network Dealing With Civil Rights and Violence Dynamics on Social Media. Who Believes and/or Shares Disinforma- During the Troubles tion and with what Consequences? Chair: Dr. Alan Greer (University of the West of England) Dr. Declan McDowell-Naylor (Queen Mary University of London) Specialist Group: Irish Politics Public Engagement with Autonomous Vehicle Development in the United-Kingdom: Analysing Participatory Public-making Practices Room: N36B and Their Political Effects Dr. Edward Burke (University of Nottingham) ‘A Highway of Death’: Dr. Jen Birks (University of Nottingham), Dr. Alison Gardner (Uni- An Analysis of the Impact of the British Army’s Cratering of Border versity of Nottingham) Public Engagement on an Emergent Crime Bridges During Northern Ireland’s Troubles and Social Justice Issue: Modern Slavery in the East Midlands Josie Richardson (University of Oxford) From Victim to Violence: An Analysis of the Crowd and the 1988 Funeral Murders Strengthening Parliamentary Democracy Italian Parliament in the Age of Populism: Chair: Dr. Marc Geddes (University of Edinburgh) Specialist Group: Parliaments New Actors, New Patterns, New Dynamics Room: Lecture Theatre 3 Chair: Dr. Davide Vampa (Aston University) Gordana Comic (Deputy Speaker, National Assembly Republic of Specialist Group: Italian Politics Serbia) Reintroducing Ethics in Politics Room: N23A Greg Power (Global Partners Governance) Trust in Politics: Is Too Dr. Antonella Seddone (University of Turin), Dr. Stefano Rombi Much Accountability a Bad Thing for Political Trust? (University of Cagliari) Do Selectorates Affect MPs Parliamentary Meg Munn (Global Partners Governance) A Parliament Struggling Behaviour? Insights from the Italian Case to Fulfil a Promise of Democracy Roberta Damiani (University College London) The Italian Legisla- Zoe Oliver-Watts (Global Partners Governance) Keeping Informa- tive Process in Bicameral Perspective tion Honest: A Unique Role for Parliaments? Francesca Feo (Scuola Normale Superiore) “Populists” as Usual? Assessing Populists’ Behaviour in Parliamentary Institutions Radical Democracy, Deliberative Democracy, Agonistic Democracy? Roundtable: David Coates, 1946-2018 Choosing Enemies, Crossing Boundaries Chair: Professor John Kelly (Birckbeck, University of London) Specialist Group: Labour Movements and Bridging “the Divide” Room: N35 Chair: Dr. Dannica Fleuss (Helmut Schmidt Universitat) Professor Mark Wickham-Jones (University of Bristol) Specialist Group: Participatory and Deliberative Democracy Professor Andrew Gamble (University of Sheffield) Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Alison Howson (Agenda Publishing) Dr. Marit Hammond (Keele University) Deliberative Democracy Dr. Colin Tyler (University of Hull) without Deliberation Dr. Hilary Wainwright (Red Pepper) Dr. Dannica Fleuss (Helmut Schmidt Universitat) Why We Should Decide to be Deliberative Democrats – Arguing for Deliberation (Un)Sustainable (Local) Politics in a without Ultimate Justification Changing (Local) World Dr. Jonathan Benson (King’s College London) What is the Epistem- Chair: Professor Herwig Reynaert (Ghent University) ic Value of Democratic Deliberation? Dr. Hans Asenbaum (University of Westminster), Dr. Selen Ercan Specialist Group: Local Politics (University of Canberra), Dr. Ricardo Fabrino Mendonca (Federal Room: N33B University of Minas Gerais) Beyond Talk: Expanding the Deliberative Professor Jim Chandler (Sheffield Hallam University)Interpreting Repertoire Parliamentary Understanding of the Role of Local Government Professor Koenraad De Ceuninck (Ghent University) The Political Justice and Citizenship Cost for Initiating a Merger Chair: Dr. Alexej Ulbricht (SOAS) Dr. Jurga Bucaite Vilke (Vytautas Magnus University) The Percep- tion of Public Interest in Inter-municipal Cooperation: Diversity of Specialist Group: Political Thought Inter-locking Actors and Cooperation Drivers Room: Lecture Theatre 7 Professor Jonathon Moses (Norwegian University of Science and Marxism in Interesting Times: Populism, Technology (NTNU)) Contested Consent Bonapartism, Fascism Justin Jackson (University of Cambridge) Towards a more Conser- vative Theory of Social Justice Chair: Dr. Nataliya Danilova (University of Aberdeen) Siyang Liu (Durham University) How David Miller’s Liberal Nation- Specialist Group: Marxism alism Could Help Resolve the Two Impasses in the Global Justice Room: N27A Debate

34 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Populism(s) in Opposition/Populism(s) in Dr. William Kissane (LSE) Democratic Transition and Civil Conflict in the Turkish Republic, 1950-2015: a Critique of Electoralism Power 2 Dr. Natalie Martin (Nottingham Trent University) Turkey Since Chair: Dr. Emmy Eklundh (King’s College London) 2007: A Series of Illiberal Events Specialist Group: Populism Begum Zorlu (City, University of London) Political Opportunity Room: N21 Structures and the Political Opposition in Turkey’ Professor Rabia Karakaya Polat (Isik University) Power, Technology Dr. Alen Toplisek (SOAS) Analysing the Economic Dimension of and Authoritarian Politics in Turkey: A Critical Discourse Approach Populist Rule in Post-Crisis Europe: Hungary and Daniel Hegedus (Fellow, German Marshall Fund of the United Gender and Political Leadership States) Rethinking the Incumbency Effect. Radicalization of Govern- ing Populist Parties in EastCentral-Europe. A Case Study of Hungary Chair: Robyn Muir (University of Nottingham) Camila Vergara (Columbia University) Populism in Power: Popular Specialist Group: Young People’s Politics Empowerment and the Tragedy of the Commons in Venezuela Room: Bowden Room Dr. Georg Loefflmann (University of Warwick) Trump vs. Globalism: Jessica Smith (Birkbeck, University of London) Voter Deci- America First and the Populist Challenge to Liberal Hegemony sion-Making and Candidate Evaluation: The Effects of Candidate Sex in UK Party Leadership Elections Co-Production, Design and Inequalities Dr. Neil Matthews (University of Bristol) Pouting Puppies’? Feminisa- Chair: Dr. Sarah Cooper (University of Bath) tion Strategies and Party Leadership. A Case Study of Northern Ireland Specialist Group: Public Policy and Administration Dr. Carole Spary (University of Nottingham) Did They/Could They Room: Lecture Theatre 6 Make a Difference? An Assessment of Symbolic Representation, Substantive Representation, and the Critical Actor Potential of the Temidayo Eseonu (University of Manchester) An Alternative to First Two Female Speakers of the Indian Lok Sabha Pluralism in Policy Making for Inclusion of Black and Minority Ethnic Groups: Is Co-productive Policy Design the Answer? Roundtable: Votes@16 Jingyan Zhu (University of Edinburgh) Why is Co-production Not Valued in Health Service Delivery in China? Chair: Dr. Emily Rainsford (Newcastle University) Dr. Robyn Rowe (Robert M. La Follette School of Public Affairs) Specialist Groups: Young People’s Politics; Elections, Public Official Narratives of Benefit Fraud and Un/sustainable Politics of Opinion and Parties Gender and Inequality Room: N24 Epideictic Rhetoric in Post-war British Professor Jonathan Tonge (University of Liverpool) Dr. Andrew Mycock (University of Huddersfield) Politics Dr. Joe Greenwood (LSE) Chair: Professor James Martin (Goldsmiths, University of Dr. Benjamin Bowman (Manchester Metropolitan University) London) Dr. Thomas Loughran (University of Huddersfield) Specialist Group: Rhetoric and Politics Anti-Politics and Gender Room: Lecture Theatre 8 Chair: Dr. Ekaterina Kolpinskaya (University of Swansea) Dr. Judi Atkins (Aston University) The Rhetoric of Flag, Faith and Family in the Queen’s Christmas Message since 1952 Room: N32B Dr. Sophia Hatzisavvidou (University of Bath) Environmental Leah Hibbs (Cardiff University) Local Government: How Are Wom- Epideictic(s): Environment, Sustainability, and Climate Change in en Councillors’ Experiences Shaped by Gender Equality Issues? And British Political Discourse (1998-2018) How Do They Seek to Advance the Substantive Representation of Dr. Andrew Crines (University of Liverpool) The Epideictic Orator in Women? Emerging Evidence from Wales Left-wing Populism Professor Sara Connolly (University of East Anglia), Professor Andrew Thompson (University of Edinburgh), Professor Hussein Analysing the Framing of Territorial Kassim (University of East Anglia) The Careers of Women and Men in the European Commission: What’s the Difference? Demands by Regionalist Actors in Europe. Emilia Belknap (University of Edinburgh) Independent Women: In- Moving beyond Identity and Culture vestigating the Gender Gap in Support for Independence Referenda Chair: Dr. Anwen Elias (Aberystwyth University/Department Using Focus Groups and Experimental Methods of International Politics) Roundtable: Conditionality, the EU and Turkey: Specialist Group: Territorial Politics Room: N33A From Transformation to Retrenchment Dr. Elin Royles (Aberystwyth University) Analysing the Welsh Chair: Dr. Rahime Suleymanoglu Kurum (Istanbul Gedik Regionalist Actors’ Framing of Territorial Demands University) Dr. Nuria Franco Guillen (Aberystwyth University) Analysing the Room: N32A Scottish Regionalist Actors’ Framing of Territorial Demands Dr. Rahime Suleymanoglu Kurum (Istanbul Gedik University) Con- Dr. Edina Szoecsik (Universität Basel) The Framing Strategies of ditionality, the EU and Turkey: Methodology and Data the Hungarian Minority Actors in Romania: Culture or Economy? Dr. Ilia Xypolia (University of Aberdeen) A Multi-Dimensional Study Dr. Anwen Elias (Aberystwyth University), Dr. Huw Lewis (Aberys- of Conditionality on Turkish Foreign Policy twyth University), Dr. Edina Szoecsik (Universität Basel) Framing Dr. Dimitrios Anagnostakis (University of Aberdeen), Dr. Rahime Territorial Demands: Analytical Framework Suleymanoglu Kurum (Istanbul Gedik University) Conditionality Regime Sustainability in Turkey: and Foreign Policy: A Study of EU Non-Members? Comparative and Conceptual Debates on Discontent, Interpretation and Illiberal Authoritarianism Participation in Democratic Systems Chair: Dr. Matthew Whiting (University of Birmingham) Chair: Dr. Katharina Crepaz (Max Planck Institute for Social Specialist Group: Turkish Politics Law and Social Policy & Technical University of Munich) Room: N25 Room: Hooley Room

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 35 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

