Council for European Studies Annual Conference 2015, Sciences Po, Paris, France

June 7, 2017 | Autor: Grace Ballor | Categoría: European Studies
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Council for European Studies

Contradictions Envisioning European Futures 22nd International Conference of Europeanists Paris, France • July 8 - 10, 2015

Program

The Centre d’études européennes (CEE) is a multidisciplinary centre dedicated to the comparative analysis of politics and public policy. Created in 2005, it is a joint research unit of CNRS (UMR8239) and Sciences Po. It brings together about 90 scholars (senior researchers, postdocs, PhD students and research assistants), as well as about twenty associate researchers from France and abroad. They form a strong team through their shared approach to research and participatory governance. The Centre’s researchers are affiliated with four departments (political science, sociology, law and history), as well as with the Paris School for International Affairs (PSIA). The CEE’s research, which combines basic and applied research, focuses on a number of key themes: •

• • • • • •

“A comprehensive approach to European integration” “Cities, territories and migrations” “Environment and Politics” “International Political Economy” “The everyday experience of politics: individuals and public policy” “Values, attitudes and political behaviours” “Institutions and political competition”

Most of the research projects adopt an international and/or comparative approach, and the results are frequently published in international peer-reviewed journals. About 90 scientific events related to the research projects are organized every year, gathering scholars, media and civil society. The CEE contributes to the structuration of the European Research Space in social and political sciences, especially through the design and management of various programs and partnerships supported by EU institutions like the European Research Council. The CEE also regularly hosts leading scholars invited for periods ranging from one month to one year.

Centre d'études européennes de Sciences Po www.cee.sciences-po.fr - [email protected] https://www.facebook.com/cee.sciencespo?fref=photo

Comparative Migration Studies (CMS)

Comparative Migration Studies (CMS) is an international, peer-reviewed journal that provides a platform for articles that focus on comparative research in migration, integration, and ethnic studies. It presents readers with an extensive collection of comparative analysis, including studies between countries, groups, levels, and historical periods. Contributions cover a wide disciplinary angle, from sociology to political science, anthropology to economics and law. Topics include: assimilation, migration policies, incorporation policies, governance of migration and integration, ethnic/ cultural/religious diversity, migrant rights, gender and migration, migration and citizenship, migration and national identity, migration and security, civic integration, nationalism and migration, and ethnic entrepreneurship. CMS also sponsors the best paper award of the CES Immigration Research Group. CMS is a regular peer reviewed journal that prints hard copies but also publishes in Open Access. We are the only journal in our field that provides OA publishing ‘free of charge’ because of the sponsoring by the IMISCOE network

Special issues:

CMS also provides an outlet for coherent special issues. Every proposal will be reviewed by the Editorial Board. If approved, all individual articles from the special issue will be subjected to double-blind peer review independently. The next ‘call for special issue proposals’ is due on September 30th, 2015.

Online submission:

Now accepting submissions through the SpringerOpen online portal Editorial Manager. Read more about the journal on SpringerOpen: comparativemigrationstudies.com CMS is associated with the research network IMISCOE (International Migration, Integration and Social Cohesion in Europe) see: www.imiscoe.org F: facebook.com/comparativemigrationstudies T: @JournalCMS E: [email protected]

CES Executive Committee

Conference Program Committee

Juan Díez Medrano, Chair Universidad Carlos III, Madrid

Jenny Andersson, Co-Chair Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS

Sheri Berman Barnard College

Robert Fishman, Co-Chair University of Notre Dame

Jason Beckfield Harvard University

Jan Willem Duyvendak University of Amsterdam

Erik Bleich Middlebury College

Virginie Guiraudon Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS

Jan Willem Duyvendak University of Amsterdam

Valerie Bunce Cornell University

Virginie Guiraudon Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS

László Bruszt European University Institute

Julia Lynch University of Pennsylvania Isabela Mares Columbia University Deborah Reed-Danahay SUNY at Buffalo

Local Organizing Committee Virginie Guiraudon, Chair Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Linda Amrani Sciences Po, CEE

CES Administration

Renaud Dehousse Sciences Po, CEE

Siovahn Walker Council for European Studies

Nancy L. Green Center for Historical Research, EHESS

Henrike Dessaules Council for European Studies

Patrick Le Galès Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS

Hudjy Dolce Council for European Studies

Andy Smith Sciences Po, Bordeaux

Jacqueline Lerescu Council for European Studies

Antoine Vauchez University of Paris 1, Pantheon-Sorbonne Cornelia Woll Sciences Po, CEE, MaxPo

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Global Affairs – New for 2015! Global Affairs is a new journal by EISA, published in partnership with Taylor & Francis. The journal will focus on global affairs, including diplomacy, strategy, political economy and policy. To celebrate the launch of Global Affairs, we have made the first issue completely free for you to read, share and enjoy. Visit: bit.ly/GlobalAffairs to start reading.

*log in or registration required

Table of Contents Call for Papers: 23rd International Conference

of Europeanists - Philadelphia, PA, U.S., 2015

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Welcome Message 7 Where to Go, Who to Ask

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Schedule of Sessions & Events Wednesday, July 8, 2015

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Thursday, July 9, 2015 29 Friday, July 10, 2015 49 Plenaries & Meetings 64 Research Network Sessions 65 Mini-Symposia 71 Subject Index 74 Participant Index 75

Resources Maps 83 Special Events 84 Restaurants 88

This work is supported by a public grant overseen by the French National Research Agency (ANR) as part of the “Investissements d’Avenir” program LIEPP (reference: ANR-11-LABX-0091, ANR-11-IDEX-0005-02).

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European Studies Book Award The European Studies Book Award honors the work of new scholars and is awarded to the best first book on any subject in European Studies published in a two-year period. Nominations may be submitted by a

publisher, author, or admiring colleague. For more information visit the CES website. Deadlines: The nomination period opens on July 1, 2015. All nominations must be received by September 30, 2015.

For more information consult our website:

www.councilforeuropeanstudies.org Council for European Studies

Call for Papers Twenty-Third International Conference of Europeanists Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. • April 14-16, 2016 Organized by the Council for European Studies (CES)

Resilient Europe? Resilience is the capacity to survive, to bounce back and to innovate in the wake of extraordinary stress or unexpected crises. Psychologists view resilience as a character trait. Today, researchers and scholars of all stripes are beginning to understand resilience as constitutive of societies as well as of individuals. The Program Committee for the 23rd International Conference of Europeanists invites participants to consider contemporary Europe’s capacity for resilience. Since the financial crisis began in 2008, stresses and shocks of various sorts have posed dilemmas that challenge Europe’s resilience in economic, political, and cultural domains. How will European economies confront slow growth and austerity, as well as the atrophy of “social Europe” and the growth of inequality? How will demographic decline combined with immigration and assimilation affect the ethnic composition of Europe? Will the protracted Eurozone crisis and waning public support for European institutions and policies alter the viability of the European project? How will secular Europe confront the challenges of religious mobilization? How will European democracies confront the rise of nationalist parties and the valorization of “illiberalism” as viable political practice? Can Europe remain a “Normative Power,” a force for liberalism, democracy and the rule of law in the world, in the face of rising powers and resurgent authoritarianism? The Council for European Studies (CES) seeks proposals that explore these questions and the quality of resilience in Europe. It encourages proposals from the widest range of disciplines and, in particular, proposals that combine disciplines, nationalities, and generations. CES invites proposals for panels, roundtables, book discussions and individual papers on the study of Europe, broadly defined, and strongly encourages participants to submit their proposals as part of an organized panel. Full panel proposals will be given top priority in the selection process. To form panels, participants may find it useful to connect with like-minded scholars through the many CES research networks, which can be found here: http://councilforeuropeanstudies.org/research/research-networks Proposals may be submitted from August 17 to October 1, 2015. Participants will be notified of the Program Committee’s decision by December 10, 2015. Information on how to submit proposals will be posted on the CES website and disseminated through its newsletter. To subscribe to the CES newsletter visit: http://councilforeuropeanstudies.org/ Juan Díez Medrano, Chair, Council for European Studies Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Mabel Berezin, Co-Chair, CES Conference Program Committee Cornell University

Mark Pollack, Co-Chair, CES Conference Program Committee Temple University

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Welcome Message Dear CES community,

Welcome Message

Reading the titles of recent CES conference programs—Crisis & Contingency (2013), Resurrections (2014), and Contradictions: Envisioning European Futures (2015)—it seems that Europe’s battle to remain relevant is almost lost. At the very least, I see a Europe besieged by neoliberalism, by immigrants, by populist/nationalist movements, by ill-conceived economic policies. I know that this was not the Program Committee’s intention. The title of this program means to convey an optimist message, the idea that Europe is able to bounce back after a dramatic financial and economic crisis, with a future worth envisioning. Yet, when I examine the exciting panels that compose this year’s Conference, my initial perception prevails: Europe is in trouble. All the same, it is also clear from perusing the program that this year’s international Conference of Europeanists brings together the world's scholars and researchers working on Europe. And perhaps it could not be otherwise. For this year we meet in Paris, and are hosted by one of France’s leading academic institutions, Sciences Po. The program includes papers on seminal topics such as welfare states, migration, democracy, and memory, seen from many perspectives and encompassing the most recent developments. Indeed, I can see future historians consulting this program to understand what interested today's leading scholars of Europe. And when they do, they will rightly conclude that politics, policy, the state, and the economy were central preoccupations, while popular culture, an important topic in research on the U.S., was of secondary concern. I thus applaud the Program Committee’s effort to represent research in this area and to encourage submissions from those working on music, art, entertainment, etc. Future historians will also conclude that today's research on Europe was highly introspective and surprisingly unconcerned by the role of emerging economies in Asia. I wish this were less the case and I hope at future conferences to see more Europeanists seriously looking eastward and reflecting on how events and developments in that part of the world may be affecting Europe. This Program was completed before the devastating tragedy of Charlie Hébdo. Thus, the panels and papers presented will not directly address the meaning, causes, and consequences of it. I am happy, how-

ever, that this International Conference for Europeanists takes place in France. It makes our exercise of the rights of freedom of speech and rational discussion— the civic and intellectual virtues which are at the heart of the academic enterprise—even more significant. I have no doubt that Charlie Hébdo will be discussed extensively in panels and corridors and that these discussions will be reflected in next year’s program. I would like to thank the CES staff for their tremendous dedication, enthusiasm, and coordinating skills. I would also like to thank the Program Committee, chaired by Jenny Andersson and Robert Fishman, and the Local Organizing Committee for their efforts to make this conference a success. In particular, I am really very grateful to Virginie Guiraudon, the LoC’s Chair, for having agreed to organize the conference in this city. And, of course, I would like to thank our incredibly generous conference sponsors: • Sciences Po • Centre d'études européennes (CEE) - Sciences Po • Laboratoire interdisciplinaire d'évaluation des politiques publiques (LIEPP) - Sciences Po • L'École des hautes études en sciences sociales (l'EHESS) • Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) • Association française de science politique (AFSP) • Alliance • Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (JEMS) • Journal of Contemporary Market Studies (JCMS) In particular, I extend many thanks to LIEPP for its generous sponsorship of the Presidential Reception. Finally, I would like to thank you, the participants in this conference, as well as the members of the Council’s growing research networks. It is your presence that makes this the world’s leading professional forum devoted to research on Europe. I hope and expect that this will be an unforgettable experience for us all!

Warmest regards, Juan Díez Medrano Chair, Council for European Studies (CES) Universidad Carlos III de Madrid

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Where to Go, Who to Ask

Conference Info

Just arrived? Visit the Registration Desk! As soon as you arrive at the conference, please checkin at the Registration Desk located in the lobby of 28 rue des Saints-Pères, 75007 Paris, France. Our Registration Desk staff will give you a badge, badge holder, and conference packet, and make note of your arrival. Hate standing in line? Well, if you are on campus on the afternoon of July 7th, you can skip the crowds by checking-in at our Early Registration Desk. Located in room C002 at 28 rue des Saints-Pères, the Early Registration Desk will be open from 1:00pm to 5:00pm. So, skip the crowds and come on by! Payments & Certificates of Attendance To finalize a payment or request a Certificate of Attendance, visit CES Administrative Services, located next to the Registration Desk. A Council staff member will be on call throughout the conference to facilitate on-site registrations, provide Certificates of Attendance, and answer administrative and financial questions. Get CES gear and enter the raffle! Wondering how to get totally cool CES swag? Want

to enter our daily raffle or ask about your member benefits? Visit the Engagement Booth! Located next to the Registration Desk in the lobby of 28 rue des Saints-Pères, the Engagement Booth is where you should go to buy CES gear, find out more about your CES membership, get directions, pick up a map of Paris, etc. At the Engagement Desk you can also drop off your free raffle ticket and win a gorgeous CES leather padfolio worth $55 and other nifty stuff. Places to Go Between Sessions Looking for some place to hang out and chat between sessions? If so, visit the lobby and gardens of 13 rue de l'Université. Coffee/tea will be served there each morning, and you can check-out the latest publications in European Studies by perusing the exhibit tables. Or, visit one of the many local restaurants, bakeries and café suggested by our Local Organizing Committee on page 88 of this program. Looking for a quiet place to work between sessions? Two or three rooms will be designated as quiet work spaces each day of the conference. Stop by the Registration Desk to inquire about study hall locations.

Technology Powerpoint and Projectors Every session room is equipped with a PC computer, projector, and projection screen. Session organizers are strongly encouraged to collect all presentations on a USB flash drive before the conference and then to arrive early to pre-load those files. Both these actions will help prevent technological delays during the session. Attendees wishing to test their presentations on projecting equipment prior to the start of their sessions are encouraged to arrive early at their session room or to inquire about alternative testing sites by visiting the Registration Desk. Remember! You must bring your presentation on a flash drive. Mobile Conference App There is also an official conference app available for

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download on all Android, Apple, and Blackberry devices. The app include information about sessions, locations, exhibitors, and other useful information. Info on how to download this app is provided in the conference packet and on the CES website. Wi-Fi Access Wi-Fi access is available free to all registered conference attendees within the designated conference venues. Information about how to access your individual Wi-Fi will be available at the Registration Desk, and will be provided to attendees when they check-in. Computer Rooms Those conference attendees who require the use of a computer or printer may visit 13 rue de l'Université, rooms J306 and J307.

Contradictions: Envisioning European Futures 22nd International Conference of Europeanists Paris, France • July 8-10, 2015

Conference Program

This work is supported by a public grant overseen by the French National Research Agency (ANR) as part of the “Investissements d’Avenir” program LIEPP (reference: ANR-11-LABX-0091, ANR-11-IDEX-0005-02).

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Participants

Michael Baum

Klaus Linsenmeier

Anna Hofman

Luc Luyten

Martin Hynes

Philippe Keraudren

Wednesday, July 8

Board Member Luso-American Foundation Program Director, Team Science & Research ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius Executive Director European Science Foundation

Director, Europe Office Heinrich Böll Foundation Chairman Evens Foundation Head of Unit European Commission DG for Research & Innovation

Moderator

Juan Díez Medrano, Professor at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid and Chair of the Council for European Studies (CES)

This very special Chair's Roundtable brings together distinguished representatives of the leading funders of European research and asks the question: What will the future look like for researchers working in European Studies? Moderated by Juan Díez Medrano, Professor at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid and Chair of the Council for European Studies (CES), this roundtable will feature representatives from the European Science Foundation, the Luso-American Foundation, ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius, the Evens Foundation, and the Heinrich Böll Foundation.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015 2:00pm - 3:45pm Erignac Amphitheater 13 rue de l’Université

Wednesday, July 8

002. The Role of EU Institutions in Migration and Asylum Policies: Jurisprudence and Enforcement 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Eiko Thielemann, London School of Economics and Political Science Participants: Who Guards the Guardians? Human Rights Constraints on EU Extraterritorial Migration and Asylum Policy and Activity. Ralph Wilde, University College London The Role of EU Institutions in Migration and Asylum Policies: Liberal Constraint? Luisa Marin, University of Twente; Ann Morissens, University of Twente The Court of Justice As a Progressive Force for Rights Recognition: The Case of Migration Law and the Right to Receive Asylum. Mariana Gkliati, Leiden University Constraining Case Law: A Tale of How EU Member States Trying to Avoid Liberal Constraints and How the European Court of Justice Did Not Listen. Moritz Jesse, Leiden University The EU Liberal Constraint or the ECtHR Liberal Constraint? The Case of Italy’s Treatment of Boat People Seeking Asylum. Irial Glynn, Leiden University Discussant: Saskia Bonjour, University of Amsterdam 003. Constructing the Leviathan: State-Building on a Contentious Continent 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Frédéric Mérand, Université de Montréal Participants: Europeanization of Statehood in the Western Balkans: A Poststructuralist Account. Senka Neuman, University of Groningen Coalition Governments and Corruption: A Comparative Analysis of the Post-War Cabinets in 38 Democracies. Hanna Bäck, Lund University; Jan Teorell, Lund University The Legacy of War on State Capacity. Didac Queralt,

004. The Cultural Effects of Europeanization: Establishing Ethical Norms 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Ulrike Liebert, University of Bremen, Centre for European Studies Participants: Advocating Gender Equity in Europe: Community Norms and British Realities. Laura Frader, Northeastern University Is Europeanization in Turkey Alive and Kicking? The Mobilization of European Human Rights Discourse in Constitution Writing. Zeynep Yanasmayan, European University Viadrina Seen By Administrative Authorities: Towards Europeanization of Asylum Practices in Germany and Sweden? Karin Schittenhelm, University of Siegen; Stephanie Schneider, University of Siegen; Kristina Wottrich, University of Siegen Discussant: Ulrike Liebert, University of Bremen, Centre for European Studies

Wednesday, July 8

001. The Debate About the Axial Age 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: John Torpey, CUNY Graduate Center Participants: John Stuart-Glennie’s Lost Theory of the Moral Revolution, 75 Years Before Jaspers’ Theory of the Axial Age. Eugene Halton, University of Notre Dame Modernity as an Axial Age? Between Transition and Reinterpretation. Paolo Pombeni, Italian-German Historical Institute Catholic Modernities within an Axial Age Perspective. Rosario Forlenza, Columbia University; Bjørn Thomassen, Roskilde University Discussant: John Boy, CUNY Graduate Center

Juan March Institute The Impact of Independence War Dynamics on PostIndependence Fiscal Capacity: Evidence from Spanish America. Luz Marina Arias, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE); Luis De La Calle, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE) Janus Unravelled: External State-Building Against ‘Party Politics as Usual’: The Case of Civil Service Reforms in Four Ministries in Albania. Nisida Gjoksi, European University Institute Discussant: Timothy Waters, Indiana University, Maurer School of Law

005. Understanding the Emergence of Populist Movements in Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: Marc Lazar, Sciences Po, CERI, CHSP Participants: Why, to Date, There Has Been No Populism in Spain? Takis Pappas, University of Freiburg Explaining the Emergence of Entrepreneurial Populism in Austria and the Czech Republic. Reinhard Heinisch, University of Salzburg; Steven Saxonberg, Masaryk University New Left Populism in Contemporary Spain? The Upsurge of Podemos. Margarita Gomez-Reino, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia; Iván Llamazares, Universidad de Salamanca The Electoral Success of the Radical Right in Europe: The Importance of Immigration Revisited. Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa Measuring Right-Wing Populism? Evidence from the German Party System. Marcel Lewandowsky, HelmutSchmidt-University/University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg; Heiko Giebler, Berlin Social Science Center; Aiko Wagner, Berlin Social Science Center

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Wednesday, July 8

006. What Europeans Think: Analyzing Recent Research on European Public Opinion 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Julie Nielsen, University of Copenhagen Participants: Same Crisis, Contradicting Results? Citizens’ Perceptions and Eurosceptic Parties in Southern Europe. Ilke Toygur, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Crisis, Class, and Social Policy: Public Opinion and Inequality. Anthony Kevins, Aarhus University; Alexander Horn, Aarhus University; Kees van Kersbergen, Aarhus University ‘Us’ Versus ‘Them’: How Trust and Identity Shape Citizens’ Political Worldview during the Financial Crisis in Europe. Eri Bertsou, London School of Economics and Political Science How Do European Citizens Envision European Futures? Exploring Temporality As a Predicting Factor of Citizens’ Attitudes Towards the EU. Céline Belot, Sciences Po Grenoble, PACTE; Virginie Van Ingelgom, Université catholique de Louvain 007. After Austerity: Southern Europe in Hard Times 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Participants: The Fall of the Celtic Tiger and the Spanish Bull. Sebastián Royo, Suffolk University Administrative, Welfare and Education Reform in the Context of Economic Crisis: Lessons from the Case of Greece, 2010-2014. Dimitrios Sotiropoulos, University of Athens Civil Society and Protest during Times of Crisis. Tiago Fernandes, New University of Lisbon How Economic Crisis Is Changing Party Systems: The Cases of Southern Europe (2008-14). Leonardo Morlino, LUISS ‘G. Carli’ Political Mistrust and the Great Recession in Southern Europe. Diego Muro, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI) Discussant: Kenneth Dubin, Anglia Ruskin University 008. Bonapartism in Europe: Contradictions of Democracy in France and Italy 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam Participants: Bonapartism, Gaullism, and Populism: The Contradictions of Democratic Traditions in France and Europe. Ido de Haan, Utrecht University Vox Populi, Vox Dei: Napoleon III, the Man of Providence Appointed By Popular Acclaim. Juliette Glikman, Université Paris 1 - Panthéon Sorbonne The Fronte Dell’uomo Qualunque, Anti-Party Rhetoric and the Quest for Democratic Legitimacy in the Transition from Fascism to Republic in Italy, 19451948. Pepijn Corduwener, Utrecht University Institutions and Leadership: Berlusconi in Historical

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Perspective. Giovanni Orsina, Luiss-Guido Carli University, Rome Discussant: Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam 009. Contested EU Mobility: Challenging the Conditions for EU Freedom of Movement? 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Ilke Adam, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Participants: Better Legal Status, Better Integration? The Role of EU Citizenship in the Integration of Bulgarian Migrants in Germany. Vesela Kovacheva, Hamburg Institute of International Economics, University of Münster Solidarity (Still) in the Making: European Union Citizenship and Social Rights. Paul Minderhoud, Radboud University Nijmegen; Sandra Mantu, Radboud University Nijmegen Restrictions of EU Citizens’ Mobility: Peculiarities of Spain. Pilar Jimenez Blanco, University of Oviedo; Angel Espinella Menendez, University of Oviedo ‘Their’ Poverty Is ‘Our’ Problem: Explaining Continuities and Discontinuities in Xenophobic Responses to Crisis. Marlou Schrover, Leiden University Discussant: Christof Roos, Vrije Universiteit Brussel 010. Crisis, Emergency and EU Politics 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: Hussein Kassim, University of East Anglia Participants: Urgency Meets Inertia: European Emergency Governance in the Sovereign Debt Crisis. Christian Kreuder-Sonnen, WZB Berlin Social Science Center The Politics of Emergency in the EU. Dionyssis Dimitrakopoulos, Birkbeck College, University of London Courts, Central Banks and Bureaucracies in the Eurozone Crisis. Antoine Vauchez, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne, CNRS The European Commission and the Growth…of Economists’ Power. Didier Georgakakis, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne Economists at the Heart of Europe? Frédéric Lebaron, Université de Versailles-Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines Discussant: Jonathan White, London School of Economics and Political Science 011. Economic Policy Challenges for the European Union: Securing the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership and Maintaining the Common Currency 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: David Cleeton, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign, Illinois State University Participants: Global Supply Chains and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. David Cleeton, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Resisting Integration? Activist Responses to the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Negotiations. Maria Garcia, University of Bath The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership: Implications for European Economic and Political Cohesion. Alan Cafruny, Hamilton College Discussants: Alan Cafruny, Hamilton College; Maria Garcia, University of Bath