Emily Burn (University of Birmingham) Does the Interpretation of Approach as a Compromise to Provide Balance and Order in the Politics Influence the Propensity to Participate? Changing World World Lawrence McKay (University of Manchester) Regional Differences Moritz Sebastian Graefrath (University of Notre Dame) Uncertain- in Political Discontent: Distance, Policy, or (Descriptive) Represen- ty in Anarchy and Hierarchy tation? Professor Ryusaku Yamada (Soka University) Mannheim, Hayek, Nauman Reayat (University of York) Rule of Law and Judicial Popper and ‘Planned Thinking’ in a Changing World Independence as a Shared Strategy: An Outlier Case of Pakistan Matt York (University College Cork) Revolutionary Love and from 2009-2013 Alter-Globalisation: The Politics of Love in Radical Social Transfor- mation in the 21st century Theorising Politics and International Dr. Ignas Kalpokas (LCC International University) Affect, Attention, Relations in the 21st Century and Algorithm in Machinic Politics Chair: Dr. Olga Khrushcheva (Manchester Metropolitan University) Room: N31 Aleksandra Spalińska (University of Warsaw) Between Coopera- tion and Contestation in Unsustainable World Politics – the Grotian Session 5 Tuesday 16 April 13:30-15:00 British Idealist Specialist Group Panel Dr. Marianna Poberezhskaya (Nottingham Trent University), D r. Nataliya Danilova (University of Aberdeen) Understanding Climate Chair: Dr. Colin Tyler (University of Hull) Change Narratives in Central Asia Specialist Group: British Idealism Dr. Olga Khrushcheva (Manchester Metropolitan University) Criti- Room: N22A cal evaluation of the RES support mechanism in Russia Dr. Maria Dimova-Cookson (Durham University) Moral Develop- ment, Conflicts of Duty and Moral Dilemmas in the Context of Value The Politics of Ethnic Conflict Pluralism Chair: Dr. Jon Mansell (Nottingham Trent University) Juan Bagur Taltavull (Complutense University of Madrid) The Rise Room: N32A of the Mass-man in an (Un)Sustainable World Dr. Nazli Pinar Kaymaz (Bilkent University) Broadening British Ramkanta Tiwari (Tribhuvan University) Reconciliation in Nepal’s Idealist’s Approach to Human Rights: J. S. Mackenzie’s List of Civic, Ethno-political Conflict: Signs of Post-ethnicity? Social and Economic Rights in an Internationalist Context Sophie Gueudet (Sciences Po Aix) From Patron-state to Partner? The Ambiguous Policies of Serbia towards Republika Srpska since Roundtable: Narendra Modi and the 2019 1995 Satoshi Tanaka (Osaka University) In the Shadow of Power Elections in India Sharing: Ethnopolitics and a Patronage System in the Dayton Chair: Dr. Jivanta Schottli (National University of Singapore) Bosnia Specialist Group: Development Politics Regulation and Crisis Management Room: N34 Christiane Andersen (University College London) Alliances and Chair: Nick Or (University of Southampton) Preparations for India’s 2019 election Discussants: Jose Maria Valenzuela (University of Oxford) Dr. Diego Maiorano (Natio) Prime Minister Modi: Governing for the Specialist Group: Executive Politics and Governance People? Room: N31 Dr. Indrajit Roy (University of York) The BJP, Caste and Poverty Luca Bellodi (University College London) Bureaucratic Control Dr. Carole Spary (University of Nottingham) Politics in India Reversed: The Influence of Independent Regulators over the Liber- alisation of the Railways Elections and Voting Behaviour in Dr. Fabrizio De Francesco (University of Strathclyde) A European Uncertain Times or Global Delaware? Transnational Regulatory Competition and the EU Single Market for Starting New Business Chair: Dr. Stuart Wilks-Heeg (University of Liverpool) Dr. lydie Cabane (University of Leiden) Regulatory Expansion in a Specialist Group: Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Multi-level Governance System: the Development of Transboundary Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Crisis Management Regimes in the European Union Jack Tudor (Swansea University) Are Some Elections More Pre- Dr. Slobodan Tomic (University College Dublin) Reputational dictable Than Others? Challenging a Problematic Paradigm for Poll Battles and the Politics of Interplay between Political Authorities Evaluation and Integrity Regulators - a Comparative Study of Ireland, Jamaica, Dr. Toby James (UEA) Evaluating Electoral Management Perfor- Uruguay and Costa Rica mance: The PROSeS Framework Dr. Sandra Resodihardjo (Radboud University) Resilient Collabo- Ceri Fowler (University of Manchester) Did Men and Women Vote rations: Emergency Networks Acting in a Resilient and Effective for Brexit for the Same Reasons. Exploring Gendered Issue Prefer- Manner ences and Their Impact on Voting at the 2016 EU Referendum Dr. Danny Rye (Liverpool Hope University) Dissent and Unity in Migration and Right-wing Populism: Parliamentary Parties Challenging German Democracy? Post-Soviet Environmental and Climate Chair: Dr. Hartwig Pautz (University of the West of Scotland) Politics Specialist Group: German Politics Room: N22B Chair: Shashi van de Graaff (University of Exeter) Dr. John Callahan (New England College) Explaining the Room: N28 Alternative – Theorizing the Rise of the AfD as a Part of the Populist Dr. Ellie Martus (University of Warwick) Environmental State Wave Capacity in Eurasia Dr. Josefin Graef (Hertie School of Governance, Berlin) Right-wing

36 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Populist Narratives of Migration: The Case of the AfD Dr. Marta Cantijoch (University of Manchester), Tim Cowlishaw Dr. Birgit Glorius (Chemnitz University of Technology), Dr. Melanie (BBC), Dr. Nikki Soo (University of Manchester), Professor Rachel Kintz (Chemnitz University of Technology) Far Right Meets “Con- Gibson (University of Manchester) Political Knowledge Gaps, Online cerned Citizens”: Politicization of Migration in Germany and the Media Habits, and the Role of the BBC in an Era of Misinformation Case of Chemnitz The UK Parliament: Legislation and Brexit Explanations of Northern Ireland’s Peace Chair: Alexandra Meakin (University of Sheffield) Process: People, Politics and the State Specialist Group: Parliaments Chair: Dr. Alan Greer (University of the West of England) Room: Lecture Theatre 3 Specialist Group: Irish Politics Dr. Ruth Dixon (University of Oxford) Coordination or Chaos? Anal- Room: N36B ysis of the 2017 Wash-up Period in the UK Parliament Dr. Stephen Hopkins (University of Leicester) and Thomas Fleming (University of Oxford) Partisan Dealignment and Pressure for Peace in Northern Ireland: The Role of New Con- Personal Vote-Seeking: Evidence from the UK sensus/New Dialogue and the Peace Train in the nascent ‘Peace Thomas Caygill (University of Newcastle) The Post-legislative Gap Process’ Dr. Richard Whitaker (University of Leicester), Dr. Philip Lynch Dr. Marisa McGlinchey ( University) The electoral decline (University of Leicester) Select Committees and Brexit: Challenges of the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) in the post GFA and Opportunities period Dr. Aaron Edwards (Royal Military Academy Sandhurst) A Legacy (Un)sustainable Citizenship: Promises and of Spying: British Counter-Terrorism and the Northern Ireland Perils of Digital Participation Peace Process Chair: Donatella Selva (Luiss Guido Carli) and Professor Populists in Italy: The League and the Five Emiliana De Blasio (Luiss Guido Carli) Star Movement Between Success, Change Specialist Group: Participatory and Deliberative Democracy and Governmental Responsibility Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Chair: Dr. Arianna Giovannini (De Montfort University) Dr. Matt Ryan (University of Southampton) Political Research after the Data Revolution Specialist Group: Italian Politics Dr. Paolo Spada (Universidade de Coimbra) The Potential of Room: N23A Argument Visualization Platforms to Promote Humility in Public Dr. Daniele Albertazzi (University of Birmingham), Dr. Mattia Zu- Discourse lianello (University of Florence) Explaining Populist Success in Italy Professor Michele Sorice (LUISS University, Rome), Mattia Zunino at the Subnational Level: a Qualitative Comparative Analysis. (Luiss Guido Carli) Digital Activism and Platform-Parties: Two Faces Dr. Flavio Chiapponi (University of Pavia), Dr. Mara Morini (Univer- of Re-Politicisation? sity of Genoa) “The Weird Couple”: Wedding, Divorce or Adultery? Dr. Rod Dacombe (King’s College London) Is ‘Trolling’ a Democratic The M5S-League Government Coalition in the Italian Political Act? Rethinking Incivility in Online Political Discussion Groups system Dr. Dario Quattromani (Roma Tre University) Notes on E-delibera- Dr. Antonella Seddone (University of Turin) With or Without You. tion: Towards an Online Public Sphere? The North Resilience Within the New Path of the League. How the Lega (Nord) Still Preserves its Regionalist-populist Features The Politics of Southeast and East Asia: Fred Paxton (European University Institute), Andrea Pettrachin (University of Sheffield) Populisms in Local Government: A Com- Political Regimes and Economies parison of Local Governments Led by the 5 Star Movement and the Chair: Shiyu Wang (Johns Hopkins University) Lega During the Migration Crisis Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Contemporary Social Democracy: Issues En Qi Teo (National University of Singapore) The Normative Legacy of Empire: Anti-Colonial Rhetoric and Consolidation of Political and Challenges Power in the Philippines Chair: Dr. Gergana Dimova (University of Winchester) Shiyu Wang (Johns Hopkins University) From Trade War to A Specialist Group: Labour Movements New Cold War? A Constructivist Approach to the Escalation of the Room: N35 Chinese-US Tension Dr. Konstantinos Tsimonis (King’s College London), Dr. Igor Rog- Dr. Roberto Veneziani (Queen Mary University of London) Social elja (European University Institute) “Authoritarian (or Sinophobic) Democracy and Distributive Conflict in the UK, 1892-2016 Advance”? Securitizing Chinese Economic Presence in Europe Dr. Magnus Feldmann (University of Bristol) The Rise and Fall of Dr. Sahra Joharchi (Nottingham Trent University), Dr. Christopher the Polish Left: Understanding the Strategic Dilemmas of Post-Com- Farrands (Nottingham Trent University) Embedding Foreign Eco- munist Social Democracy nomic and Security Goals: the Institutionalisation of the Belt and Dr. Rob Manwaring (Flinders University) Social Democracy and Road Initiative in the AIIB Policy Change Professor Eunice Goes (Richmond University) ‘Turning the Page on Austerity: A Story of Effective Leadership by the Portuguese Challenges to Liberal Democracy Socialist Party Chair: Justin Jackson (University of Cambridge) Specialist Group: Political Thought Media’s Role in the Public Sphere Room: Lecture Theatre 7 Chair: Dr. Natalie Martin (Nottingham Trent University) Dr. Alexej Ulbricht (SOAS) Grossly Offensive? The Speech Acts of Room: Lecture Theatre 1 Doctors and ‘Life-protectors’ in the Context of the German ‘Adver- Dr. Jared Ahmad (University of Sheffield)Who Represents the tising Ban’ on Abortions Islamic State? Analysing Mainstream Media Discourses and Rep- Dr. Benjamin Chwistek (City Lit) The Myth of Enlightenment: Liber- resentations of the Islamic State Phenomenon in the Aftermath of alism, Myth and Violence the November 13th 2015 Paris Attacks Camila Vergara (Columbia University) On Systemic Corruption Dr. Natalie Martin (Nottingham Trent University) Journalists as Charlene Mckibben (Queen’s University Belfast) Populism on the Terrorists? The Case of Turkey Periphery of Democracy: Moralism and the Politics of Recognition

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 37 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

Policy Instruments and Administrative Youth Political Socialisation: Agents, Reform Processes and Effects Chair: Dr. Alice Moseley (University of Exeter) Chair: Dr. Emily Rainsford (Newcastle University) Specialist Group: Public Policy and Administration Specialist Group: Young People’s Politics Room: Lecture Theatre 6 Room: N24 Professor Christopher Hood (Oxford University), Dr. Barbara Pi- Peter Burgess (Kings College) Semira’s Story – Faith, Family and otrowska (Oxford University) Gaming of Public Spending Numbers Experience in the Development of a Young Political Activist and What Limits It: Goodhart’s Law Revisted James Hart (Notthingham Trent University) Transitions to Political Dr. Rick Harmes (University of Exeter), Professor Oliver James Participation: The Social Influences and Experiences Which Gener- (University of Exeter), Dr. Clare Maudling (University of Exeter) The ate Political Interest and Action amongst Millennials Politics of State Reorganisation: The Changing Structures of UK Dr. Julianne Viola (University of Oxford) Social Media and Political Government Departments Socialisation: How Youth Conceptualise Citizenship in Contempo- Professor Claire Dunlop (University of Exeter), Dr. Jonathan Kam- rary Society khaji (University of Exeter), Professor Claudio Radaelli (University Katherine Smith (University of Sheffield)Youth on the Margins: College London) A Bunch of Rule-making Tools: Mapping Instru- Experiences of Young People’s Participation in Political Parties and ments Across the European Union Social Movement Organisations Rhetorical Analysis as a Method of National Environmental Politics Political Research Chair: Dr. John Blewitt (The Schumacher Institute) Chair: Professor Alan Finlayson (University of East Anglia) Room: N26A Specialist Group: Rhetoric and Politics Dr. Thomas O’Brien (University of York) Terrorism, Greenies and Room: Lecture Theatre 8 Higher Interest Rates’: Social Control and Anti-Protest Laws in Australia Professor James Martin (Goldsmiths, University of London) Rhet- Dr. Louise Thompson (University of Manchester), Mitya Pearson oric, Discourse and the Hermeneutics of Public Speech (King’s College London) Adapting to Parliament: The Organisational Dr. Sophia Hatzisavvidou (University of Bath) Rhetorical Analysis Change of Green Parties in the UK and the Study of Political Controversies Dr. Judi Atkins (Aston University) Envisioning Britain after Brexit – Comparative European Elections and Party Rhetorical Constructions of ‘the Nation’ and National Identity Politics Roundtable: Getting Ready for Subject TEF Chair: Dr. Tatiana Rizova (Christopher Newport University) in Politics and IR Room: N27B Chair: Professor John Craig (University of Leeds) Johannes van Gorp (American University of Sharjah) Socio-Cultur- Specialist Group: Teaching and Learning Network al Politics and Party Cohesion in the Low Countries Room: Hooley Room Dr. Matteo Cavallaro (Université Paris 13), Dr. Guido Salza (Uni- versity of Turin), Dr. Massimo Angelo Zanetti (University of Aosta Dr. Helen Williams (University of Nottingham) Valley) The Evolution of the Attitudinal Determinants of Radical Dr. Simon Lightfoot (University of Leeds) Right Voting in Europe Between 2002 and 2014 Dr. Georgina Blakeley (The Open University) Dr. Malcolm Harvey (University of Aberdeen), Dr. Peter Lynch (University of Stirling) The Scottish Party System at 20: A Thaw in a Turkey and its Kurdish Population: An Frozen Party System? Unsustainable Relationship? Maria Giovanna Sessa (Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies), Giacomo Riccio (European Parliament) Can the Enemies of My Chair: Dr. Matthew Whiting (University of Birmingham) Enemy Be My Friends? The Paradox of a European Transnational Specialist Group: Turkish Politics Alliance Among Eurosceptic Nationalist Parties Room: N25 Dr. Ceren Lord (Oxford University), Dr. Durukan Imrie-Kuzu (Cov- Understanding and Explaining Latin entry University) Institutional Structuralism, Religion and Ethnicity: American Politics Kurdish Alevis in Turkey Dr. Ozlem Kayhan Pusane (Isik) State Agency and Conflict Conta- Chair: Dr. Joanildo Burity (Fundação Joaquim Nabuco) gion: The Turkish Experience of the Syrian Civil War Room: N33A Dr. Gulay Icoz (Independent Researcher) Liberal Democracy versus Dr. Claudio Fuentes (Universidad Autónoma de Chile) Who Are the Religious Conservatism in Turkey: The HDP, The AKP and the 2018 Regional Authorities? A Proposal to Build Typologies of Region- Election’ al Political Appointments in a Hyper-presidential and Centralist Recep Onursal (University of Kent) In Search of Peace: Hegemony System, Chile and the Logic of Kurdish Conflict in Turkey Kazuma Mizukoshi (University College London) Empirical Impli- cations of Intra and Interpersonal Changes in Partisan Attitudes to Contemporary Abortion Politics Party Nationalization in Brazil Chair: Dr. Oliver Harrison (Nottingham Trent University) Ana Maria Lobos (University of Kent) The Chilean Paradox: Political Specialist Group: Women and Politics Legitimacy and its Influence on Public Attitudes Towards Punish- ment Room: Bowden Room Dr. Fran Amery (University of Bath) Contemporary abortion politics in the UK: Between protection and liberation Dr. Jennifer Thomson (University of Bath) Abortion politics and Northern Ireland: explaining resistance to change Dr. Sarah Cooper (University of Bath) The Europeanization of Abor- tion Policy in the Republic of Ireland: Achieving the Unexpected?