013. Explaining Cross-National Differences in Public Health Approaches: How Do Institutions Matter? 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania Participants: Multilevel Governance and the Regulation of Noncommunicable Diseases (NCDs) in the European Union. Donley Studlar, University of Strathclyde Beyond Isomorphism: The Uneven Diffusion in France of International Public Health Innovations. Henri Bergeron, Sciences Po, CSO, CNRS; Patrick Castel, Sciences Po, CSO Weighing Risks: Policy-Making, Science and the Politics of Contaminated Blood. Rosemary Taylor, Tufts University Fighting AIDS in French Guyana: Capsizing Minds in Paris First. Marc Dix-Neuf, Sidaction Discussant: Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania 014. Toward Balance in the New Welfare State 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chair: Franca van Hooren, VU University of Amsterdam Participants: Small Welfare States in Motion. Anton Hemerijck, VU University Amsterdam; Franca van Hooren, VU University of Amsterdam The End of Decent Incomes for the Poor? The Fatal Link Between Minimum Wages and Social Benefits in World’s Most Developed Welfare States. Bea

015. Inequalities and the Welfare State 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Sonja Blum, University of Vienna Participants: Elite Ideology, Rhetoric and the Welfare State in the British House of Commons, 1987-2014. Tom O’Grady, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Support for Redistribution and Immigration in Advanced Industrialised Societies. Gerda Hooijer,

Wednesday, July 8

012. Envisioning European Futures through Cultural Practices 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chair: Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University Participants: European Dis/Union: The Creative Europe Programme and the Europeanization of Culture. Randall Halle, University of Pittsburgh Female Industrial Labor in Contemporary European Cinema. Barbara Mennel, University of Florida, Gainesville Skins: The Politics of Intimacy in Contemporary European Cinema. Beverly Weber, University of Colorado Boulder; Maria Stehle, University of Tennessee Knoxville From Colonial Past to Cosmopolitan Future: Extreme Makeovers in European Ethnology Museums. Katrin Sieg, Georgetown University Discussant: Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University

Cantillon, Herman Deleeck Centre for Social Policy; Natascha Van Mechelen, Herman Deleeck Centre for Social Policy; Diego Collado, Herman Deleeck Centre for Social Policy The ‘New’ Social Investment in Context: The Human Capital Stock in Five Countries. Tony Fahey, University College Dublin How Universal Is the Danish Welfare State? Paul Marx, University of Southern Denmark; Michael Klitgaard, University of Southern Denmark A Welfare State for Whom? The Impact of Social Investment Reforms on Income and Activation in the Netherlands. Menno Soentken, VU University Amsterdam; Franca van Hooren, VU University of Amsterdam; Deborah Rice, University Oldenburg Discussant: Peter Starke, University of Southern Denmark

THE TOCQUEVILLE REVIEW

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he Tocqueville Review is a French-American bilingual journal devoted to the comparative study of social change, primarily in Europe and the United States, but also covering major developments in other parts of the world, in the spirit of Alexis de Tocqueville’s pioneer investigations. The journal publishes essays on current affairs, history, and political philosophy. The journal is available in print and online at Project MUSE – http://bit.ly/ttr_pm Join TTR email list! Sign up here – http://bit.ly/ttralerts Visit us at bit.lyttr_pm 13

University of Oxford You Can Go Your Own Way? Job Flexibility, Skills, and Occupational Gender Segregation in Advanced Democracies. Øyvind Skorge, London School of Economics and Political Science Discussant: Miguel Glatzer, La Salle University

Wednesday, July 8

016. Patterns of Migrant Mobilization at the National and Local Level in the US and Europe After 9/11 (SOMI Project) 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Simon Reich, Rutgers University Participants: A Pluridisciplinary Approach of Migrant Mobilization as a Response to Securitization. Ariane Chebel d’Appollonia, Rutgers University Far from Monolithic: An In-Depth Look at Latino Subgroups’ Mobilization Patterns in a Post 9/11 Context. Karina Saldivar, Long Island University Are Muslims in Europe an Under Class? Jocelyne Cesari, Harvard University Britain’s ‘Islamic Republic’? State and Media Influences on Muslim Politics in the East End of London. Daniel DeHanas, King’s College London Discussant: Martin Schain, New York University 017. Persistent Neo-liberalism during the Great Recession 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Remy Davison, Monash University Participants: Delimiting the ‘Berlin Consensus’: Power Politics in Ordoliberal and Neoliberal Frameworks. Holly Snaith, University of Copenhagen; Peter Nedergaard, University of Copenhagen The Bocconi Boys Go to Brussels: Italian Economic Ideas, Transnational Sites of Power and European Economic Policy. Oddny Helgadottir, Brown University Disciplinary Neoliberalism and Anti- Austerity Movements in Europe. Beyza Tekin, Galatasaray University Ideational Power in the Euro Crisis. Martin Carstensen, Copenhagen Business School Discussant: Remy Davison, Monash University 018. Political Salience, Private Interests, and the Regulation of Finance 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Cornelia Woll, Sciences Po, CEE, MaxPo Participants: Salience, Responsiveness and Business Power: Executive Pay Regulation in the UK and US. Pepper Culpepper, European University Institute; Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley The Power of Political Networks: Lobbying and Policy Entrepreneurship in the UK Banking Reform Process. Scott James, Kings College London; Dimitris Christopoulos, Modul University

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Weak Interests and the Politics of Legitimation: An Empirical Examination of Financial Reforms in the EU and the US after the Subprime Crisis. Lisa Kastner, Sciences Po, CEE, MaxPo Taxing Financial Transactions in the First Golden Age of Finance Capitalism. Elsa Massoc, University of California, Berkeley After Dodd-Frank: The Post-Enactment Politics of Financial Reform in the United States. J. Nicholas Ziegler, University of California, Berkeley; John Woolley, University of California Santa Barbara Discussant: Gunnar Trumbull, Harvard University 019. Queering Anti-Austerity: Gender, Sexuality, and Social Movements 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: Cristina Flesher Fominaya, University of Aberdeen Participants: LGBT Activism in the Context of Neoliberalism and Neo-Conservatism in Turkey. Mary Bernstein, University of Connecticut; Caner Hazar, University of Connecticut Sexual Politics of Austerity: Queer Movements and Marxism in Contemporary Greece. Konstantinos Eleftheriadis, European University Institute Queering Spanish Social Protests: “Body Coalitions” in Neoliberal Times. Gracia Trujillo, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha The Role of Feminist Participation during the Winter 2012 Mobilizations in Romania. Alexandra Ana, Scuola Normale Superiore / Universita di Bologna “Occupy Patriarchy!” Feminism in and Against Occupy Camps in Scotland. Catherine Eschle, University of Strathclyde Discussant: David Paternotte, Université Libre de Bruxelles 020. Should We Continue to Study the European Union? 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: Renaud Dehousse, Sciences Po, CEE Discussants: Emmanuel Mourlon-Druol, University of Glasgow; Virginie Guiraudon, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS; Sabine Saurugger, Sciences Po Grenoble; Andy Smith, Sciences Po, Bordeaux 021. The EU as a Security Actor 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Hylke Dijkstra, Maastricht University Participants: Europe’s Return to United Nations Peacekeeping? Challenges, Opportunities and Ways Ahead. Joachim Koops, Vesalius College, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Stabilisation and Association: A Contradictory Security Strategy for the Future of Europe? Annemarie Rodt, Roskilde University Liberal Power Europe: Liberal Identities and Institutional Constraints in EU Crisis Management. Wolfgang Wagner, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam The European Union as a Mediator in International

Peace Negotiations. Julian Bergmann, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Mainz; Arne Niemann, University of Mainz Discussant: Hylke Dijkstra, Maastricht University

023. The European Union at a Crossroads: Political Tensions, Economic Weakness, and the Integration Process in Danger 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Vivien Schmidt, Boston University Discussants: Maurizio Ferrera, University of Milan; Jan Zielonka, University of Oxford St. Antony’s College; Caroline de la Porte, Roskilde University; David Natali, University of Bologna 024. The Institutional and Cultural Integration of Immigrants in Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Erik Bleich, Middlebury College Participants: Evaluating the Governance of Islam in France. Jonathan Laurence, Boston College De facto Immigrant Cultural Integration: Supermarket Products in France and the United Kingdom. Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill What is at Stake in Military Chaplaincy When Muslims Join the Ranks? An International Comparison. Ines Michalowski, WZB Berlin Social Science Center Prayers of Purification among Muslim Women in France. Fareen Parvez, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Discussant: Christian Joppke, University of Bern 025. Urban Spatial Politics after the Crisis 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Lilian Knorr, Princeton University Participants: Social Media and Civic Engagement in the Immigrant City: True Participation or Urban Marketing? Aditi

026. Cross-Disciplinary Approaches to Radicalism and Violence 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Cynthia Miller-Idriss, American University Participants: Are Radical Islam Militants the Successors to European Far-Left Activists? The Struggles of Social Classes, Geopolitical Concerns and the Reaction to Domination within French Salafism Today. Mohamed-Ali Adraoui, European University Institute The Transformation of the Radical Right Gender Gap: Analyzing the 2014 European Elections. Nonna Mayer, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS; Mauro Barisione, University of Milan The Far Right Old and New: Between Antisemitism and Islamophobia. Alberto Spektorowski, Tel Aviv University Discussant: Cynthia Miller-Idriss, American University

Wednesday, July 8

022. The European Citizens’ Initiative 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chair: Carlo Ruzza, University of Trento Participants: Who Is Leading the ECI? Luis Bouza Garcia, College of Europe Life after the ECI? Campaigns in the Afterlife. Justin Greenwood, Robert Gordon University; Katja Tuokko, College of Europe What Role for the Court of Justice of the European Union in the Development of the European Citizens’ Initiative? Anastasia Karatzia, University of Surrey A Good Start? The ECI, Three Years on. Elizabeth Monaghan, University of HullUniversity of Hull Discussant: Barbara Helfferich, European Anti-Poverty Network

Mehta, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Urbanism and the Youth Question: The Welfare Politics of Public Space in Paris. Lilian Knorr, Princeton University Europe’s Infrastructural Opportunity: Transnational Systems of Public Appearance. Christopher De Vries, Rademacher de Vries