38 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Session 6 Tuesday 16 April 15:15-16:45 Politics in India: Exclusion and A Conceptual Map and Proposed Theory of Low Administrative Performance Empowerment Dr. Felicity Matthews (University of Sheffield)Legislative Over- Chair: Dr. Sagarika Dutt (Nottingham Trent University) sight? The Capacity of Parliamentary Committees to Scrutinise Specialist Group: Politics of South Asia Executive Patronage Room: N34 Dr. Jan Meyer-Sahling (University of Nottingham) Public Service Motivation Across and Within Developing Country Governments Nikita Audichya (Jawaharlal Nehru University) Women and Decent Dr. Slobodan Tomic (University College Dublin), Dr. Jonathan Rauh Work: Study of Urban Informal Women Workers in India (College of Charleston) What is the Role of Political Culture in Ethics Christiane Andersen (University College London) Foes Turned Regulation: a Comparative Analysis of Anglo-Saxon Countries Friends: What Drives Coalition Formation in India’s Elections? Dr. Diego Maiorano (National University of Singapore), Dr. Dishil The Politics of Labour Movements and Shrimankar (University of Nottingham) Workfare and Empowerment: Has India’s Employment Guarantee Empowered Women and Dalits? Migration Processes Dr. Carole Spary (University of Nottingham) Performing Represen- Chair: Dr. Martin Monahan (Nottingham Trent University) tation? Women MPs and the Indian Parliament Room: N35 Electoral Management, Turnout and Integrity Xinyu Yuan (Graduate Institute of International Relations and Development Studies, Geneva) The Strategic Adjustments of Donor Chair: Jack Tudor (Swansea University) Agencies to Build Local Civil Society in Response to Repressive Specialist Group: Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Environments: Case Study of China Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Dr. Heather Watkins (Nottingham Trent University), Dr. Maria Urbina (University of Wolverhampton), Dr. Jon Mansell (Notting- Dr. Stuart Wilks-Heeg (University of Liverpool) International ham Trent University) Nae Pasaran: Whatever Happened to Working Standards, Policy Transfer and the Reform of Electoral Registration: Class Internationalism? Recent Experience in Established Anglosphere Democracies Doga Atalay (Glasgow Caledonian University) Understanding the Dr. Toby James (University of East Anglia) Measuring Electoral Relationship Between Football and Identity: Immigrant Football Clubs Integrity: Electoral Officials Perceptions of Electoral Integrity Dr. Umut Korkut (Glasgow Caledonian University), Dr. Andrea Dr. Emily Rainsford (Newcastle University), Dr. Alice Moseley Terlizzi (University of Florence) From Macro Politics of Migration to (University of Exeter), Dr. Alistair Clark (University of Newcastle), Micro Debates on European Union in Hungary and Italy Dr. Stuart Wilks-Heeg (University of Liverpool) Increasing Youth Voter Registration: Setting Out a Research Agenda Changing Governance in England: Towards Re-thinking ‘the Political’ in the Era of (Un)Sustainable Patterns? Climate Change Chair: Dr. Arianna Giovannini (De Montfort University) Chair: So Youn Kim (University of Waterloo) Specialist Group: Local Politics; Space, Governance and Room: N28 Politics Room: N33B Dr. Rupert Read (University of East Anglia) How Facing up to Climate Reality Will Change Everything Andrew Walker (Queen Mary University of London) Directly Elected Dr. Lucy Ford (Oxford Brookes University) Ecological Crises, Denial ‘Metro Mayors’: Politicisation or Depoliticisation? and Risk: A Psychoanalytic Reconceptualisation of Beck Dr. Adrian Bua (De Montfort University) Dr. Arianna Giovannini Noah Wescombe (The Schumacher Institute) Selznick, Schumacher, (De Montfort University) Trouble Letting Go: The Politics and Eco- and Spinoza? Reframing the Theory of Communitarian Liberalism nomics of (De)Centralisation in England for Radical Systems Change Nicholas Gray (Northumbria University) ‘They Talk, You Pay’: De- David Collste (Universities of Stockholm & Clermont-Ferrand) centralisation, Democracy and the Long Shadow of the 2004 North Integrative Modeling and Stakeholder Dialogues: Combining Vision East Devolution Referendum in England and Evidence Graham Pycock (University of Westminster) Neighbourhood Gover- nance: The Politics of Localism in London National Identities and Political Representation Political Emotions, Insults and Showmanship Chair: Lawrence McKay (University of Manchester) Room: N32A Chair: Dr. Rachel Bernhard (Nuffield College, University of Oxford) Samah Rafiq (Jawaharlal Nehru University) Private Actors in Mobility Management: Impact on Creation of Categories of Citizens Specialist Group: Media and Politics and Non-Citizens Room: Lecture Theatre 1 Dr. Siuyau Lee (The Education University of Hong Kong)Being Chinese Dr. Penny Andrews (University of Sheffield)Fandom, Populism, in Hong Kong: The Role of Implicit Beliefs About Group Malleability Political Imaginaries and Self-care Professor Jonathon Moses (Norwegian University of Science and Dr. Benjamin Little (University of East Anglia) “The Most Expensive Technology (NTNU)) Contested Consent Joint in History”: Elon Musk’s Environmental Advocacy and How to Sell Cars Through YouTube’s Intellectual Dark Web Performance, Recruitment and Oversight in Public Bureaucracies UK Parliament: How Does History Inform Chair: Dr. Felicity Matthews (University of Sheffield) and Dr. the Future? Jan Meyer-Sahling (University of Nottingham) Chair: Dr. Danielle Beswick (University of Birmingham) Specialist Group: Executive Politics and Governance Specialist Group: Parliaments Room: N31 Room: Lecture Theatre 3 Dr. Eva Zemandl (Nottingham Trent University) Change Distur- Alexandra Meakin (University of Sheffield)Understanding Parlia- bances and Pathological Uncertainty in CEE Public Administration: mentary Governance: Using the Multiple Streams Framework and

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 39 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Historical Institutionalism to Analyse the Restoration and Renewal Studying Political Ideologies and Practices of the Dr. James Strong (Queen Mary University of London) The House Rhetorically of Commons’ Influence Over Military Action: What Can We Learn Chair: Dr. Sophia Hatzisavvidou (University of Bath) From History? Specialist Group: Rhetoric and Politics Nicholas Dickinson (University of Exeter) From Representation to Room: Lecture Theatre 8 Meritocracy: Conceptions of Parliamentary Work and the Political Class in the Boyle Committee Reports, 1971-1979 Professor Alan Finlayson (University of East Anglia) Form and Craig Prescott (University of Winchester) The Burns Report on Content in Ideological Rhetoric Online the Size of the : Using Parliamentary Privilege to Dr. Benoit Dillet (University of Bath) Rhetorical Analysis, Ideology Informally Amend an Act of Parliament? Critique, and Digital Problems Clementine Boucher (Goldsmiths, University of London), Dr. David Deliberation, Participation and Moon (University of Bath) Student Protest and Rhetorical Strategy Constitutional Reform in Europe How to Run a Simulation with Your Chair: Dr. Rod Dacombe (King’s College London) Students: A Practical Introduction Specialist Group: Participatory and Deliberative Democracy Chair: Dr. Peter Woodcock (University of Huddersfield) Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Specialist Group: Teaching and Learning Network Dr. Heta Heiskanen (University of Tampere), Dr. Niina Meriläinen Room: Hooley Room (University of Tampere) Finnish Youth Act Black Box: Who Partici- pated and How? Professor John Craig (Leeds Beckett University) Dr. Simon Usherwood (University of Surrey) Dr. Roberto De Rosa (Niccolò Cusano University - Rome), Dr. Dario Quattromani (Roma Tre University) Deliberating on the Consti- tutional Reform. Analysis of the Discourses for the 2016 Italian Gender in the Profession Process Chair: Dr. Jennifer Thomson (University of Bath) Dr. Anastasia Deligiaouri (Dublin City University), Dr. Jane Suiter Discussant: Professor Claire Dunlop (University of Exeter) (Dublin City University) E(U)-Rulemaking in a Deliberative Environ- Specialist Group: Women and Politics ment: Current State and Challenges of Deliberative Law Making at Room: Lecture Theatre 2 the EU Level Professor John Parkinson (Maastricht University), Dr. Nuria Dr. Stephen Bates (University of Birmingham), Dr. Zoe Pflaeger Franco Guillen (Aberystwyth University/Department of Interna- Young (De Montfort University) Women in the Profession: An Update tional Politics) The Scottish Independence Debate: An Electronic, of the Composition of UK Political Science Departments by Gender Deliberative Systems Analysis Dr. Sadiya Akram (Manchester Metropolitan University), Dr. Zoe Pflaeger Young (De Montfort University) Informal Support and Populism(s) in Opposition/Populism(s) in Luck: ECRs Experiences of Post-maternity/Parental Leave Support in UK Political Science and International Studies Departments Power 3 Dr. Manjeet Ramgotra (SOAS) Confessions of a Senior Teaching Chair: Dr. Andy Knott (University of Brighton) Fellow: The Challenges of Academic Career Progression Specialist Group: Populism Professor Heather Savigny (De Montfort University) The Violence of Impact: Politics and Women in the UK HE sector Room: N21 Lazaros Karavasilis (Loughborough University) Comparing Roundtable: Cultural Backlash: Youth Populism in Opposition and in Power: Lessons from Greece and Germany Political Action in a Time of Austerity Dr. Selin Karana Senol (Üsküdar University) Socio-Economic Chair: Dr. James Weinberg (University of Sheffield) Policies with Benefits in Populist Regimes: The Case of Venezuela Specialist Group: Young People’s Politics and Turkey Room: N24 Nathan Schackow (Stock West University of Innsbruck) Are Popu- Dr. Sarah Pickard (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3) list Governments Detrimental to Liberal Democracy in Europe? Dr. James Sloam (Royal Holloway University) Aitor Bonsoms (University of Essex) Is The Catalan Pro-Indepen- Professor Matt Henn (Nottingham Trent University) dence Movement Populist? A Discourse Analysis of the Pro-inde- Professor Alistair Ross (London Metropolitan University) pendence Presidents of Catalonia Professor Pippa Norris (Harvard University) via Skype The Politics of Crisis Governance and Dr. James Weinberg (University of Sheffield) Expertise Developments in Political Science: The Role Chair: Dr. Jon Gorry (Nottingham Trent University) of Experts Specialist Group: Public Policy and Administration Chair: Dr. Ekaterina Kolpinskaya (University of Swansea) Room: Lecture Theatre 6 Room: N23A Dr. John Connolly (University of the West of Scotland), Dr. Andrew Dr. Helen Williams (University of Nottingham) How Can We Decolo- Judge (University of Glasgow) Brexit and the Rescaling of Transna- nise Political Science and International Relations? tional Governance for Health Security Professor Keith Dowding (Australian National University) It’s the Professor Annette Töller (FernUniversität in Hagen), Dr. Renate Government’s Fault Stupid: Why Political Philosophers Should Stop Reiter (FernUniversität in Hagen), Professor Wolfgang Guenther Talking About Personal Responsibility (FernUniversität in Hagen), Lisa Walter (FernUniversität in Hagen) Dr. Tina Haux (University of Kent) Impact in the Political Sciences? The “Refugee Crisis” as a Challenge to Health Policymaking in Ger- Contextualising the submissions to the REF2014 many – Studying the Example of Psychiatric and Psychotherapeutic Care of Refugees European Politics in a Time of Change Professor Janice Morphet (University College London), Dr. Ben Clifford (University College London) Fail to Prepare, Prepare to Fail: Chair: Dr. Stuart Fox (Cardiff University) How Local Authorities are Helping Central Government to Deliver Room: N27B Major Infrastructure Projects Dr. Neil Hughes (University of Nottingham) From Tourists to Terror-