027. Europe in the World 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Trica Keaton, Vanderbilt University Participants: Unequal Citizenships and Multiple Europes. Manuela Boatcã, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany They Don’t Deserve to be South African: Examining Autochthony, Citizenship, and Belonging in Contemporary South African Society. Kathryn Pillay, University of KwaZulu-Natal Adventures in Deportation: Malian Migrant Narratives and Social Transformation. Julie Kleinman, Pennsylvania State University Australian Racial Ideology: From Cultural Homogeneity to Multiculturalism? Karen Farquharson, Swinburne University of Technology Discussant: Trica Keaton, Vanderbilt University 028. Fiscal Welfare in Europe: Dismantling or Reshaping Solidarity? Session 1 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Michaël Zemmour, Sciences Po, LIEPP & Université Lille 1 (Clersé) Participants: The Transformative Power of Fiscal Welfare in Europe: A State of the Art. Nathalie Morel, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP; Chloé Touzet, Sciences Po, LIEPP; Michaël Zemmour, Sciences Po, LIEPP & Université Lille 1 (Clersé) Welfare State, Tax Expenditures and Inequality: Portugal in Comparative Perspective, 1989-2011. Rui Branco,

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New University of Lisbon; Edna Costa, New University of Lisbon Fiscal or Social? the Instrumentation of ‘Make Work Pay’ Policies in the United Kingdom. Daniel Clegg, University of Edinburgh Fiscal Welfare and Solidarity Shifts in European Social Security Schemes. Patricia Frericks, Hamburg University Discussant: Kimberly Morgan, George Washington University

Wednesday, July 8

029. Religion in Contemporary Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: John Torpey, CUNY Graduate Center Participants: Religious Revival or Multicultural Battle? David Abraham, University of Miami Religion As Culture? How European and American High Courts Endorse Majority Religion. Christian Joppke, University of Bern Ending Secularisms? Riva Kastoryano, Sciences Po, CERI, CNRS Discussant: John Torpey, CUNY Graduate Center 030. The Politics of Euromed Relations after the Arab Spring 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chair: Roberto Roccu, King’s College London Participants: The EU’s Agricultural and Industrial Policies Towards the North African Countries after the Arab Spring. Christos Kourtelis, King’s College London Beware What You Push For! The Unintended Effects of EU-Promoted Financial Sector Reforms in Egypt. Roberto Roccu, King’s College London EU Security Practices in the Mediterranean Region, Redux? Sarah Wolff, Queen Mary, University of London The EU and Islamist Actors after the Arab Uprisings: Selective Engagement, Cognitive Frames and Domestic Factors. Benedetta Voltolini, Maastricht University; Silvia Colombo, Istituto Affari Internazionali External Migration Governance after the Arab Uprisings: Changing the Path? Andrew Geddes, University of Sheffield; Leila Hadj-Abdou, Sheffield University Discussant: Benedetta Voltolini, Maastricht University 031. The Role of EU Institutions in Migration and Asylum Policies: Policy Design and Interinstitutional Relations 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Dagmar Soennecken, York University Participants: What Role Did Human Rights Play in Negotiation Processes on EU Law on Labour Migration? Bjarney Fridriksdottir, Radboud University Nijmegen Challenging the “Liberal Constraint Thesis” through

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Comparative Policy Analysis: The Role of Intra- and Inter-Institutional Relations in Asylum Policies, Border Policies and (ir)Regular Migration. Petra Bendel, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität ErlangenNürnberg; Ariadna Ripoll Servent, University of Bamberg Delegation in EU Migration Policy: What Role for EU Institutions in Shaping Legislative Outputs? Marco Scipioni, University of London One Master Too Many? the European Commission and EU Asylum Policy-Making. María Duro Mansilla, European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States of the European Union (Frontex) Contesting the European Asylum and Border Regime: How, Where and When Do Cosmopolitan Arguments Matter? Juergen Neyer, European University Viadrina; Mitja Sienknecht, European University Viadrina; Luana Martin, European University Viadrina Discussant: Eiko Thielemann, London School of Economics and Political Science 032. Aspirations vs. Realism in European Energy Policy 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Hilary Appel, Claremont McKenna College Participants: Georgia’s Euro-Atlantic Aspiration and Energy Transit Role in Light of the Ukraine Crisis. Mariam Dekanozishvili, Coastal Carolina University Energy and Identity: Geopolitical Imagination of Turkey As an Energy Transit Country. Tolga Demiryol, Istanbul Kemerburgaz University Politics of Renewable Energy. Jeffrey Ladewig, University of Connecticut; Oksan Bayulgen, University of Connecticut; David Jones, CUNY Baruch College From Model to Multiple: The Making of the Sustainable Village and its Implications for Germany’s Energy Transition. Jennifer Carlson, Rice University Discussant: Timur Ergen, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies 033. Balkan Tensions: Examining the Interplay between Regional and European Models 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chair: Dario Brentin, University of Graz Participants: The Paradox of Europe’s Borders: Romania’s State of Play in the Schengen Accession Process. Claudia Badulescu, Centre International de Formation Européenne “Tapping the Potential”: From Remittances to Revisioning Citizenship in Croatia. Daphne Winland, York University Yugoslavia the Good: Building a European Future By Remembering the Past in War Crimes Trials. Timothy Waters, Indiana University Maurer School of Law European Future’s Past: The Yugoslav Model. Cirila

Toplak, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Social Sciences Race Among the Ruins: Will Nato’s Enlargement Include Montenegro, Macedonia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina? Erwin Erhardt, University of Cincinnati

035. Immigrants as Political Actors: Avenues to Migrant Political Agency 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Andreas Wüst, University of Mannheim Participants: Voicing the Right to Belong: European Citizenship and Romanians in France. Elena Popa, Indiana University Bloomington The Promise of European Union Citizenship. Jörg Rössel, University of Zurich; Julia Schroedter, University of Zurich Beyond the Political Opportunity Structure Approach: Competing Discourses and Practices of Inclusiveness By First- and Second-Generation Migrants Participating in the Italian Left. Maria Teresa Cappiali, University of Montreal Political Representation of Immigrant Minorities in Europe. Nermin Aydemir, Bilkent University Discussant: Uwe Hunger, University of Muenster (WWU) 036. Party System Transformations: Contesting Political Power in Volatile Times 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Kevin Deegan-Krause, Wayne State University Participants: The Valence Gap: Economic Crises, Valence Perceptions, and Party System Volatility. Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University Parties As Transformative Social Actors in Post-Crisis Europe. Sanna Salo, European University Institute Transformations in the Party System in Spain: Beyond the National Frame. Carolina Plaza, Universidad de

037. Redefining Urban Landscapes in Diverse Societies 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: Floris Vermeulen, University of Amsterdam Participants: Spaces of (non-citizen) Citizenship: The Liminal Politics of Undocumented Activism. Thomas Swerts, University of Chicago Strategic Cosmopolitanism in Urban Space: Marseille’s Year As European Capital of Culture. Camille Cohen, Rice University A Euro-Mediterranean Future: Redefining Urban Identity and Belonging in Southern France. Philip Cartelli, Harvard University, École des hautes études en sciences sociales Urban Policies and Diversity: Addressing Social Inequalities in ‘Hyper-Diverse’ Paris. Angéline Escafre-Dublet, Sciences Po, CERI; Christine Lelévrier, Institut d’urbanisme de Paris Lab’Urba Environmental Challenges and the Cities. Omer Pamukcu, University of Phoenix; Sultan Tepe, University of Illinoist at Chicago Discussant: Dominika Polanska, Södertörn University

Wednesday, July 8

034. Colorblindness in France in Comparative Perspective 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chair: Melissa Byrnes, Southwestern University Participants: Blackness: Shaping a New Minority in France. Abdoulaye Gueye, University of Ottawa Race and Culture in Right-Wing Political Discourses in the UK and France. Jeanne Hanna, American University Muslims Social Inclusion and Exclusion in Canada, Quebec and France: Does National Context Matter? Jeffrey Reitz, University of Toronto; Patrick Simon, INED, Associate Researcher of Sciences Po, CEE; Emily Laxer, University of Toronto Discrimination in a Colorblind Society: Are Racial Divisions Shaping the French Model of Integration?” Patrick Simon, INED, Associate Researcher of Sciences Po, CEE Discussant: Jean Beaman, Purdue University

Salamanca; Hugo Marcos, Universidad de Salamanca; Iván Llamazares, Universidad de Salamanca Discussant: Erica Edwards, Miami University Ohio

038. Securing European Borders 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Catherine Hoeffler, Catholic University of Lille, Associate Researcher of Sciences Po, CEE Participants: ‘Europe’s Other Border-Free Zone: the Common Travel Area between the United Kingdom and Ireland. Graham Butler, University of Copenhagen; Gavin Barrett, University College Dublin EU Migration Policy and Securitisation in the EuroMediterranean Region. Foteini Kalantzi, University of Macedonia, Greece Statehood Alternatives: A Comparative Perspective on Territorial Politics in Europe. Dejan Stjepanovic, University College Dublin Discussant: Thomas Spijkerboer, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam 039. Shadows: Memories of War and Violence in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: Chiara De Cesari, University of Amsterdam Participants: Seizing Sovereignty on a Heritage Battlefield: Villalar De Los Comuneros, 1521 and 2010s. Thomas Abercrombie, New York University; Sarah Penry, Fordham University Mobilizing National War Memories: Revival of WWII Memory Discourse in Russia in Light of the Conflict with the Ukraine. Daria Khlevnyuk, Stony Brook University Elite Spokesmen or Mass Action: Political Strategies of

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Algerian War Veterans’ Associations in France, 19581974. Anndal Narayanan, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The Contradictions of Civic Integration: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia and the Shadows of the Holocaust in the Netherlands. Esther Romeyn, University of Florida Imagined Borders That Divide and Unite Us: The Politics of Memory in Cyprus. Rabia Harmansah, University of Pittsburgh Discussant: Jan Kubik, University College London

Wednesday, July 8

040. Workers, Labor Conflicts, and Economic Outcomes 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Tiziana Nazio, University of Turin Participants: Collective Bargaining in Europe: Contradictions Between EU Economic Governance and Workers’ Transnational Strategies. Sergio Canalda Criado, Pompeu Fabra University Coordinating Conflict: German Works Councils in Tech Worker Resistance to Mass Layoffs. Sidney Rothstein, University of Pennsylvania Trade Unions and Euroscepticism. Andy Mathers, University of the West of England; Susan Milner, University of Bath; Graham Taylor, University of the West of England Exposure to Occupational and Industry-Level Risks of Offshoring and Automation, and Redistribution Preferences in 23 European Countries. Stefan Thewissen, Leiden University Professional Bridges: Migrants’ Ties with Natives and Occupational Advancement. Laura Morosanu, University of Sussex Discussant: Guglielmo Meardi, University of Warwick 041. (In)consistencies of European Regulation of Capitalism 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Holly Snaith, University of Copenhagen Participants: Negotiating Varieties of Capitalism? Crisis and Change in Contemporary British and German Labor Migration Policy. Regine Paul, University of Bremen European Integration and Varieties of Capitalism: Problems with Institutional Divergence in a Monetary Union. Aidan Regan, University College Dublin; Alison Johnston, Oregon State University Managing the Tensions Arising from Market Inclusion and Monetary Exclusion: A Comparative Analysis. Claes Belfrage, University of Liverpool Is There a European Capital? Cédric Durand, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales; Tristan Auvray, Université de Paris 13 042. Authoritarian Legacies and Challenges to PostAuthoritarian Democracies 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101

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Chair: Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Participants: Lustration and Support for Democracy: Evidence from Post-War Germany. Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford; Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University Russia, Ukraine, and the Borders of Europe. Stephen Hanson, William and Mary State Capture, Corruption and Party Competition Under Post-Communism. Milada Anna Vachudova, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Lessons of the Past? Fidesz and Hungary’s Conservative Revolution. Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley Discussant: Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 043. Contradictions and European Futures: How and Why Labor Law Matters 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Julia Lopez, Universitat Pompeu Fabra Discussants: Julia Lopez, Universitat Pompeu Fabra; Consuelo Chacartegui, Universitat Pompeu Fabra; Caruso Bruno, University of Catania; Franz Ebert, Max Planck Institute 044. Crisis of Democracy? Party Politics and Representation in Times of Austerity 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Denise Traber, University of Zurich Participants: Issue Attention and Responsiveness in Times of Austerity. Denise Traber, University of Zurich; Nathalie Giger, University of Geneva; Silja Häusermann, University of Zurich Doomed to be Dominated? Causes and Consequences of Party Organization Change. Gijs Schumacher, VU University Amsterdam; Nathalie Giger, University of Geneva Dual Mobilization Strategies: How the Latin American Left Copes with Divided Electorates. Simon Bornschier, University of Zurich Discussants: Armin Schäfer, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies; Jonathan Polk, University of Gothenburg 045. Reconfiguring the European Academy? The Ambiguous Impact of European and International Organisations on Higher Education 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: Dorota Dakowska, University of Strasbourg Participants: The OECD and Higher Education: The Bureaucratic Politics of Inclusive Liberalism. Gangolf Braband, University of Luxembourg; Robert Harmsen, University of Luxembourg Dividing Lines in European Higher Education Qualifications Framework. Susana Melo, University of Nottingham

Drivers of Internationalization in Higher Education at the Periphery: The Cases of Romania and Portugal. Ligia Deca, University of Luxembourg Ambiguous Europeanization: Higher Education in the Czech Republic Between “Knowledge-Based Economy” and “Europe of Knowledge." Josef Kavka, University of Strasbourg Discussant: Roger Dale, University of Bristol

047. Security and Citizenship in Minority Communities: Tensions and Contradictions 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Ariane Chebel d’Appollonia, Rutgers University Participants: Ten Years on – the Triumph of Securitisation over Inclusive Citizenship in Britain? Paul Thomas, University of Huddersfield The Impact of Securitized Citizenship and Cohesion Policies on Sikhs and Muslims in the UK. Romain Garbaye, Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3; Vincent Latour, Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès Nigerians and the Securitisation of Migration and Integration Policies in the UK. Catherine Puzzo, Université de Toulouse II Jean Jaurès Immigrant Protection Networks Vs. the Enforcement State in Tucson, Arizona: A Parallel Public Sphere? James Cohen, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3 Discussant: Erik Bleich, Middlebury College 048. Social Dialogue and Collective Bargaining for Vulnerable Groups of Workers in Europe: Opportunities and Barriers 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: Oscar Molina, Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona Participants: Is Negotiated Public Action, a Performative Way to COPE with Older Workers’ Integration to Labour Market in France ? Jean-Louis Renoux, IRISSO; Michele Tallard, Dauphine Université Paris Collective Bargaining in the ‘Shadow of Hierarchy’ of Government Policies on Youth Unemployment and Active Aging in the Netherlands: Does It Work? Frank Tros, University of Amsterdam Inter-Generational Bargaining in Italy. Roberto Pedersini, University of Milan; Lisa Rustico, University of Milan Improving Social Rights and Working Conditions of Workers with Flexible Contracts: Strategies and

049. The EU’s Construction of a Political Identity: Movement and Constraints on EU Stateness 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Renaud Dehousse, Sciences Po, CEE Participants: Reconceptualizing the EU’s ‘Stateness’: Updating the EU As ‘Region-State’ in Light of the Eurozone Crisis. Vivien Schmidt, Boston University ‘Integration through Law’: (still) the EU’s Identity? Analysing EU Law-Making from a Strategic Constructivist Point of View. Sabine Saurugger, Sciences Po Grenoble Which Differentiation? the EU after the Eurocrisis. Sergio Fabbrini, Luiss Guido Carli Rome Regions at Their Borders: Rethinking Identity, Territory and Governance. Thomas Diez, University of Tübingen The EU and the Creation of European Cultural Heritage. Mark Thatcher, London School of Economics and Political Science Discussant: Christopher Bickerton, University of Cambridge, Associate Researcher of Sciences Po, CEE

Wednesday, July 8

046. Round-Table “50/50, No More Excuses”: Brainstorming for Equality After Lisbon 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Agnès Hubert, European Commission Discussants: Barbara Helfferich, European Anti-Poverty Network; Gabriele Abels, University of Tübingen; Joyce Mushaben, University of Missouri-St. Louis; Mieke Verloo, IWM, Institute for Human Sciences; Maria Stratigaki, Municipal Administration Athens

Actions of Employers and Trade Unions in Four Sectors in Italy. Marcello Pedaci, University of Teramo Segmentation and Social Exclusion in Six Countries and Four Sectors: The Role of Trade Unions and Employers’ Organisations. Maarten Keune, University of Amsterdam; Nuria Elena Ramos Martin, University of Amsterdam Discussant: Philippe Pochet, Université catholique de Louvain

050. Whose Design? Institutionalizing the European Banking Union 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Paul Stephenson, Sciences Po, CEE Participants: The Banking Union As Challenge or Virtue of MultiLevel Accountability? Julia Fleischer, University of Bergen ECB Powers in a Hybrid Banking Union. Shawn Donnelly, University of Twente Central Banks, Politicians and Reform: Analysing institutional reform after the financial crisis. Harpal Hungin, European University Institute Banking Union or Solve It Yourself? The Swedish-Baltic Experience of Cross-Border Crisis Management. Aneta Spendzharova, Maastricht University; Ismail Bayram, European University Institute Explaining National Preferences on the New European Banking Policy Framework: The Case of Lithuania. Marius Skuodis, Vilnius University; Vytautas Kuokstis, Vilnius University Discussant: Zdenek Kudrna, University of Vienna 051. Film Screening and Discussion with Filmmaker 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Mame-Fatou Niang, Carnegie Mellon University

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Participants: Afro-Diasporic French Identities. Nathalie Etoke, Connecticut College Discussant: Mame-Fatou Niang, Carnegie Mellon University 052. European Integration and Global Political Economy Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 053. Political Parties, Party Systems and Elections Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 054. Transnational Memory and Identity Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210

Wednesday, July 8

055. Fiscal Welfare in Europe: Dismantling or Reshaping Solidarity? Session 2 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Nathalie Morel, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP Participants: Hidden Welfare State in Poland? Fiscal Welfare in the Context of Permanent Austerity. Michal Polakowski, International Centre for Research and Analysis; Dorota Szelewa, Warsaw University and ICRA The Winner Takes It All? The New Personal Income Taxation and Family-Based Tax Allowances in Hungary Since 2010. Dorottya Szikra, Eötvös University, Budapest, Hungary Feed the Beast: Finance Capitalism and the Spread of Pension Privatisation in Europe. Marek Naczyk, Sciences Po, CEE; Bruno Palier, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP, CNRS 056. Methodological Dilemmas and Approaches to Studying Radicalism and Violence 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Fabian Virchow, University of Applied Sciences Duesseldorf Participants: Solidarity and Tactical Coordination in the German Anti-Nuclear Movement: An Event History Analysis. Darcy Leach, Bradley University; Sebastian Haunss, University of Bremen How Political Violence and Radicalism End: An Empirical Study ‘Triangulating’ Different Sources, Methods and Actors. Manuela Caiani, SNS (Scuola Normale Superiore), Florence What Can We Learn from the Iconography of Violence? Cynthia Miller-Idriss, American University The Quest for a “Legitimate” Enemy: Contemplations on Electoral Behavior of Populist Parties in Europe Evidence from Austria, the Netherlands and the UK. Karen Umansky, Tel Aviv University When the Personal Is Political: Marine Le Pen and Feminism’s Paradoxes. Dorit Geva, Central European University

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Discussant: Fabian Virchow, University of Applied Sciences Duesseldorf 057. Panel 1: National Growth Strategies and Welfare State Reform (Sponsored by LIEPP) 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room JM Chair: Cathie Martin, Boston University Participants: National Growth Strategies and Welfare State Reform. Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance; Bruno Palier, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP, CNRS Mapping Economic Growth Models before the Crisis and Their Consequences Thereafter. Georg Picot, Manchester University Taking Different Paths? Growth Models and the Evolution of the German and Swedish Political Economies. Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva; Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva Discussant: Deborah Mabbett, Birkbeck College 058. “Visible Minorities” in Contemporary Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Karen Farquharson, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Participants: From Black to Blue? Nana Adusei-Poku, Hogeschool Rotterdam Violence, Mourning and the Precarious Other. Laurie McIntosh, Duke University Peripheralized in the Periphery: Migration, Deportation, and Detainment in Ireland and Spain. Elisa White, University of California, Davis Everyday Anti-blackness on Rue Mouffetard. Trica Keaton, Vanderbilt University Discussant: Karen Farquharson, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia 059. European Economies in Historical Perspective 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: John Stephens, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Participants: Industrial Transformation in the Aftermath of the Crisis: An Empirical Analysis of Industrial Policies in the UK, Germany, France and Spain. Angela Garcia Calvo, Collegio Carlo Alberto; Steven Coulter, London School of Economics and Political Science The Unsolved Contradictions of the Modernists. Economic Policy Expectations and Political Crisis in France 1978-2012. Bruno Amable, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne Feedback Processes, Issue Salience, and the Political Dynamics of Capitalist Development: How Shareholders Gained Corporate Control Rights in Britain, Germany, and France. Helen Callaghan, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies Mapping the Global Balkans: Emerging Economy Networks and Political Identity Articulation in

Serbia. Dunja Apostolov-Dimitrijevic, Carleton University Discussant: Magnus Feldmann, University of Bristol

061. Patterns in Immigration Policy: Convergent Trends 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Karin Schittenhelm, University of Siegen Participants: The Political Economy of European Migration Management. Harald Köpping Athanasopoulos, University of Liverpool Dimensions of Immigrant Integration: Comparing Outcomes and Opinions. Laurence Lessard-Phillips, University of Manchester; Maria Sobolewska, University of Manchester; Silvia Galandini, University of Manchester Race Versus Immigration? The Concepts of Difference in Italy and the U.S. Ann Morning, New York University; Marcello Maneri, Università di MilanoBicocca Convergence or Divergence: How Has Immigration Policy Changed in the Last Decade? Simon Reich, Rutgers University; Martin Schain, New York University Discussant: Sara Goodman, University of California, Irvine 062. Current and Future Prospects for Funding European Research 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Participants: Anna Hofmann, ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius Martin Hynes, European Science Foundation Luc Luyten, Evens Foundation Juan Díez Medrano, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Klaus Linsenmeier, Heinrich Böll Foundation Michael Baum, Luso-American Foundation 063. Analytic Approaches to Contradictions and European

064. Deadly Contradictions: Border Management and Migrant Mortality in the Mediterranean 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Participants: Human Rights, Accountability and Migrant Mortality. Thomas Spijkerboer, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Migration Management Between Humanitarian and Securitarian Narratives. Paolo Cuttitta, VU University Amsterdam Fatal Encounters with the Southern Maritime Border of the EU: Counting and Accounting for the Dead. Orcun Ulusoy, VU University Amsterdam; Tamara Last, VU University Amsterdam Surveillance Design Communities in Europe: Border Deaths and Eurosur in the Mediterranean. Theodore Baird, VU University Amsterdam Discussant: Orcun Ulusoy, VU University Amsterdam