40 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 ists: Securitising Tourism in Barcelona sions: Can the Domestic Politics of Small Island States Lead to Inter- Dr. Tatiana Rizova (Christopher Newport University) Refugee national In/Stability? A Case Study of Malta Policies in the European Context Dr. Matteo Cavallaro (Université Paris 13) Differences and Determi- Mr. Andre DeBattista (University of Malta), Dr. Jean Claude nants of RRPs’ Blurring Strategies on Economic Issues Cachia (University of Malta) Domestic Politics, Regional Repercus-

Session 7 Wednesday 17 April 09:00-10:30 Place, Politics and Movements Making Sense of Nigerian Domestic Politics Chair: Dr. Tom Quinn (University of Essex) Chair: Dr. Jon Mansell (Nottingham Trent University) Specialist Group: Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Room: N34 Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Adamu Ismail (Federal Polytechnic Kauranamoda), Mansur Dr. Alia Middleton (University of Surrey) Local Ties, Regional Muhammad Bello (Federal University Gusau) The Effect of Vested Identities and Hyper-localism: Strategically Presenting Candidates Interest on Development Reform Agenda: How Vested Interests in Election Literature affect Education Reform in Kaduna State, Nigeria? Dr. Danny Rye (Liverpool Hope University), Dr. James Muldoon Lucky Benson (University of Manchester) The Challenges of (University of Exeter) Conceptualising Party-driven Movements Implementing E-government Reform Strategies in Nigeria: A Policy James Furlong (University of Southampton) From Mining Towns to Transfer Analysis Merseyside: Understanding Labour’s Changing Heartlands Sarah Joe (University of Huddersfield) The Visual Framing of Boko Dr. Stuart Fox (Cardiff University) Social Action as a Route to the Haram: An Analysis of Images in Selected Nigerian Newspapers and Ballot Box: Can Volunteering Reduce Age Inequalities in Turnout? Twitter Sustainability in National Politics and the Parliaments and Policy Making in Global Economy Comparative Perspective Chair: Dr. Kevin Love (Nottingham Trent University) Chair: Dr. Catherine Bochel (University of Lincoln) Room: N28 Specialist Group: Parliaments Kristin Eichhorn (University of Technology Chemnitz), Professor Room: Lecture Theatre 3 Eric Linhart (University of Technology Chemnitz) Environmental Matthew Williams (University of Oxford) (Un)Sustainable Legisla- Protection and Policy Performance in Autocratic Regimes tive Language in a Changing World Dr. Filippos Proedrou (University of South Wales) Foreign Policy in Ernest Kwofie (University of Birmingham) Understanding Parlia- the Anthropocene Era: The Need to Embed Sustainability mentary Oversight in Africa: An Interpretive Analysis of Confirma- tion Hearings in Ghana’s Parliament Human Rights and Business: Challenges Dr. Susan Dodsworth (University of Birmingham), Dr. Nicholas for the Governance and Sustainable Cheeseman (University of Birmingham) Critical Leaders: How Women on Parliamentary Committees Influence the Health Sector Implementation of the UN Guiding Principles in Africa Chair: Dr. Yingru Li (University of Glasgow) Discussant: Dr. Judy Muthuri (University of Nottingham) Rethinking Local Democracy: A Global Specialist Group: Global Justice and Human Rights Perspective Room: Lecture Theatre 7 Chair: Dr. Rod Dacombe (King’s College London) Professor John McKernan (University of Glasgow), Dr. Yingru Li Specialist Group: Participatory and Deliberative Democracy (University of Glasgow) The Human Right to Accountability: Norma- Room: Lecture Theatre 4 tive Foundations and Critique Brenda Ogembo (Institute of Local Government Studies (IN- Dr. Alvise Favotto (University of Glasgow), Dr. Kelly Kollman LOGOV), University of Birmingham) Wanjiku’s Assembly: A Case (University of Glasgow) (Corporate) Responsibility for What? The Study on the Effects of Legislative Public Engagement in Kenya’s Uneven Embedding of Sustainability Issues in Global Markets Sub-national Legislatures Bruno Magalhães (University of São Paulo), Dr. Ricardo Fabri- Media and Politics in the Post- no Mendonça (Federal University of Minas Gerais) Deliberative Representative Democracy: The European Democracy and Public Administration: Inducers of Connectivity and Scene Coupling on a Network Driven Local Policy Osman Karacan (University of Southampton) Citizen Participa- Chair: Professor Luigi Ceccarini (University of Urbino tion in Turkish Local Governments: Motives of Elected Officials to Carlo Bo) Involve Citizens in Administrative Processes Specialist Group: Media and Politics; Italian Politics Room: Lecture Theatre 1 (Un)Sustainable Politics and Policy in China Mattia Zunino (Luiss Guido Carli) How to Influence Political Prefer- and Taiwan ences. Political Manipulation Effectiveness Through a Generational Chair: Benjamin Ho (Nanyang Technological University) Approach. Specialist Group: Politics and Policy in Southeast and East Dr. Rosanna De Rosa (University of Naples Federico II) The Con- stituency Communication at a time of 5SM: Among Representation Asia and Government Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Dr. Olgierd Annusewicz (University of Warsaw) Popular Politics. Benjamin Ho (LSE) BRI, Legitimacy and Geopolitics How Modern Political Communication can be Blamed for the “Lost Tao Wang (University of Manchester) Legislators as Mommies Connection” Phenomenon in Post-representative Democracies and Daddies: How Confucian Culture Shapes Representation in Carlotta Caciagli (Scuola Normale Superiore) Social Activism in Taiwan Times of Crisis: Urban Movements and their Challenges to Institu- Kim Vender (University of Edinburgh) A Changing Role in a Chang- tional Politics ing Climate: China as a Global Climate Leader?

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 41 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

The Psychology of Populism The New American Politics: Understanding Chair: Donatella Bonansinga (University of Birmingham) Trump Specialist Group: Political Psychology Chair: Wayde Marsh (University of Notre Dame) Room: N23B Room: N31 Tobias Widmann (European University Institute) Populists and Dr. John Callahan (New England College) Trump, Public Diplomacy, Emotions on Twitter: The Moderating Effect of Political Responsibili- and the Nature of Power ty on Populist Communication Strategies Dr. Matthew Mokhefi-Ashton (Nottingham Trent University) The Christine Stedtnitz (University of Essex) The Effect of a Perceived Role of Celebrity and Social Media in the Construction of ‘Brand Loss of Status on Openness to False Facts in Political Campaigns Trump’ Donatella Bonansinga (University of Birmingham) Are We ‘Really’ Dr. Fatemah Alzubairi (Kuwait University) The Rise of Authoritari- In Danger? How The British Tabloids Construct (In)Security anism in Democracies and Non-Democracies India’s Domestic and International Policies The Role of Political Science in the Modern Chair: Dr. Francesca Silvestri (Nottingham Trent University) Age Room: N35 Chair: Professor Ian Budge (University of Essex) Dr. Archana Kujur (Central University of Karnataka) Everyday Struggles of Tribal Women, Structural Violence and Development: A Room: N23A Case Study of a Tea Garden Economy in Eastern India Professor Abdelwahab El-Affendi (University of Westminster/ Nikas Kindo (Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai) Resource Doha Institute for Graduate Studies) Does Political Science Have a Politics, Everyday Violence and Exclusion of Tribal Communities: Future in a Post-Liberal Age? Evidence From a Coal Mining Region in Eastern India Dr. Stuart Durkin (University of Aberdeen), Dr. Malcolm Harvey Rajarshee Chowdhury (Jawaharlal Nehru University) De-histor- (University of Aberdeen) Innovative Assessments in the icising Everyday Lives, Evoking Fear: Urban Spatial Practices in Teaching of Politics: Enhancing Student Engagement and Skills Kathputli Colony, New Delhi Acquisition Dr. Heather Mbaye (University of West Georgia) Making Politi- Roundtable: The Politics and Security of cal Research Count: Comparing Policymaker Views of Academic Misogyny Researchers Chair: Professor Cynthia Enloe (Clark University) Authoritarianism: Origins and Resilience Room: Bowden Room Chair: Valentina Dotto (Birmingham City University) Dr. Katerina Krulisova (Nottingham Trent University) Room: N32A Helen Voce (Nottingham Women’s Centre) Shamsher Chohan (Communities Inc) Aliaksandr Herasimenka (University of Westminster) Beyond Ted Antill (Nottinghamshire Police) Organisational Hybridity: Platform-based Radical Campaigning as a New Type of Political Organising in Authoritarian States Learning for Democracy: The Practice, Policy Dr. John Meadowcroft (King’s College London) Arendt and Hayek and Potential of Citizenship Education. on the Origins of Totalitarianism Chair: Dr. Benjamin Bowman (Manchester Metropolitan Political Survival in the 21st Century: University) Evidence From Hungary, Turkey, Jordan and Specialist Group: Young People’s Politics Room: N24 the UK Rebecca Baker (University of Exeter) Bridging the Gap: Youth-cen- Chair: Dr. Imad El-Anis (Nottingham Trent University) tred Citizenship Education in the UK Room: N36A Dr. Sean Murphy (Teeside University) Goodbye NCS: From Neoliber- Kristof Filemon (University of Bologna) Sacrificing the Future for al Towards Becoming Citizens In The Third Millennium Political Survival: A Case Study of Hungary Dr. James Weinberg (University of Sheffield), Dr. Avril Keating Dr. Benjamin Worthy (Birkbeck, University of London), Dr. Mark (University College London), Dr. Sarah Mills (Loughborough Bennister (University of Lincoln) The Politics of Survival: Theresa University) The Future Of Citizenship Education: Where to go Next May July 2016-July 2018 From the House of Lord’s Report on Citizenship and Civic Engage- Dr. Shun Watanabe (Kyoto University) Dynamics of Linchpin ment? Monarchical Rule: Jordan in the Neoliberal Era Professor Alistair Ross (London Metropolitan University) Building Blocks for the Construction of Political Identities: What Young Living in the Age of Populism, Myth and Europeans Say Political Correctness Visionary Systems Thinking for Chair: Dr. Janka Lloyd (Nottingham Trent University) Sustainability: Political and Policy Room: N21 Dimensions Dr. Gergana Dimova (University of Winchester) “Mediated” Popu- lism in Bulgaria: Rhetoric, Style or Presentation? Chair: Dr. Jenneth Parker (The Schumacher Institute) Dr. Xander Kirke (Newcastle University) Political Myth and Room: N22A Populism: A Collective Search for Significance in an Age of Uncer- Rebecca Fisher (University of East Anglia) Re-visioning Sustainabil- tainty ity Education and Engagement Dr. Spyridon Plakoudas (American University in the Emirates) Dr. John Blewitt (The Schumacher Institute) William Morris and the Populism in the Birth-Place of Democracy: The Peculiar Case of End of Politics Greece Dr. Tom Stedall (The Schumacher Institute) Ways in Which An- Neema Begum (University of Manchester), Liz Chambers (Uni- ti-Fracking and Social Justice Movements are Informed by Systems versity of Bristol), Dr. Aurelien Mondon (University of Bath) The Thinking Politicisation of Political Correctness

42 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Session 8 Wednesday 17 April 11:00-12:30 Roundtable: Is the UK Unsustainable? Brexit, Junhyoung Lee (University College Dublin) Does the Legitimacy of Authoritarian Regimes Really Matter? Revisiting Legitimacy in the Territorial Politics and the Constitution Study of North Korea Chair: Professor Daniel Wincott (Cardiff University) Room: Lecture Theatre 2 Political Psychology: Understanding and Professor Daniel Wincott (Cardiff University) Explaining Decision-making Professor Nicola McEwen (University of Edinburgh) Chair: Dr. Eva Zemandl (Nottingham Trent University) Dr. Rachel Minto (Cardiff University) Room: N23B Professor John Denham (University of Winchester) Professor John Garry (Queen’s University Belfast) Jenna Arnall (University of Bath) Tony Blair and George W. Bush, a Political Psychology Analysis of the Decision to Invade Partisanship and Voting Behaviour Dr. Dion Curry (Swansea University), Dr. Gabriela Jiga-Boy Chair: Dr. Danny Rye (Liverpool Hope University) (Swansea University), Dr. Glenn Gottfried (Ipsos Mori) The Political Psychology of Brexit: Legitimacy, Trust and the ‘People’s Will’ in Specialist Group: Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Political Decision-Making Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Professor Sheldon Levy (Wayne State University) The Psycho-logic Dr. James Weinberg (University of Sheffield) The Psychology of of Destructive Politics: The Logic of the Illogical Partisanship: Testing for Congruence between the Basic Human Values of Voters and Members of Parliament in the United Kingdom Critical Reflections on Political Processes in Jack Bailey (University of Manchester) Affective Asymmetry: Party India and Pakistan ID Affects Both the Level and Trajectory of Voters’ Economic Views Dr. Chrysa Lamprinakou (University of Strathclyde), Dr. Wolf- Chair: Dr. Sahra Joharchi (Nottingham Trent University) gang Rüdig (University of Strathclyde), Dr. Sofia Collignon (Royal Room: N35 Holloway University), Dr. Javier Sajuria (Queen Mary University of Rajarshee Chowdhury (Jawaharlal Nehru University) Forging London) The Other Side of the Scottish Independence Referendum: Networks of Urban Solidarity: Responses to Evictions and Resettle- Explaining the Effect of the Independence Referendum on Political ments by the Marginalised, Observations from an Indian City Polarisation and Voting Behaviour in Scotland Nikas Kindo (Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai) Interro- The Politics of Media Narratives and gating Resource Politics and Rentier State: Evidence from a Coal Economy in Eastern India Discourses Dr. Arjumand Kazmi (University of Warwick) (Un)certain Democra- Chair: Mark Boyd (University of Auckland) tisation? Critical Reflections on the Role of Internationally Funded Room: Lecture Theatre 1 NGOs in Pakistan Bastian Struve (University of Glasgow) Portraying Domestic “Ter- Populism and History 1 rorist” Attacks in the Chinese News Media Nadia Haq (University of Bristol) Rethinking Media Discourse on Chair: Dr. Emmy Eklundh (King’s College London) British Muslims: Public Contestation and the Democratic Media Specialist Group: Populism Esmeralda Bon (University of Nottingham) Online Post-Truth Room: N21 Politics? An Analysis of the Campaign Argumentation and Evidence Sebastian Ronderos (University of Essex) Hysterie and the End of advanced on Facebook by UK MPs History. On Populism and Revolution in the XXI Century Takao Terui (King’s College London) Reframing British Film Policy: Dr. Andy Knott (University of Brighton) On Populism’s Beginnings Idea, Rhetoric and Rationale in the Cinematograph Films Act of Dr. Toygar Sinan Baykan (Kirklareli University) Populism as Re- 1909/1927/1938 sponsive Governmental Practice: The Case of Turkey Democratic Innovations, Participation and Public Policy and Administration Specialist Policy Change Group: Behaviouralism and Policy Narratives Chair: Dr. Rod Dacombe (King’s College London) Chair: Dr. Kate Mattocks (University of East Anglia) Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Specialist Group: Public Policy and Administration Emmeline Cooper (University of Westminster) Governing Sustainable Room: Lecture Theatre 6 Investing in Pension Schemes: The Theory and Practice of Voice Dr. Alexander Hudson (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Reli- Dr. Alice Moseley (University of Exeter), Dr. Eva Thomann (Univer- gious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen) Potemkin Village Meetings: sity of Exeter) Revisiting the Policy Cycle in Light of the Behavioural Public Participation in Constitution Making Turn: a Conceptual and Scoping Review Dr. Dario Quattromani (Roma Tre University) Participatory Innovations Thibaud Deruelle (University of Exeter) “Credibility is in the Eye the and Post-Ideological Populism. A Tension between Ideals and Reality Beholder”: the Role of Cognitive Biases in Understanding Regulato- Dr. Adrian Bua (De Montfort University & New Economics Foun- ry Agencies’ Bureaucratic Reputation dation), Dr. Sonia Bussu (Manchester Metropolitan University) Dr. Siabhainn Russell (University of Stirling) Disability as Part of Democratising the Policy Process: a Critical Analysis of Democratic the Ministerial and Cabinet Lexicon Since 2000 Innovations for Policy-making Dr. Peter Eckersley (Nottingham Trent University), Katarzyna Lakoma (Nottingham Trent University) Narratives and Evidence in (Un)Sustainable Politics and Policy in East Reforms to Fire and Rescue Services in England and Southeast Asia Turkey and Its Neighbourhood: Contemporary Chair: Tao Wang (University of Manchester) Specialist Group: Politics and Policy in Southeast and East Asia Policy Approaches and Challenges Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Chair: Dr. Natalie Martin (Nottingham Trent University) Petra Desatova (University of Leeds) The Politics of Grief: Manag- Room: N25 ing the Passing of King Bhumibol Adulyadej in the Lead Up to the Dr. Ozlem Kayhan Pusane (Isik University) Turkey, KRG, and the Royal Transition Independence Referendum: From Cooperation to Conflict

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 43 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

Professor Vivien Lowndes (University of Birmingham), Professor How Politicians Affect Voter Behaviour in Rabia Karakaya Polat (Isik University) How are Local Responses to Syrian Refugees in Turkey Shaped by Multiple and Competing Middle and Low-income Countries Interpretations Within a Multi-level Context? Chair: Dr. Nicholas Cheeseman (University of Birmingham) Dr. Cristiano Bee (Oxford Brookes University), Dr. Stavroula Chro- Room: N26A na (King’s College London) A Failed Approach? A Policy Narrative Framework Analysis of the EU Civil Society Policy in Turkey Dr. Daniel Paget (University of Oxford) Moving the Crowd: Mobilis- ing and Persuading at Rallies in Africa Gendered Politics? Campaigns, Systems, Tanushree Goyal (University of Oxford), Dr. Robin Harding (University of Oxford) Attribution, Demand and Accountability for Policy-making, Theory and Practice Education Provision: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Delhi Chair: Emilia Belknap (University of Edinburgh) Calum Fisher (SOAS) Malawian MPs on the Campaign Trail: Strate- Room: Bowden Room gising and Presenting the Self Dr. Rachel Bernhard (University of Oxford) Gendering Political American Foreign Policy Under Trump Campaigns Dr. Maria Garcia (University of Bath) Gendering International Free Chair: Raluca Pahontu (University of Oxford) Trade Agreements Room: N31 Dr. Don S. Lee (University of Nottingham), Charles T. Mcclean Professor Tanguy Struye de Swielande (Université catholique (University of California, San Diego) Gendered Patterns of Ministeri- de Louvain) Rebuilding Global Inclusion: Time for a New American al Turnover in East Asian Presidential Systems Grand Strategy Dr. Anand Rao (State University of New York at Geneseo) Is the Explaining and Measuring Youth Political East Asian Quadrilateral Sustainable? Participation Dr. Ioana-Nelia Constantin-Bercean (Babes-Bolyai University) As- sessing Transatlantic Fallout After US Withdrawal From the JCPOA Chair: Katherine Smith (University of Sheffield) Specialist Groups: Young Peoples’ Politics; Elections, Public Neighbourhood Politics: Explaining Local Opinion and Parties Governance Room: N24 Chair: Dr. Chris Caswill (Manchester Institute of Innovation Magdelina Kitanova (University of Southampton) Contextual Influencers of the Propensity of Young Individuals to Participate in Research) Formal and Informal Politics: Multilevel Analysis Room: Lecture Theatre 7 Claire Breniaux (University of Burgundy) National Identity and Dr. Claudio Fuentes (Universidad Autónoma de Chile) How Does a Young People’s Political Engagement in Scotland Divided Municipality Affect the Management of Local Government? Carl Görtz (University of Orebro), Dr. Viktor Dahl (University of The Case of Mayors and Local Councillors in Chile Orebro) Why the Scope Seems to Matter: Exploring Young People’s Dr. Archana Kujur (Central University of Karnataka) Identity Con- Conceptions of Politics flict: Demand for Gorkhaland Ana Pontes (Nottingham Trent University), Professor Matt Henn Márcio Mello (University of Brasilia), Dr. Denilson Coelho (University (Nottingham Trent University), Professor Mark Griffiths (Notting- of Brasilia) Diffusion of urban policies in Brazil, a multivariate analysis. ham Trent University) Youth Political Engagement Scale New Dynamics of National and Transnational Understanding the New Politics of Brexit, Party Competition in Europe Trump and Corbyn Chair: Dr. Hartwig Pautz (University of the West of Scotland) Chair: Dr. Matthew Mokhefi-Ashton (Nottingham Trent Room: N33A University) Dr. Panos Panayotu (Loughborough University) Articulating the Room: N22A National and the Transnational Aspects of Populism A Way For- Dr. Emma Foster (University of Birmingham) Trump, Parrhesia, and ward? The Case of DiEM25 the Politics of Truth Marta Lorimer (LSE) Building Legitimacy Through European Dis- Dr. Peter Kerr (University of Birmingham) Tradition and Truth: courses: The Case of the Front National/Rassemblement National Dimensions of the New Anti-Politics of Brexit Dr. Davide Vampa (Aston University), Dr. Caroline Gray (Aston Dr. Martin Monahan (Nottingham Trent University) Metamodern- University) Assessing and Explaining the Diverging Trajectories of ism and the Structure of a Feeling: On the Nature of New Democrat- Territorial Politics in Italy and Spain (2008-2018) ic Socialism Dr. Mustafa Kutlay (City, University of London), Dr. Iosif Kovras Nauman Reayat (University of York) The Role of Judicial and Politi- (City, University of London) The EU’s Approach to Post-crisis Ac- cal Elites in the Judicialization of BREXIT countability: Is There a Learning Effect? Session 9 Wednesday 17 April 13:30-15:00 Environmental Governance and Mediating Politics and the Politics of Media Unsustainable Politics Chair: Dr. Francesca Silvestri (Nottingham Trent University) Chair: Heather Alberro (Nottingham Trent University) Room: Lecture Theatre 1 Room: N28 Dr. Ilia Xypolia (University of Aberdeen) All Jokes Aside: Construct- Dr. Duncan Rusel (University of Exeter), Dr. Anne Jensen (Uni- ing Russophobia in Late Nights Shows versity of Aarhus) Risk Taking and Public Policy Making: Employing Mark Boyd (University of Auckland) Video Voters? A Comparison Experimental Policy Approaches in the Search for Solutions to of Television News Coverage of National Election Campaigns in Unsustainable Problems the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, and New So Youn Kim (University of Waterloo) Global Network of Cities: Zealand. Applying a Non-traditional IR Lens to Global Climate Governance Avantika Dureha (Jawaharlal Nehru University) The Politics of Dr. Gina Reinhardt (University of Essex), Dr. Kakia Chatsiou (Uni- Projection: Tyranny of Language and Manifested Visibility versity of Essex) What Can Computerized Text Mining Tell Us About Jintao Zhu (LSE) The Modern Totem: A Theoretical Justification Disaster Resilience? Investigating Resilience Plans for National Animals