Wednesday, July 8

060. Experiencing and Fighting Discrimination 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chair: Patrick Simon, INED, Associate Researcher of Sciences Po, CEE Participants: Men and Gender Equality in European Policy. Katarzyna Wojnicka, University of Gothenburg “Nothing to Do with the Law”? How Diversity Management Relates to Antidiscrimination Regulations in France and in the US. Laure Bereni, Centre Maurice Halbwachs, CNRS European Consensus Facing an East-West Divide: From the Recent Echr Jurisprudence on Prohibition of Sexual Orientation Discrimination. Vivianne Weng, National Chengchi University, Taiwan On Visibility and Invisibility for the Tamil Population of Paris, France. Nicole Berger, Princeton University Discussant: Gokce Yurdakul, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Futures 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Robert Fishman, Carlos III University Madrid Discussants: Jason Beckfield, Harvard University; Mabel Berezin, Cornell University; Gøsta Esping-Andersen, Universitat Pompeu Fabra; Wolfgang Streeck, Max-PlanckInstitut fuer Gesellschaftsforschung

065. Diplomacy at the End of Empire 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Jessica Pearson-Patel, University of Oklahoma Participants: Negotiating Informal Empire: Trans-Appalachian Diplomacy, 1765. Andrew Hermeling, Lehigh University The Dutch Mountbatten. Herman Van Roijen and the End of Dutch Empire in Asia. Hans Meijer, University of Groningen; Rimko van der Maar, University of Amsterdam Diplomacy in the Twilight of Empire: FrancoPortuguese Relations during Decolonization. Melissa Byrnes, Southwestern University Discussant: Jessica Pearson-Patel, University of Oklahoma 066. European Sub-State Nationalisms: Quantitative Perspectives 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Yannis Karagiannis, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI) Participants: Seeing Both Sides: Democratic Conflict and Identity Change in Multicultural States. Maria Jose Hierro, Universitat Pompeu Fabra Intellectuals and Secessionism in Catalonia and Flanders. Yannis Karagiannis, Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals (IBEI); Mattia Guidi, LUISS Rome Risk and Attitude Towards Constitutional Change in Scotland. Robert Liñeira, University of Edinburgh

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Endogenous Identities? How the Independence Debate Is Reshaping Catalans’ Identity. Maria Jose Hierro, Universitat Pompeu Fabra; Jordi Muñoz, Universitat de Barcelona Discussant: Mattia Guidi, LUISS Rome

Wednesday, July 8

067. Europe’s Diversity Regarding Immigrant Integration 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: Alessio D’Angelo, Middlesex University Participants: How Prominent Is the Integration Discourse in the Press? Results from a 5-Country Study. Alexander Caviedes, State University of New York, Fredonia Growing up French? Social Marginalization, Intergenerational Connections and the Limitations of Citizenship in France. Jean Beaman, Purdue University New Emigration from Spain? an Examination of Post 2007 Spanish Migration to the UK and Germany. Cristina Ramos, University of Florida Neoliberal Government of Integration: Governing By Enterprise and Law. Ozden Ocak, George Mason University Varieties of Immigrant Integration in Post-Enlargement Europe– Spain v. Italy. Roxana Barbulescu, University of Southampton Discussant: Deborah Reed-Danahay, SUNY at Buffalo 068. Measuring Welfare Stateness in Advanced Industrialized Countries and Beyond 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Peter Starke, University of Southern Denmark Participants: Globalizing Comparative Social Policy: Going Past Europe. Lyle Scruggs, University of Connecticut Unconventional Welfare States: Macro-Structural Origins, Distinctive Traits, Measurement Problems. H. Tolga Bolukbasi, Bilkent University; Kerem Oktem, Bilkent University; Efe Savas, Bilkent University Measuring Welfare State Generosity in Transitional Welfare States: The Case of Post-Communist Countries in Central and Eastern Europe. Kati Kuitto, University of Greifswald Overcoming the Pitfalls of Decommodification and Generosity Indices: Towards a Fsqca-Based Index of Welfare Stateness. Kerem Oktem, Bilkent University; Efe Savas, Bilkent University Discussant: Olli Kangas, Social Insurance Institution of Finland 069. Media and Euroscepticism in Times of Crisis 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Nicholas Startin, University of Bath Participants: “This Time It’s Different”? Euroscepticism and the 2014 European Parliament Elections in the Dutch Press. Patrick Bijsmans, Maastricht University From Ambivalence to Hostility: The Role of the Tabloid

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Press in the Debate about UK Membership of the EU. Nicholas Startin, University of Bath Beyond 15 M: Democracy, New Media and Social Actors in the Aftermath of the Financial Crisis in Spain. Leocadia Diaz Romero, Universidad de Murcia 070. Migration Politics and Contradictions in Times of Political and Economic Crisis 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam Participants: EU Migration Policy and the Financial Crisis: Does Less Money Lead to Fewer Rights? Florian Trauner, University of Vienna Crises and Contradictions: Migration Policies in Post1960s Britain. Sarah Hackett, Bath Spa University Local Refugee Aid Policy Development: Berlin Policymakers’ Strategic Appropriation of Federal Law. Suzanna Crage, University of Pittsburgh Drowning By Numbers. EU Fundamental Principles Trashed By Immigration Policy. Marie-Laure Basilien-Gainche, Institut Universitaire de France Contradictions in Immigration Policies in Times of Crisis: The Case of Greece. Roubini Gropas, European University Institute Discussant: Ferruccio Pastore, FIERI 071. Paradigm Shifts – Europe’s New Financial Architecture 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: Matthias Thiemann, Goethe Universitaet Frankfurt am Mainz/Sustainable Architecture for Finance in Europe (SAFE) Discussants: Hans-Helmut Kotz, Harvard University/ Sustainable Architecture for Finance in Europe (SAFE); Leonard Seabrooke, Copenhagen Business School Andrew Baker, Queen’s University Belfast; Tobias Troeger, Goethe Universitaet/Sustainable Architecture for Finance in Europe (SAFE) 072. Party Politics in Multilevel States 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Francesc Amat, University of Oxford Participants: Minority Government and Office Concessions in a Multi-Level State: Lessons from Spain. Bonnie Field, Bentley University Arena Shopping: The Effects of Decentralization on the Selective Entry of Ethnoterritorial Parties in Parliamentary Elections. Bonnie Meguid, University of Rochester Is Regionalism Contagious? Explaining Regionalist Party Success in Europe. Seth Jolly, Syracuse University Economic Voting in Multi-Level States: A RegionalLevel Analysis. Simon Toubeau, Centro de Estudios Politicios y Constitucionales; Markus Wagner, University of Vienna

Explaining the Immigrant Integration Policies of National Minority Regions: A Comparative Case Study of Catalonia and South Tyrol. Christina Zuber, University of Bremen Discussant: Melissa Rogers, Claremont Graduate University

074. Reforming Social Europe in Times of Crisis 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: Daniel Clegg, University of Edinburgh Discussants: Klaus Armingeon, University of Bern; Lisa Conant, University of Denver; Waltraud Schelkle, London School of Economics and Political Science; Anton Hemerijck, VU University Amsterdam 075. Religion and the European Union: A Christian Club, Really? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: François Foret, Université Libre de Bruxelles Discussants: François Foret, Université Libre de Bruxelles; Jim Guth, Furman University; Brent Nelsen, Furman University; Harald Wydra, Cambridge University 076. Secession vs. Federalism: Successes and Failures of Intergroup Bargaining for Cultural Identity 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Michael Hechter, Arizona State University Participants: Cultural Legacies, Political Preferences and Intergroup Bargaining – Explaining the Failure of Jurassic Separatism in Switzerland. Sean Mueller, University of Berne; Michael Hechter, Arizona State University; David Siroky, Arizona State University Debating Recognition and Empowerment for Minority Nations in the Age of Uncertainty. Alain Gagnon, Université du Québec à Montréal Ethnofederalism and Other Institutional Forms of Managing Ethnic Problems. Liam Anderson, Wright State University Can Federalism Save the United Kingdom? Malcolm Harvey, University of Aberdeen Territorial Autonomy and State Capacity: Explaining

077. Socialist Memory: Contradictions & Confrontations a Generation After the Break-Up of the Soviet Bloc 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Participants: Bleached Stripes & Burning Beetles: Russia’s St. George Ribbons and the Guardianship of Soviet Space and Memory. Deborah Jones, University of Michigan Function, Form & Spray-Paint. Jana Tsoneva, Central European University; Georgi Medarov, University of Sofia Nostalgic Anti-Communism? Contesting the Socialist Past through Cinema in the Czech Republic. Veronika Pehe, University College London The Political Economy of Forgetfulness. Ivaylo Dinev, University of Sofia

Wednesday, July 8

073. Rebooting Transatlantic Relations? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Kristian Nielsen, Copenhagen Business School Participants: New Dynamics in Transatlantic Security: What Lies Beyond the Rhetoric of “Light Cold War” in Europe? Visne Korkmaz, Yildiz Technical University The Transatlantic Relationship: Not Quite for the Scrapheap Yet. Anna Dimitrova, ESCE International Business School, Paris; Kristian Nielsen, Copenhagen Business School Strengthening Transatlantic Relations from the Bottomup: Reinforcing Mutual Interests through Knowledge and Practioners’ Networks in Times of Uncertainties. Sami Makki, Sciences Po, Lille Discussant: Kristian Nielsen, Copenhagen Business School

Separatist Conflict Diffusion. Andreas Schädel, ETH Zurich Discussants: David Siroky, Arizona State University; Alex Wilson, Vrije Universiteit Brussel

078. The Effectiveness of the European Institutions in Protecting Human Rights in Times of Austerity 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Elisabeth Lambert, French Center for Scientific Research/University of Strasbourg Participants: The European Committee of Social Rights and the Collective Complaints: Reassessing Economic Hindrances. Hélène Michel, University of Strasbourg The Economic and Political Influence Exerted By Private Foundations on Cases Taken By NGOs to the European Court of Human Rights, the European Committee of Social Right and the European Court of Justice. Brice Champetier, University of Strasbourg; Gaëtan Cliquennois, French Center for Scientific Research/University of Strasbourg The Aspects of the Accession of the European Union to the European Court of Human Rights and Their Potential Impacts on Fundamental Rights through the Control over EU Law. Mikael Madsen, University of Copenhagen; Urska Sadl, University of Cophenhagen Safeguarding Human Rights in Times of Economic Hardship: Member States’ Contributions to the Council of Europe. Marielle van Heumen, University of Strasbourg Discussant: Gaëtan Cliquennois, French Center for Scientific Research/University of Strasbourg 079. The European Future of Permanent Austerity? – New Approaches to Comparative Analysis of Welfare and Family Policies Including Old and New EU Member Countries 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Tomasz Inglot, Minnesota State University, Mankato Participants: The Age of Austerity Vs. the Golden Age: A New Historical Explanation of Family Policy Continuity