44 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Law and Order in Deliberative Democracies Consideration of Political Ecology Jennifer Hinton (Stockholm University) Political Polarisation as a Chair: Dr. Thomas O’Brien (University of York) Logical Outcome of Capitalism’s System Dynamics Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Dr. Jenneth Parker (The Schumacher Institute) Political Economy Paul Robinson (Teesside University) Police and Crime Commissioners and Political Ecology: Systemic Approaches and Resident Consultation: A Case Study of a Northern Police Force Dr. Chandra Mouli Vemury (The Schumacher Institute) Spirituality Ajenai Clemmons (Duke University) Counting the Dead: Finding and Public Policy: New Relationships for Sustainability Officer-Caused Fatalities in the Official Record Dr. Emily Gray (University of Sheffield), Professor Stephen Farrall Contested Issues, Recurrent Problems in (University of Derby), Dr. Phil Jones (University of Sheffield)A Lon- American Politics gitudinal Analysis of Welfare Claimants’ Contact With the Criminal Justice System 1958-2000: Thatcherite Repercussions? Chair: Dr. Matthew Mokhefi-Ashton (Nottingham Trent University) China’s Political Economy: One Belt, One Road Room: N31 Chair: Dr. Sahra Joharchi (Nottingham Trent University) Raluca Pahontu (University of Oxford) The Democrat Disaster: Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Natural Hazard Exposure, Risk Aversion and Insurance Demand Lina Liu (Swiss Federal Institute of Techonology Zurich) The Values Francis Okpaleke (University of Waikato) The Role of Drones in US and Principles of China’s Belt and Road Initiative: A Study With the Grand Strategy: Implication for War and Politics Theory of Relationality Emre Demir (TED University) Bridging the Neighbourhoods: A Criti- A Crisis of Migration or a Crisis of Politics? cal Analysis of China’s Policies Towards Central and Southeast Asia Chair: Georgios Kyroglou (Nottingham Trent University) Khurram Siddiqui (University of Nottingham) Security Challenges Room: N23A to China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC): A Way Forward Benjamin Ho (Nanyang Technological University) The Belt and Alexandra Bulat (University College London) How Should Migra- Road Initiative and China’s Quest for Global Greatness tion Policy Post-Brexit Look Like? Insights From A Qualitative Study With Newham and Tendring Residents Populism and History 2 Fred Paxton (European University Institute), Andrea Pettrachin (University of Sheffield) Populisms in Local Government: A Com- Chair: Dr. Marina Prentoulis (University of East Anglia) parison of Local Governments Led by the 5 Star Movement and the Specialist Group: Populism Lega During the Migration Crisis Room: N21 Dr. Eva Thomann (University of Exeter), Professor Oliver James Dr. Philipp Decker (Istanbul Medipol University) The Nationalism/ (University of Exeter), Thibaud Deruelle (University of Exeter) Eth- Populism Nexus: Waves of Populism and Crises of Liberalism in the nic and Racial Stereotypes and Biases in Frontline Implementation: Transatlantic Space A Systematic Review of Patterns and Possible Interventions Dr. Michaelangelo Anastasiou (University of Victoria) Populism Dr. Aurelien Mondon (University of Bath), Dr. Aaron Winter and the Mirror of Technology (University of East London) Racism in the Name of Liberalism: The Mr. Thomas Zicman de Barros (Sciences Po) Populism and Its De- Post-racial and the Mainstreaming of the Far Right tractors in the Brazilian Press During the Fourth Republic (1946-1964) Contemporary Developments in International Education and Political Engagement Civil Society Chair: Dr. Rose Gann (Nottingham Trent University) Chair: Dr. Udit Bhatia (University of Oxford) Room: Lecture Theatre 6 Room: N27A Professor Amany Khodair (British University in Egypt), Dr. Mahmoud Khalifa (Suez Canal University) The Role of Educational Public Policies Lisa Gibson (University of Nottingham) The Effectiveness of Trans- in the Development of Political Awareness: The Case of Egypt national Citizen Led Friendship Groups Between Libya and America Dr. Siuyau Lee (The Education University of Hong Kong) Attitudes in Improving Libyans Views Toward America Towards Professional Education and Vocational Training: Experi- Dr. Francesca Granelli (King’s College London) Exploring the mental Survey Evidence from Hong Kong Impact of the Resurgence of Borders and Margins On Networks of Dr. Eva Zemandl (Nottingham Trent University), Dr. Marton Rovid Trust (Central European University) Understanding the Experience of Dr. Ibrahim Khatib (University of Oxford) Identity, Threat, Conflict Political (In)Justice from a Policy Angle: The Case of School (De) perception and Democratic values in the Context of the Protracted Segregation of the Roma Minority in Hungary Conflict Xinyu Yuan (Graduate Institute of International Relations and De- Frames and Discourse in Gender Politics velopment Studies, Geneva) Aiding Civil Societies in Authoritarian Countries: The Role of Informal Mechanisms by Foreign Actors Chair: Leah McCabe (University of Edinburgh) Room: Bowden Room The Politics of Local Infrastructural Dr. Wan Chi Leung (University of Canterbury) Female Political Development Leaders’ Media Responses: #MeToo in UK and Taiwan Robyn Muir (University of Nottingham) The Princess is the Political: Chair: Dr. Marianna Poberezhskaya (Nottingham Trent Using Culture to Understand Politics University) Professor Gill Allwood (Nottingham Trent University), Dr. Khursh- Room: Lecture Theatre 7 eed Wadia (University of Warwick) French Forced Marriage Policy: Gender and Ethnicity in Republican Universalist Policy-Making Sam Mutter (Birkbeck, University of London) Fast Talk in Hard Times: Logistical Expertise in the Governance of London’s Trans- Political Economy/Political Ecology: port Infrastructure Professor Brian Jacobs (Staffordshire University) Knowledge and Systemic Approaches Housing Policy Innovation in London: The Case of Offsite Construct- Chair: Jan Nathrath (Nottingham Trent University) ed Homes Room: N22A Emilie Parry (Oxford University) Lessons from biocultural and spiritual responses to climate change in Asia: A Whole Systems

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 45 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Conference Panels and Papers

Session 10 Wednesday 17 April 15:15-16:45 Party Politics and Elections versity of Hong Kong) On the Shoulders of the Fallen Giant: Institu- tionalization of Elite Politics in Single-Party Communist Regimes: Chair: Ana Pontes (Nottingham Trent University) Experience of the PRC and the USSR Room: Lecture Theatre 5 Farsan Ghassim (Oxford University), Dr. Markus Pauli (Yale-NUS) Varieties of Populism: Can a Popular Concept The Specter of World Government: A Survey Experiment Travel in a Changing World? Dr. Christopher Kirkland (York St John University) Beyond First- and Second-order? Political Parties Approaches to Chair: Dr. Nicholas Cheeseman (University of Birmingham) Elections Room: N21 Dr. Don S. Lee (University of Nottingham), Dr. Fernando Casal Professor Paul Taggart (University of Sussex) Populisms in West- Bertoa (University of Nottingham) Party System Institutionalization ern Europe and Government Formation in Asia Dr. Fernando Casal Bertoa (University of Nottingham), Dr. José Rama Caamaño (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid) The Two Faces Theorising Environmental Politics and of Janus: On the Determinants of Anti-establishment Parties’ Suc- Evaluating Risks cess in Post-communist Europe in Comparative Perspective Dr. Daniel Paget (University of Oxford) Mistaken for populism: Chair: Dr. Nathan Jones (Nottingham Trent University) Magufuli, ambiguity and elitist plebeianism in Tanzania Room: N28 Dr. Eloise Harding (University of Southampton) Post-truth Politics Public Policy and Financial (In)Stability in the Anthropocene Era: The Context, Concepts and Implications of Chair: Dr. Matthew Wall (Swansea University) Environmental Scepticism Room: Lecture Theatre 6 Valentina Dotto (Birmingham City University) A New Definition of Sustainability for a More Balanced Approach Toward Economy, Chris Game (Institute of Local Government Studies (INLOGOV), Ecology and Social Equity University of Birmingham) UK Local Governments Are Too Big and Hosea Olayiwola Patrick (University of KwaZulu-Natal) Climate Too Centrally Controlled to Go Bankrupt – Well, That’s One Bet I Change and Water Security in South Africa: Assessing Conflict and Lost! Coping Strategies in KwaZulu-Natal Dr. Nisida Gjoksi (Policy Officer, Albania and Bosnia and Herzegov- ina Unit, Directorate General for Enlargement and Neighbourhood), Global Justice and Human Rights Dr. Eliska Drapalova (Hertie School of Governance) How to Survive Without Resources: Politicization of the Local Administration in Chair: Ajenai Clemmons (Duke University) Romanian Cities Room: Lecture Theatre 7 Dr. Iosif Kovras (City, University of London), Dr. Stefano Pagliari Nicholas Schenk (University of Leicester) Statelessness as a Result (City, University of London) Crisis and Punishment? Explaining of Structural Injustice Bankers’ Prosecutions in Post-Crisis Europe Chi-Hsun Chen (Durham University) Transcend the Liberal Legiti- macy Dilemma: Modus Vivendi and Capability Approach The Politics of the Young: New Beginnings Juliana Semione (University of Nottingham University) Freedom: Chair: Prof. Matt Henn (Nottingham Trent University) The Second Peculiar Institution Room: N24 Dr. Katharina Crepaz (Max Planck Institute for Social Law and Social Policy & Technical University of Munich) (New Forms of) Professor Nicole Gallant (INRS University), Laurence Pitre-vézina Political Participation in Regional Diversity Contexts: Challenges (Université Laval) Moving Academic Research into Practice: Can and Opportunities Scholars Connect the State’s with Young People’s Online Political Professor Allister McGregor (University of Sheffield), Professor Expression? Colin Hay (Sheffield Institute of Political Economy Research), Tom Dr. Thomas Loughran (University of Huddersfield), Professor Hunt (Sheffield Institute of Political Economy Research) The Inclu- Jonathan Tonge (University of Liverpool), sive Growth Muddle Dr. Andrew Mycock (University of Huddersfield) Who Supports ? Analysing, Questioning and Theorising Political Communication, New Media and Democratic Processes Voters’ Responses Chair: Professor Ian Budge (University of Essex) Chair: Heather Alberro (Nottingham Trent University) Room: Lecture Theatre 4 Room: Lecture Theatre 1 Dr. Ogan Yumlu (Istanbul Bilgi University) Situating the Epistemic Kashif Rashid (SZABIST), Arsalan Ayoub Kaim Khani (SZABIST) Value of Democracy: Against Populism and Elitism Political Brand Hate: A Voter’s Perspective Chiemezie Nwosu (University of Technology Sydney) Question- Tristan Hotham (University of Bath) Is It Party Pages or Party ing Democratic Autonomy in a Culture of Poverty and Economic Leader Pages That Matter Most on UK Facebook? Dependency Yiyang Zhao (Zhengzhou University / Bangor University) Social Daniel Skeffington (University of Bath) Metaphysics and Modernity: Media and China’s Network Social Political Participation From the The Origins of Political Disillusionment Perspective of Field Theory Dr. Benjamin Worthy (Birkbeck, University of London), Giuseppe Alternative Futures and China’s National and Sollazzo (University of London) Downing Street Tweets: Prime Min- Foreign Policies isterial Twitter Use and the Personalisation of Politics 2012-2018 Chair: Dr. Sahra Joharchi (Nottingham Trent University) Technology and Governance Room: Lecture Theatre 9 Chair: Dr. Olga Khrushcheva (Manchester Metropolitan Flavia Lucenti (Roma Tre University) Alternative Narratives to the Liberal International Order: The Case of China University) Emre Demir (TED University) Fragmented or Integrated Asia: Com- Room: N31 peting Regional Visions of China and the United States Thorsten Brønholt (University of the West of Scotland) Governed by Dr. Jiangnan Zhu (University of Hong Kong), Nikolai Mukhin (Uni- Algorithms: Theories of Digitised Power to Shape Subjects and Societies

46 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Dr. Barney McManigal (University of Oxford) Regulating Disruptive Causes and Consequences of Foreign Technologies: The New Politics of Global Innovation Dr. Gareth Mott (Nottingham Trent University) Pitfalls of ‘Taming Intervention the Internet’s Wild West’: UK Online Counter-Extremism Policy and Chair: Dr. Jon Gorry (Nottingham Trent University) the End of a ‘Golden Era’ for Content Removal Room: N27A Tensions in Contemporary Counter-terrorist Samaila Adelaiye (University at Buffalo, SUNY) Foreign Investors and Diplomatic Intervention in Interstate Conflict Initiatives and Profiling Dr. Ilia Xypolia (University of Aberdeen) From the White Man’s Chair: Dr. Kevin Love (Nottingham Trent University) Burden to the Responsible Saviour: Justifying the Humanitarian Room: N23A Intervention in Libya Dr. Zana Gulmohamad (University of Sheffield) Iraq’s Popular Dr. Katerina Krulisova (Nottingham Trent University), Dr. Janka Mobilisation Forces: Its Fragmented Nature and Entanglement in Lloyd (Nottingham Trent University) Female Terrorists and the the Middle East ‘Loneliness’ of Lone Wolves Samah Rafiq (Jawaharlal Nehru University) Risk-Profiling of Indi- Populism and Politics in Europe and Beyond vidual Travellers: Biopolitics at International Borders Syeda Bareeha Fatima (University of Aberdeen) The Global War on Chair: Dr. Paolo Chiocchetti (Independent Researcher) Terror and Everyday Militarism in Pakistan Room: N33A Salome Ietter (Queen Mary University of London) The ‘Gilets Nuclear Technologies and National Security jaunes’: anti-populism in ‘crisis’ Chair: Professor Abdelwahab El-Affendi (University of Dr. Enrico Reuter (University of York) Popular Sovereigntism and Westminster) the Future of the Welfare State Lukas Slothuus (University of Edinburgh) Resistance Between Room: N32A Thought and Action: Faith and Fatalism in the Philosophy of Praxis Jan Nathrath (Nottingham Trent University) Hydrocarbon-deficien- cy, energy insecurity and nuclear power development Minjung Kim (Georgetown University) Will Revisionist States Give Up Their Bomb? A Quantitative Analysis of the Revisionist Experi- ence and Nuclear Proliferation Decision Dr. Imad El-Anis (Nottingham Trent University), Jan Nathrath (Nottingham Trent University) Regime Type and Social Acceptance of Nuclear Energy Transitions Right-wing Parties, Strategies and Discourses Chair: Kristin Eichhorn (University of Technology Chemnitz) Room: N36A Katy Brown (University of Bath) When Eurosceptics Become Euro- philes: Far-Right Opposition to Turkish Involvement in the European Union Michele Diana Luz (Universidade Federal de Pelotas/ University of Brighton), Letícia Baron (Universidade Federal de Pelotas) Brazilian Far-right Discourse: Its Meanings and Articulation Towards the Election of Jair Bolsonaro Dr. Takamichi Sakurai (Keio University) The Socio-Pathological Phenomenon of Contemporary Neo-Fascism in Germany: In Terms of Erich Fromm’s Conceptions of Authoritarianism, Bureaucracy and

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 47 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Index of Names

6 Buller, Jim...... 26 Dillet, Benoit ...... 40 Burgess, Peter...... 38 Dimova, Gergana...... 33,37,42 6, Perri...... 28,31 Burity, Joanildo...... 27,38 Dimova-Cookson, Maria...... 36 A Burke, Edward...... 34 Dixon, Ruth...... 28,37 Adams, Matthew...... 28 Burn, Emily...... 36 Dodsworth, Susan...... 41 Adelaiye, Samaila...... 47 Burns, Tony...... 28 Dollery, Brian ...... 29 Ahmad, Iram...... 28 Bussu, Sonia...... 43 Dotto, Valentina...... 42,46 Ahmad, Jared...... 37 Butler, Chris...... 26,28,33 Dover, Robert...... 29-30 Akram, Sadiya...... 6,40 Byrne, Christopher...... 30 Dowding, Keith...... 33,40 Alberro, Heather ...... 26,31,44,46 Drapalova, Eliska...... 31,46 Albertazzi, Daniele...... 31,37 C Drew, Joseph...... 29,32 Cabane, Lydie...... 31,36 Alblas, Edwin...... 28 Duggan, Alan...... 28 Caciagli, Carlotta...... 41 Allington, Daniel...... 32 Dunlop, Claire...... 5-6,33,38,40 Callahan, John ...... 6,31,36,42 Allsop, Bradley...... 33 Dureha, Avantika...... 44 Can, Seda...... 26 Allwood, Gill ...... 45 Durkin, Stuart...... 42 Cantijoch, Marta...... 37 Alzubairi, Fatemah...... 6,42 Dutt, Sagarika...... 28,39 Carter, Neil...... 33 Amery, Fran...... 27,38 Casal Bertoa, Fernando...... 46 E Anastasiou, Michaelangelo...... 45 Caswill, Chris...... 26,44 Eckersley, Peter...... 5,31,33,43 Andersen, Christiane...... 33,36,39 Cavallaro, Matteo...... 38,41 Edwards, Aaron...... 37 Andrews, Penny...... 28,39 Caygill, Thomas...... 37 Eichhorn, Kristin ...... 41,47 Annusewicz, Olgierd...... 41 Ceccarini, Luigi...... 41 Eklundh, Emmy...... 29,35,43 Antill, Ted...... 6,42 Celep, Odul...... 4,30 El-Affendi, Abdelwahab ...... 42,47 Arnall, Jenna...... 43 Chandler, Jim...... 34 El-Anis, Imad ...... 3,9,42,47 Arnott, Margaret...... 32 Charalambous, Giorgos...... 26,28,31 Elias, Anwen...... 35 Arya, Dena...... 33 Chatsiou, Kakia ...... 44 Enloe, Cynthia...... 3, 5-6,8,42 Asenbaum, Hans...... 32,34 Cheeseman, Nicholas...... 44,46 Eseonu, Temidayo...... 35 Atalay, Doga...... 39 Chen, Chi-Hsun...... 46 Ette, Mercy...... 31 Atkins, Judi...... 35,38 ...... Evershed, Jonathan...... 30 Audichya, Nikita...... 39 Chiapponi, Flavio 37 Chiocchetti, Paolo...... 28,47 Awan-Scully, Roger...... 4 F Chohan, Shamsher...... 6,42 Farrall, Stephen...... 26,45 B Chowdhury, Areeq...... 5,32 Farrands, Christopher...... 37 Badran, Ahmed...... 27 Chowdhury, Rajarshee...... 42-43 Farrell, Catherine...... 27 Bagur Taltavull, Juan...... 36 Chwistek, Benjamin...... 37 Favotto, Alvise...... 41 Bailey, Jack...... 43 Clarke QC MP, Kenneth...... 4,26 Fear, Christopher ...... 30,33 Baker, Rebecca...... 42 Clements, Ben...... 29,33 Feldmann, Magnus ...... 37 Barclay, Andrew ...... 29 Clemmons, Ajenai...... 45-46 Feo, Francesca...... 34 Barnett, Neil...... 30,32 Cochrane, Feargal...... 31 Filemon, Kristof...... 42 Bates, David...... 34 Collste, David ...... 39 Fine, Sarah...... 26 Bates, Stephen...... 6,40 Comic, Gordana...... 5,8,34 Finlayson, Alan...... 38,40 Battle, Martin...... 30 ...... Connolly, John 27,40 Fisher, Calum...... 44 Baykan, Toygar Sinan...... 4,30,43 ...... Convery, Alan 5,33 Fisher, Justin...... 5,33 Bee, Cristiano...... 44 ...... Cooper, Emmeline 43 Fisher, Rebecca...... 42 Begum, Neema...... 5,27,32,42 ...... Cooper, Sarah 35,38 Fleming, Thomas...... 37 Belknap, Emilia...... 35,44 Craig, John...... 38,40 Fleuss, Dannica...... 29,34 Bellodi, Luca...... 36 Crepaz, Katharina...... 35,46 Ford, Lucy ...... 39 Bennett, Natalie...... 4 Crines, Andrew...... 35 Ford, Rob...... 4,7,26 Bennister, Mark...... 32 Curato, Nicole...... 32 Fowler, Ceri...... 36 Benson, Jonathan...... 34 Curry, Dion...... 43 Fox, Stuart...... 40-41 Benson, Lucky...... 41 Custodi, Jacopo ...... 28 Franco Guillen, Nuria...... 35 Bercow MP, John ...... 3,5,7 Freudenstein, Roland ...... 4,26 Bernhard, Rachel...... 39,44 D Fuentes, Claudio...... 38,44 Beswick, Danielle...... 29,33,39 Dacombe, Rod...... 37, 40-41,43 Funk, Lothar...... 34 Bhatia, Udit...... 26,45 Dahl, Viktor...... 44 Furlong, James...... 41 Bielskis, Andrius...... 28 Damiani, Roberta ...... 34. Fuselli, Silvia ...... 4,30 Birks, Jen...... 34 Daniels, Steven...... 33 Blakely, Georgina ...... 38 Danilova, Nataliya ...... 28,34,36 G Blewitt, John...... 38,42 Davies, Graeme...... 5 Gallant, Nicole...... 46 Bochel, Catherine...... 32,41 Davies, Luke John ...... 31 Gamble, Andrew...... 34 Bomberg, Elizabeth...... 5,33 De Blasio, Emiliana...... 37 Game, Chris...... 46 Bon, Esmeralda...... 43 De Ceuninck, Koenraad...... 34 Gann, Rose...... 5,10,45 Bonansinga, Donatella...... 42 De Francesco, Fabrizio...... 27,36 Garcia, Maria...... 44 Boni, Filippo...... 28 De Rosa, Roberto...... 40 Gardner, Alison...... 34 Bonsoms, Aitor...... 40 De Rosa, rosanna ...... 41 Garry, John...... 6,43 Boschert, Eilish...... 28 De Vrieze, Franklin...... 27 Geddes, Marc...... 5,29,34 Boucher, Clementine...... 40 DeBattista, Andre...... 41 George, Ann ...... 28 Bowman, Benjamin...... 33,35,42 Decker, Philipp ...... 45 Gerver, Mollie...... 26 Boyd, Mark...... 43-44 Defty, Andrew...... 29 Gibson, Lisa...... 45 Bradbury, Jonathan ...... 27 Deligiaouri, Anastasia...... 40 Giovannini, Arianna...... 27,30,37,39 Breniaux, Claire...... 44 Demir, Emre...... 45-46 Glyniadaki, Katerina...... 28 Brown Swan, Coree...... 30,32 Demiralp, Seda...... 4,30 Goes, Eunice...... 37 Brown, Katy...... 27,47 Denham, John...... 6,8,43 Gonzalez Ginocchio, Brenda...... 4,27 Bua, Adrian...... 39,43 Dennis, James...... 29 Gordon, Uri...... 33 Bucaite Vilke, Jurga ...... 34 Deruelle, Thibaud...... 43,45 Gorry, Jon...... 40,47 Buchs, Milena...... 28 Desatova, Petra...... 43 Görtz, Carl...... 44 Budge, Ian...... 42,46 Dickinson, Nicholas...... 40 Gottwick, Vanessa...... 32 Bulat, Alexandra...... 23,30,45 Diepeveen, Stephanie...... 31 Goyal, Tanushree...... 44