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Wednesday, July 8

and Change in Europe. Tomasz Inglot, Minnesota State University, Mankato Post-Crisis Family Policies in Europe: An “Age of Austerity”? Sonja Blum, University of Vienna; Mary Daly, Oxford University; Mikael Nygård, Åbo Akademi University; Tatjana Rakar, Social Protection Institute of the Republic of Slovenia; Karin Wall, Universidade de Lisboa Strengthening Minimum Income Protection in Southern European and CEE Countries: Pressures from within and from Beyond. Matteo Jessoula, University of Milan; Manos Matsaganis, Athens University of Economics and Business; Marcello Natili, University of Milan, Italy Institutional Change and Social Policy Developments in Eastern Europe and Southern Europe. Alfio Cerami, Independent Scholar Discussant: Kimberly Morgan, George Washington University 080. The Nature of the Beast? – Administrative Legitimacy and the Future of the EU Public Administration 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Deirdre Curtin, University of Amsterdam Participants: Promises and Limits of Representative Bureaucracy in the Study of the EU’s Bureaucracy. Magali Gravier, Copenhagen Business School EU Administrative Procedures in a Constitutional Perspective. Joana Mendes, University of Amsterdam EU Risk Regulation and the Contested Legitimacy of the EU Public Administration. Maria Weimer, University of Amsterdam From the Crisis of Corporatism to the Crisis of Governance. Poul Kjaer, Copenhagen Business School European Banking Union As a Case-Study in Administrative Legitimacy. Peter Lindseth, University of Connecticut School of Law Discussant: Christian Joerges, University of Bremen/Hertie School of Governance 081. The Political Power of Protest in Europe since the Great Recession 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: Oddny Helgadottir, Brown University Participants: “We’ve Been Occupying for 10 Years." Repertoire (dis) Continuity and Activists’ Memories from the Global Justice Movement to Anti-Austerity Mobilisations in Italy and Germany. Priska Daphi, Goethe University Frankfurt; Lorenzo Zamponi, European University Institute Crisis and Collective Action in Greece: Continuity and Change. Kostis Kornetis, New York University; Hara Hara Kouki, Birbeck College Defending the ‘Bad’ Constitution. the Indirect Effects of the Portuguese Cycle of Contention Against the Austerity. Guya Accornero, Instituto Universitário de

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Lisboa; Pedro Pinto, University of Cambridge Discussant: Cornel Ban, Boston University 082. The Tricky Issues? Prostitution, Abortion, Same-Sex Families, and the EU 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: Annick Masselot, University of Canterbury Participants: Tricky Issues and the EU Policy Agenda: Why Trafficking but Not Prostitution? Gill Allwood, Nottingham Trent University Let’s Just Not Talk about It: Same Sex Families in the EU. Jessica Guth, Bradford University Reframing the EU Concept of Worker: Can SexWorkers be Workers? Annick Masselot, University of Canterbury European Values? Populist Anti-Immigration Parties, Abortion and Prostitution. Heli Askola, Monash University Discussant: Joyce Mushaben, University of Missouri-St. Louis 083. How to Analyze the Europeanization of Regional Parliaments 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chairs: Anna-Lena Högenauer, Maastricht University; Gabriele Abels, University of Tübingen Participants: Spokes in the Wheel. European Affairs and Parliamentary Administration in German Landtage. Aron Buzogany, Freie Universität Berlin; Jens Häsing, Freie Universität Berlin Interparliamentary Relations: New Deliberative Space or Instrument to Improve Parliamentary Control? Annegret Eppler, University of Innsbruck Regional Parliaments in the EU Multilevel Parliamentary System. Peter Bursens, University of Antwerp; Anna-Lena Högenauer, University of Luxembourg More Scrutiny, More Harmony? The Early Warning System and Executive-Legislative Relations at Subnational Level. Julia Fleischer, University of Bergen Regional Empowerment Under the EWS? Towards a Framework for Analysis. Karolina BoronskaHryniewiecka, Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM) Regional Parliaments Questioning EU Affairs. AnnaLena Högenauer, Maastricht University Discussants: Anna-Lena Högenauer, Maastricht University; Gabriele Abels, University of Tübingen 084. Panel 2: Adjustment and Trajectories (Sponsored by LIEPP) 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room JM Chair: Sofia Perez, Boston University Participants: Adjustment Trajectories in Comparative Perspective. Peter Hall, Harvard University Producer Coalitions in the Building of National Growth

Strategies. Kathleen Thelen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology National Growth Regimes and the Lost Boys. Cathie Martin, Boston University Jobs, Skills and Restructuring: Outsourcing and Relocation in the European Union. Jette Knudsen, Copenhagen University/Massachusetts Institute of Technology Discussant: John Stephens, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

086. The Role of Social Actors and Ideas in the Context of Marketization and Contra Trends 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: Patricia Frericks, Hamburg University Participants: The Marketization of Employment Services in UK, Germany and Denmark Inherent Dilemmas and Trade-Offs. Karen Breidahl, University of Aalborg, Denmark; Matthias Knuth, University Duisburg-Essen; Flemming Larsen, University of Aalborg, Denmark; Lisa Schulte, Greenwich University Rethinking the Marketization of Australia’s Employment Services. Greg Marston, Faculty of Health, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia Pressures Towards and within Universalism: Conceptualizing Change in Care Policy and Discourse. Margarita León, ‘Rmón y Cajal’, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain; Costanzo Ranci, Polytechnic of Milan; Tine Rostgaard, University of Aalborg The Interaction of Culture, Institutions and Actors in Explaining Cross-National Differences in Care Policy

087. Theoretical and Ideological Issues in the Study of Radicalism and Violence 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Mabel Berezin, Cornell University Participants: Widening Extremism: Definitions in the Era of “Cumulative Extremism." Gavin Bailey, University of Leicester Political Extremism: A Non-Normative, Comparative Definition. Sam Jackson, Syracuse University Cumulative Extremism: How Violent Social Movements Co-Evolve. Joel Busher, Coventry University; Graham Macklin, Southampton University Mirrors of Identities: Muslims’ Embodiment of Nationhood and the Challenge of the Radical Right. Daphna Elfersy, Tel Aviv University Discussant: Mabel Berezin, Cornell University

Wednesday, July 8

085. The Role of Knowledge in European Futures: Lessons from the Crisis and Challenges for Governance 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: Inga Ulnicane, University of Vienna; Nicola Dotti, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) Participants: Back to Reality: Why the EU Missed the Train for a Future-Oriented Growth Policy. Robert Kaiser, University of Siegen; Heiko Prange-Gstöhl, European Commission Long-Term Impacts of the Financial Crisis on European Research and Innovation Policies: Reinforcing Old Tensions? Inga Ulnicane, University of Vienna Implementing Research and Higher Education Policies into the EU Hard Law Frame? Andrea Gideon, University of Liverpool Changing Subjects of Education in the Bologna Process. Lavinia Marin, KU Leuven Dynamism of European Research Geography: Does Specialization Really Matters? Nicola Dotti, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB); André Spithoven, Belgian Science Policy Office; Bas Van Heur, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) Discussant: Dorota Dakowska, University of Strasbourg

Marketization. Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg; Christopher Grages, Hamburg University; Thurid Eggers, Hamburg University The Limits to Consumerism in Long-Term Care: Understanding Choices of Older Users of Direct Payments in England. Ricardo Rodrigues, European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research

088. Blackness: The Politics of Race and Visibility in Europe 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chair: Damani Patridge, University of Michigan Participants: Who Am I or Who Am I Supposed to be? Africanness and Greekness As Both Imposed and Chosen Markers of Identity Among Youth of Sub-Saharan African Background in Athens. Andromachi Papaioannou, Generation 2.0 for Rights, Equality & Diversity Being Black in Paris: Investigating Experiential Differences Between Blacks of Different Origins and How Those Differences Affect Perceptions of Unity. Joy Obayemi, Stanford University Historical Residue and Modern Sanitation: The Formation and Creolization of Transformed Black Spaces in Paris and France. Marshall Smith, Cornell University Discussant: Abdoulaye Gueye, University of Ottawa 089. Demography: Migration, Fertility, and Marriage 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Marc Howard, Georgetown University Participants: Looking for a Good Match? A Comparison of Transnational and Intra-National Couples in the UK Pakistani and Sikh Communities. Evelyn Ersanilli, University of Oxford; Katharine Charsley, University of Bristol; Hiranthi Jayaweera, University of Oxford Will Current Intra-EU Migrants Return Home on Retirement? Evidence from the Experience of Earlier

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Wednesday, July 8

Waves of Migrants from Southern to Northern Europe. Paul Bridgen, University of Southampton; Traute Meyer, University of Southampton Let’s Have More Russian Babies: How Anti-Immigrant Sentiment Shapes Family Policy in Russia. Marina Kingsbury, University of New Mexico The Politics of Ethnodemographic Survival: ProNatalism, Migration and Citizenship in Romania. Costica Dumbrava, Maastricht University Translating Work, Family and Social Life in Europe: Marriage Migrants’ Performances of Cultural Translation in Germany. Anil Al-Rebholz, Okan University Looking a Gift Horse in the Mouth: Analyzing the UK Fertility Boom Admist the New Hopes and Realities of Immigration, Fertility Behaviours and Nationalist Futures. Shelley Grant, Queen Mary University of London Discussant: Laurence Lessard-Phillips, University of Manchester 090. Economic Actors and Institutions in History 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Jakob Vogel, Sciences Po, Centre d’Histoire Participants: Spectacle Men and Tea Agents in London: The Conflict Between International Networks and Rising Nationalism at Turn of the Twentieth Century. Stephanie Seketa, University of California Santa Barbara The Developmental State in Developed Societies: The Evolution of Economic-Policy Making in France and Finland. Mark Vail, Tulane University; Darius Ornston, University of Toronto Economic Nationalism through Changing Times: The Political Discourse on Foreign Takeovers in Britain Since the 1950s. Helen Callaghan, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies Discussant: Carolyn Biltoft, Georgia State University 091. Hard and Soft Legal Instruments: Current Trends in EU Law 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Moritz Jesse, Leiden University Participants: The EU's Role in Global Competition Policy in a Changing World. Umut Aydin, Universidad Catolica de Chile Building a European Law Profession Between the State and the Market. Lola Avril, Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne The Role of EU Competition Law and Policy in Promoting Solidarity and Combating Austerity. Anca Chirita, Durham Law School The Objectives of EU Competition Law in a Changing World. Martin Petschko, University of Luxembourg EU Company Law Between Regulatory Competition and Harmonization: A Contradiction? Alessio

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Bartolacelli, Alma Mater Studiorum, University of Bologna The Role of Internet Service Providers in Enforcing Privacy Law in Europe. Magdalena Jozwiak, VU University Amsterdam Discussant: Elaine Fahey, City University London 092. How the Past Lives On: Artefacts of European Memory 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: Eric Sangar, Institut de Recherche Stratégique de l’Ecole Militaire (IRSEM), Paris Participants: Driving Remembrance from below: Civil Society Initiatives and the Memory of the German Democratic Republic. Jenny Wüstenberg, Free University of Berlin Once upon a Republic… or the Strange Case of Viktor Orbán’s Hungary: Historical Memory and Educational Policy. Karl Benziger, Rhode Island College The Ethics of Poetic Form in the Era of Memory: Cavafy and Cernuda. Christina Karageorgou-Bastea, Vanderbilt University Memory, Borders, Race. Chiara De Cesari, University of Amsterdam Envisioning the Future of Post-Agricultural Rurality through Heritage Preservation: Patrimonial Labelization and Ecomuseum in France. Hélène Ducros, North Carolina State University Discussant: Jan Kubik, University College London 093. New Perspectives on European Inequality 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Steffen Mau, University of Bremen Participants: Growth Performances, Top Incomes and Consumer Credit: A Political Economy Perspective. Thibault Darcillon, LADYSS, University of Paris 7, CES; Karim Azizi, CES, University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne The Cost of Being Muslim: National Variation in Religious Income Disparities. Svenja Kopyciok, Brown University; Hilary Silver, Brown University The Europeanisation of Social Inequalities. Theoretical Challenges and Empirical Evidence. Martin Heidenreich, University of Oldenburg Over-Concentration of Income and Middle-Class Preferences for Redistribution. Michaël Zemmour, Sciences Po, LIEPP & Université Lille 1 (Clersé); Elvire Guillaud, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne The Social Welfare Deficit: Spending Preferences and Policy Responsiveness. Larry Bartels, Vanderbilt University Discussant: Boris Heizmann, Universitaet Hamburg 094. Political Violence, State Repression, and Displacement 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chair: Laia Balcells, Duke University