48 Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Graef, Josefin...... 32,34,36 Karavasilis, Lazaros ...... 40 M Graefrath, Moritz Sebastian...... 36 Kartalis, Yani...... 29 Mac Carthaigh, Muiris...... 31 Granelli, Francesca...... 45 Kayhan Pusane, Ozlem...... 38,43 Machin, Amanda...... 32 Grassi, Samuele...... 28 Kaymaz, Nazli Pinar...... 36 Magalhaes, Bruno...... 41 Gray, Caroline...... 44 Kazmi, Arjumand...... 43 Maiguashca, Bice...... 29 Gray, Emily...... 26,45 Keith, Daniel...... 26,31 Maiorano, Diego...... 36,39 Gray, Nicholas...... 39 Kellgren-Parker, Leila-Clare...... 32 Manchanda, Nivi...... 4-5 Greenwood, Joe...... 4,23,35 Kelly, John...... 34 Mansell, Jon...... 36,39,41 Greer, Alan...... 29,31,34,37 Kettell, Steven...... 29 Manwaring, Rob...... 37 Griggs, Steven...... 30,32 Khalifa, Mahmoud...... 45 March, Luke...... 26 Guarneros-Meza, Valeria...... 30 Khatib, Ibrahim...... 45 Markou, Grigoris...... 32 Gueudet, Sophie...... 36 Khodair, Amany...... 45 Maronitis, Kostas...... 30 Gulmohamad, Zana...... 47 Khrushcheva, Olga ...... 36,46 Marsh, Wayde...... 6,27,42 Gursoy, Yaprak...... 4,30,33 Kilby, Allaina...... 32 Martin, James...... 35,38 Kim, Minjung...... 47 Martin, Natalie ...... 26,35,37,43 H Kim, So Youn...... 39,44 Hall, Amanda...... 31 Martin, Nicole...... 27-28 Kim, Yunji...... 29 Hallerberg, Mark ...... 28 Martus, Ellie...... 23,36 Kindo, Nikas ...... 42-43 Hammond, Marit...... 4,34 ...... King, Will...... 30 Matthews, Felicity 5,29,33,39 Haq, Nadia...... 43 ...... Kinna, Ruth...... 28,33 Matthews, Neil 35 Harding, Eloise...... 46 Kinnear, Olivia...... 26 Mattocks, Kate ...... 43 Harmes, Rick...... 30,38 Kintz, Melanie...... 37 Maudling, Clare ...... 38 Harrison, Oliver...... 26,38 Kirke, Xander...... 42 Mazzolini, Samuele...... 28 Hart, James...... 38 Kirkland, Christopher...... 46 Mbaye, Heather...... 42 Harvey, Malcolm...... 38,42 Kissane, William ...... 35 McAndrew, Siobhan...... 32 Hatzisavvidou, Sophia...... 35,38,40 Kitanova, Magdelina...... 44 McAnulla, Stuart...... 29,32 Haughey, Sean...... 32 Knoerich, Jan...... 33 McCabe, Leah...... 27,45 Haux, Tina...... 40 Knott, Andy...... 27,32,40,43 McDowell-Naylor, Declan...... 34 Hegedus, Daniel ...... 35 Kollman, Kelly...... 41 McEwen, Nicola...... 6,8,27,43 Hegele, Yvonne ...... 27 Kolpinskaya, Ekaterina...... 27,30,32,35 McGlinchey, Marisa...... 37 Heims, Eva...... 28 Korkut, Umut...... 39 McGregor, Allister...... 46 Henn, Matt...... 6,33,40,44 Kovras, Iosif...... 44,46 McIntyre, James...... 31 Herasimenka, Aliaksandr...... 42 Krulisova, Katerina...... 6,30,42,47 McKay, Fiona...... 29 Hibbs, Leah ...... 35 Kujur, Archana...... 42,44 McKay, Lawrence...... 26,30,36,39 Hillebrand, Rainer ...... 34 Kurylo, Bohdana...... 29 McKenna, Dave...... 27 Hindmoor, Andrew...... 4-5,27,33 Kutlay, Mustafa ...... 26,33,44 McKernan, John ...... 41 Hinton, Jennifer...... 45 Kutlay, Muzaffer...... 28 Mckibben, Charlene...... 37 Ho, Benjamin...... 41,45 Kwofie, Ernest...... 41 McManigal, Barney...... 47 Hood, Christopher...... 38 Kyroglou, Georgios...... 33,45 Meadowcroft, John ...... 42 Hopkins, Stephen...... 37 Meakin, Alexandra...... 37,39 Horgan, Amelia...... 29 L Medvedev, Sergey...... 33 ...... Hotham, Tristan 46 ...... Laihonen, Maarit 30 Merilainen, Niina...... 40 Howson, Alison...... 34 ...... Lakoma, Katarzyna 43 Meyer-Sahling, Jan...... 39 Huang, Xing...... 29 ...... Lamprinakou, Chrysa 33,43 ...... Hudson, Alexander...... 43 Middleton, Alia 41 Lange, Bettina...... 27 Hughes, Neil...... 40 Minto, Rachel...... 6,43 Lazar, Orlando...... 29 Hunt, Tom...... 46 Miyazaki, Masato...... 32 Leatham, Scott...... 26,31 Mizukoshi, Kazuma...... 38 Lee, Don S ...... 26,44,46 I Mogaki, Masahiro...... 27 Lee, Junhyoung...... 43 Ibisi, Suzana...... 29 Mokhefi-Ashton, Matthew...... 6,42, 44-45 Lee, Siuyau...... 39,45 Icoz, Gulay...... 38 Monahan, Martin...... 27,39,44 Lees, Nicholas...... 32 Ietter, Salome...... 47 Mondon, Aurelien...... 27,42,45 Leidig, Eviane...... 5,32 Iliadis, Christos ...... 29 Moon, David...... 40 Leone, Fabio...... 26 Imrie-Kuzu, Durukan ...... 38 Moorby, Graham...... 31 Leontsini, Eleni...... 28 Ingham, Leigh...... 33 Moore, Luke...... 33 Leston-Bandeira, Cristina...... 29 Ismail, Adamu...... 41 Morales, Laura ...... 31 Leung, Wan Chi...... 45 Morini, Mara...... 37 J Levy, Carl...... 28 Morphet, Janice...... 27,30,40 ...... Jackson, Justin 28,34,37 Levy, Sheldon...... 43 Morrison, James ...... 29 ...... Jacob, Marc S 28 Lewanika, McDonald...... 31 Moseley, Alice...... 38-39,43 Jacobs, Brian...... 45 Li, Yingru...... 41 Moses, Jonathon...... 34,39 James, Toby...... 36,39 ...... Lightfoot, Simon 38 ...... Jarrett, Henry...... 30 Mott, Gareth 26,47 Lilly, Alice...... 32 Jervis, Robin...... 29 Muir, Robyn...... 35,45 Little, Benjamin...... 39 Joe, Sarah...... 41 Mukhin, Nikolai...... 46 Liu, Lina...... 45 Joharchi, Sahra...... 37,43, 45-46 Munn, Meg...... 5,8,34 Liu, Siyang...... 34 Johns, Rob...... 5 Murphy, Mary C ...... 30 Lloyd, Janka...... 27,42 Johnson, Beth...... 26 Murphy, Sean...... 42 Lobos, Ana Maria...... 38 Jones, Nathan...... 33,46 Murtagh, Cera...... 29 Lockwood, Matthew...... 5,33 Jose, Jim...... 27 Muthuri, Judy...... 41 Loefflmann, Georg...... 35 Mutter, Sam...... 45 Lord, Ceren...... 38 K Mycock, Andrew...... 4,35,46 Kaim Khani, Arsalan Ayoub...... 46 Lorimer, Marta ...... 44 Kalpokas, Ignas...... 36 Loughran, Thomas ...... 30,35,46 N Kamkhaji, Jonathan...... 38 Love, Kevin...... 31,41,47 Nathrath, Jan...... 45,47 Kanazawa, Reiko...... 26 Lowndes, Vivien...... 44 Natusch, Grace...... 30 Karacan, Osman...... 41 Lucenti, Flavia...... 46 Newman, Jack...... 31 Karakaya Polat, Rabia...... 33,35,44 Luz, Michele Diana...... 47 Norris, Pippa...... 6,40 Karana Senol, Selin ...... 40 Lynch, Philip...... 37 Nwosu, Chiemezie...... 46

Political Studies Association - 69th Annual International Conference 49 Nottingham, 15 - 17 April 2019 Index of Names

O Royles, Elin...... 35 Tsagkroni, Vasiliki ...... 26,29 Rusel, Duncan...... 44 Tudor, Jack...... 36,39 O'Brien, Thomas...... 38,45 Russell, Sally...... 28 Tyers, Roger...... 28 Ogembo, Brenda...... 41 Russell, Siabhainn...... 43 Tyler, Colin ...... 34,36 Okpaleke, Francis...... 45 Rutter, Jill...... 4,26 Oliver, Tim...... 30,32 Ryan, John...... 26,34 U Oliver-Watts, Zoe...... 5,34 Ryan, Matt...... 37 Ulbricht, Alexej...... 34,37 O'Neill, Michael...... 4,26 Rye, Danny...... 30,33,36,41 Urbina, Maria...... 39 Onursal, Recep...... 38 Usherwood, Simon ...... 30,40 ...... Oppong-Asare, Abena 5 S Utz, Patrick ...... 32 Or, Nick...... 31,36 Sakurai, Takamichi...... 47 Ostrowski, Wojciech ...... 27 Sancton, Andrew...... 29 V Sarac, Busra Nisa...... 30 Valenzuela, Jose Maria...... 31,36 P Saunders, Clare...... 28 Vampa, Davide...... 34,44 Paget, Daniel...... 31,44,46 Savigny, Heather...... 40 van de Graaff, Shashi ...... 5,31,33,36 Pahontu, Raluca...... 44-45 Schackow, Nathan...... 40 van Gorp, Johannes ...... 38 Panayotu, Panos...... 44 Schenk, Nicholas...... 46 Vazquez, Jimena...... 32 Parker, Jenneth...... 27,42,45 Schnabel, Johanna...... 27 Velikanov, Cyril...... 26 Parkinson, John...... 40 Schneeberger MBE, Kirsty...... 4 Vemury, Chandra Mouli ...... 45 Parry, Emilie...... 45 Schoor, Carola...... 27 Vender, Kim...... 41 Parry, Katy...... 26 Schottli, Jivanta...... 26,36 Veneziani, Roberto...... 37 Patrick, Hosea Olayiwola...... 46 Seddone, Antonella...... 31,34,37 Venizelos, Giorgos...... 32 Patteri, Antonella...... 28 Selva, Donatella ...... 37 Vergara, Camila...... 35,37 Pauli, Markus...... 46 Semione, Juliana...... 46 Verney, Susannah...... 29 Pautz, Hartwig ...... 31,36,44 Sessa, Maria Giovanna...... 38 Viola, Julianne ...... 38 Paxton, Fred...... 31,37,45 Sheldon, Jack...... 32 Vlassopoulos, Chloe...... 26 Peace, Timothy...... 31 Shephard, Mark...... 34 ...... Pearson, Mitya...... 38 Voce, Helen 6,42 Siddiqui, Khurram ...... 45 Pegan, Andreja...... 27 Sijstermans, Judith...... 32 W Pencheva, Denny...... 30 Silvestri, Francesca...... 26,42,44 Wadia, Khursheed...... 45 Penel, Charlotte...... 32 Skeffington, Daniel...... 46 Walker, Andrew...... 39 Perry, Hazel...... 30 Sloam, James...... 6,40 Wall, Matthew...... 33,46 Petersohn, Bettina...... 27 Slothuus, Lukas...... 30,47 Walter, Lisa...... 40 Pettrachin, Andrea...... 37,45 Smith, Jessica...... 35 Wang, Shiyu...... 37 Pflaeger Young, Zoe...... 6,40 Smith, Katherine ...... 38,44 Wang, Tao...... 41,43 Phinnemore, David...... 4,7,26 Smith, Paul...... 34 Wassum, Moritz...... 26 Pickard, Sarah...... 6,33,40 Smith, William...... 32 Watanabe, Shun...... 42 Plakoudas, Spyridon...... 42 Sobolewska, Maria...... 5,32 Watkins, Heather...... 39 Plumb, Nick...... 31 Soo, Nikki...... 37 Watts, Ellen...... 26 Poberezhskaya, Marianna ...... 3,9,36,45 Sorice, Michele...... 37 Weinberg, James...... 6,40, 42-43 Pontes, Ana...... 44,46 Spada, Paolo ...... 37 Wescombe, Noah...... 39 Power, Greg...... 5,34 Spalińska, Aleksandra...... 36 Whitaker, Richard...... 37 Prentoulis, Marina...... 27,45 Spary, Carole...... 35-36,39 White, Hannah...... 32 Prescott, Craig...... 40 Stafford, Chris...... 30 Whitham, Ben...... 32 Pretorius, Corli...... 4 Stanley, Liam...... 4,27 Whiting, Matthew...... 29,35,38 Proedrou, Filippos...... 41 Stedall, Tom ...... 42 Whiting, Sophie...... 29 Pycock, Graham ...... 39 Stedtnitz, Christine...... 42 Wickham-Jones, Mark...... 34 Q Stirbu, Diana ...... 27 Widmann, Tobias...... 42 Quattromani, Dario...... 37,43 Stoker, Gerry...... 4,27 Wilks-Heeg, Stuart...... 36,39 Quinn, Tom...... 33,41 Stride, Gregory...... 30 Willett, Joanie...... 27-28 Strong, James...... 4-5,33,40 Williams, Helen...... 38,40 R Struve, Bastian...... 43 Williams, Matthew ...... 41 Raekstad, Paul ...... 29,33 Struye de Swielande, Tanguy...... 44 Wilson, Angelia...... 3-5,27 Rafiq, Samah...... 39,47 Suissa, Judith...... 28 Wincott, Daniel...... 30,43 Rahim, Sana...... 30 Suleymanoglu Kurum, Rahime...... 27,35 Winrow, Marc Sinan...... 33 Rainsford, Emily...... 35, 38-39 Sullivan-Thomsett, Chantal ...... 31 Wood, Matt...... 24 Ramgotra, Manjeet...... 6,40 ...... Sutherland, Ewan 27,30 Woodcock, Peter ...... 40 Rao, Anand...... 44 ...... Swann, Thomas 33 Worthy, Benjamin...... 42,46 Rao, Sumedh...... 5,23 Szoecsik, Edina...... 35 Wring, Dominic...... 31-32 Raymond, Christopher...... 32 Read, Rupert...... 39 T X Taflaga, Marija...... 28,30 Reayat, Nauman...... 36,44 Xypolia, Ilia...... 27,35,44,47 Reiter, Renate...... 40 Taggart, Paul...... 46 Resodihardjo, Sandra...... 36 Tanaka, Satoshi...... 36 Y Reuter, Enrico...... 47 Taylor, Dan ...... 27 Yamada, Ryusaku...... 36 Rex, Bethany...... 31 Temple, Luke...... 29 York, Matt...... 36 Reynaert, Herwig ...... 34 Teo, En Qi ...... 37 Yumlu, Ogan...... 46 Richardson, Josie...... 34 Terlizzi, Andrea...... 39 Richardson, Kay ...... 26 Terui, Takao...... 43 Z ...... Rizova, Tatiana...... 38,41 Thomann, Eva...... 43,45 Zemandl, Eva 28,33,39,43 Robinson, Paul ...... 45 Thompson, Andrew...... 26,35 Zhao, Yiyang ...... 46 Rodrigues Vieira, Vinicius ...... 33 Thompson, Louise...... 29,38 Zhu, Jingyan ...... 35 Roelofs, Portia ...... 31 Thomson, Jennifer...... 38,40 Zhu, Jintao...... 44 Rogelja, Igor...... 37 Thornton, Stephen ...... 28 Zicman de Barros, Thomas...... 45 Rombi, Stefano...... 34 Ting, Wang Leung...... 33 Zimmer, Daniel...... 26 Ronderos, Sebastian...... 43 Tiwari, Ramkanta...... 36 Zito, Anthony...... 33 Ross, Alistair...... 6,40,42 Tobin, Paul ...... 4-5,33 Zorlu, Begum...... 35 Roussos, Konstantinos...... 32 Tomic, Slobodan...... 28,36,39 Zulianello, Mattia...... 37 Rovid, Marton...... 45 Tonge, Jonathan ...... 35,46 Zunino, Mattia...... 37,41 Rowe, Robyn...... 35 Toplisek, Alen...... 35 Roy, Indrajit...... 26,31,33,36 Tran, Carolyn...... 29

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