095. Populist Critique of the European Project 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Margarita Gomez-Reino, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia Participants: From Copenhagen to Ankara Criteria: Neo-Populism As an Alternative to European Agenda. Akif Kaynak, Istanbul Kemerburgaz University A Populist Era? An Analysis of Legislative Discourse in the European Parliament, 1999-2014. Bart Bonikowski, Harvard University; Noam Gidron, Harvard University Facing an Illiberal Future. Polish “War on Gender” in a Transnational Perspective. Elzbieta Korolczuk, University of Gothenburg; Agnieszka Graff, University of Warsaw Discussant: Reinhard Heinisch, University of Salzburg 096. Religious and Social Responses to Austerity 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Simon Griffiths, Goldsmiths College Participants: Corporal Works of Mercy in a Time of Austerity: The Contradictory Role of Religion in Contemporary Portugal. Paul Manuel, Mount St. Mary’s University Cushioning the Effect of Financial Strain on Well-Being in Times of Crisis. A Comparative Analysis of the Role of Social Networks, Religion, and Confidence in Politics. Tim Reeskens, Tilburg University; Leen Vandecasteele, University of Tübingen Indignados/Podemos in the Midst of a Double Legitimation Crisis: From Prefigurative Movement to Electoral Strategy. Richard Weiner, Rhode Island College; Ivan Lopez Pardo, Carlos III University Madrid Discussant: Priska Daphi, Goethe University Frankfurt

097. Steering the State: Regulatory Sites and Practices 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Jale Tosun, Heidelberg University Participants: Liberalism and Mercantilism in the Contradictory European Developmental State. Lars Niklasson, Linköping University Conceptualizing the Executive Branch of the EU through Concept Structures: A Vertical Separation of Powers Perspective. Andreas Corcaci, Technische Universität Darmstadt; Jared Sonnicksen, Technische Universität Darmstadt Game Change: An Analysis of the Origins of the Macroeconomic Imbalance Procedure. Leon Kanthak, Cologne Center for Comparative Politics, University of Cologne Instrumenting Interests: Bureaucratic Politics and the European Commission’s Consultations with Stakeholders Regime. Adriana Bunea, University College London Discussant: Miriam Hartlapp, University of Leipzig

Wednesday, July 8

Participants: Representing Mass Violence: U.S. Versus European Varieties. Joachim Savelsberg, University of Minnesota Searching for the Agency: Political Violence, State Repression and Popular Mobilization. Ignacio Sánchez-Cuenca, Instituto Carlos III-Juan March (IC3JM); Luis De La Calle, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE) Intergenerational Transmission of Political Attitudes and Behavior Among Victims of State Repression: Crimean Tatars and Russia. Leonid Peisakhin, New York University Abu Dhabi; Noam Lupu, University of Wisconsin Madison Sovereign Power and Purification Narratives: Forced Displacement in the Decade of Roma Inclusion. Snezana Otasevic, Rutgers University The Populist Radical Right in Europe a Xenophobic Voice in the Economic and Social Crisis. Dietmar Loch, Université Lille 1; Ov Cristian Norocel, University of Helsinki/Stockholm University Discussant: Yitzhak Brudny, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

098. The Ukrainian Crisis and the Return of Russia 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Cirila Toplak, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Social Sciences Participants: Ukraine’s Orange Revolution and Property Rights: Sovereign Commitment Reconsidered. Stanislav Markus, University of Chicago Ukraine’s Troubled Path to European Integration. Hilary Appel, Claremont McKenna College Gender-Based Violence in Ukraine: Empirical Evidence and Policy Interventions. Ganna Gerasymenko, Institute for Demography and Social Studies, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Realpolitik Hits Back? The Challenges to the EU’s External Relations in the Neighbourhood. Tatiana Skripka, Maastricht University The EU, Its Member States and Their Decisions on Restrictive Measures Against Russia during the Ukraine Crisis. Henri Vogt, University of Turku Regionalism and Multivectorism in Eurasia: The Case of Ukraine. Mikhail Molchanov, St. Thomas University Discussant: Maria Popova, McGill University 099. European Social Models from Crisis to Crisis: Employment and Inequality in an Era of Monetary Integration 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: Anton Hemerijck, VU University Amsterdam Discussants: Fritz Scharpf, Max Planck Institute; Robert Hancké, London School of Economics and Political Science; Andrew Martin, Harvard University; Jon Erik Dølvik, University of Oslo; Caroline de la Porte, Roskilde University 100. Inequalities and Care Challenges: Migration, Markets,

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Wednesday, July 8

and the Shifting Configurations in Policy Regimes 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: Karen Shire, University Duisburg-Essen Participants: Complexities and Contradictions in Employment Regimes and the Capabilities and Agency of Migrants in the Care/Domestic Sector. Barbara Hobson, Unversity of Stockholm; Susanne Fahlen, Stockholm University; Zenia Hellgren, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Madrid Carers, Migration and Social Entitlements: Who Cares for the Carers? Eleonore Kofman, Middlesex University Migrant Care Workers Versus Brides: Different Responses to Care Crisis in Southern European and East Asian Countries. Tiziana Caponio, University of Turin; Margarita Estevez-Abe, Collegio Carlo Alberto A Very Special Job. The Representation of Domestic Work in Spanish Policy Debates. Pilar Gonalons Pons, University of Wisconsin, Madison Family First? Discourses and Practices of Elderly Care in the Czech Republic. Radka Dudová, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Do the Stakeholders Still Matter? The Change of Reconciliation Work/Family Policies Since 2000 at the European Level. Sophie van der Dussen, ULB/ FNRS Discussant: Karen Shire, University Duisburg-Essen 101. New Media and Immigration: Online Identities and Belongings 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Nicholas Boston, CUNY Lehman College Participants: Fixating or Multiplying the Self? Social Media and Identity from the Perspective of Diasporic Queers. Lukasz Szulc, University of Antwerp The Role of Social Networks in Educational Performance of Students with Migration Background in Germany. Taylan Acar, University of WisconsinMadison Social Media Romance: Gay- and Lesbian-Identified Immigrants in Denmark. Andrew Shield, Roskilde University Discussant: Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam 102. The Political Economy of Financial Instability in Europe 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Cornelia Woll, Sciences Po, CEE, MaxPo Participants: Once a PIIGS Always a PIIGS? Divergent Recovery in the European Periphery. Aidan Regan, University College Dublin; Samuel Brazys, University College Dublin Democratic Risk, the Great Recession, and the Euro Crisis. Michael Breen, Dublin City University

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Who’s Borrowing? Credit Encouragement Vs. Credit Mitigation in European National Financial Systems. Gregory Fuller, American University Taming Credit Market Liberalization? Corporatist Wage Setting Institutions’ Mitigating Effects on Housing Bubbles. Alison Johnston, Oregon State University; Aidan Regan, University College Dublin Discussant: Waltraud Schelkle, London School of Economics and Political Science 103. The Politics of Migration and Integration in Germany 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Oliver Schmidtke, University of Victoria Participants: Germany’s Responses to Increasing Asylum Seekers in the 1980s, 1990s and 2010s. Suzanna Crage, University of Pittsburgh German Civic Integration Policies in Comparative Perspective. Sara Goodman, University of California, Irvine Mapping the Transformation of the CDU’s Immigration Policy. Simon Green, Aston University Post-Perestroika Ethnic Immigration from the Former Soviet Union to Germany: Challenges of Integration Twenty Years on. Christin Hess, Aston University The “Party for Immigrants”? Social Democrats’ Struggle with an Inconvenient Electoral Issue. Oliver Schmidtke, University of Victoria Making Room for Islam in Germany's Public Schools: The Role of the Länder. Phil Triadafilopoulos, University of Toronto at Scarborough; Joachim Rahmann, Hertie School of Governance Incorporation Beyond Cleavages: Germany’s Parties and the Immigrant-Origin Electorate. Andreas Wüst, University of Mannheim Discussant: Uwe Hunger, University of Muenster (WWU) 104. The Politics of Mobility and Diversity: The Effects of Migration on European Politics and Societies 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Willem Maas, York University Participants: Controlling Immigration? Marc Helbling, WZB Berlin Social Science Center Is Convergence a Myth? Migration, Social Inequality and the Strength of Europe’s Civil Societies. Ruxandra Paul, Harvard University; Andrei Roman, Harvard University The International Diffusion of Expatriate Dual Citizenship Policies. Maarten Vink, Maastricht University Conforming Female Citizens in the Making: Gender, Ethnicity and the Local-Level Incorporation Policies in Paris and Helsinki. Linda Haapajärvi, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Centre Maurice Halbwachs Preference Voting and Descriptive Representation in the German Cities. Colin Brown, Harvard University

Discussant: Theresa Kuhn, University of Amsterdam

106. Envisioning European Futures 6:00 to 7:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume Boutmy Chairs: Robert Fishman, Carlos III University Madrid; Jenny Andersson, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Participants: The Moral Challenge to Europe. Kim Scheppele, Princeton Is There a Future for Egalitarian Democracy in Europe? Peter Hall, Harvard University Normative Power Meets Geopolitics: EU and the Implosion of its Neighborhoods. Jacques Rupnik, Sciences Po, CERI Secularism, Religion and Diversity: The Contradictions of a European Identity. Gokce Yurdakul, HumboldtUniversität zu Berlin

Thursday, July 9 107. Economic Crisis and Government-Opposition Dynamics 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Participants: Economic Crisis and Party Transformation: The Rise of a New Opposition in Italy? Luca Verzichelli, University of Siena; Francesco Marangoni, University of Siena The Opposition Parties’ Behaviour in Portugal Between Internal Constraints and External Challenges. Elisabetta De Giorgi, NOVA University of Lisbon, FCSH; Federico Russo, NOVA University of Lisbon Governing By Consensus? Government-Opposition Relations in Spain (2001-2013). Anna Palau, University of Barcelona; Luz Muñoz Marquez, University of Barcelona; Laura Chaqués-Bonafont, University of Barcelona Less Conflict in Times of Crisis? GovernmentOpposition Dynamics in Germany. Christian Stecker, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich Danish Opposition during Economic Crisis: Challenge or Confirmation of ‘Responsible Opposition’? Flemming Christiansen, Roskilde University Discussant: Gabriella Ilonszki, Corvinus University of Budapest

Thursday, July 9

105. The Public Attribution of Responsibility in Politics: Structures of Public Sensemaking 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: Mark Bovens, Utrecht University Participants: What Are the Blames All about? Attribution Issues in the Eurozone Crisis. Maria Kousis, University of Crete; Marina Papadaki, University of Crete Over-Responsibilised and Over-Blamed: Elected Actors in Media Reporting on Governance Networks. A Comparative Analysis in Eight European Metropolitan Areas. Frank Marcinkowski, Universität Münster; Daniel Kübler, University of Zurich; Karin Hasler, University of Zurich In the Eye of the Storm. European Commission and ECB in the ‘Battle’ of Attributing Responsibility in the Eurozone Crisis. Jochen Roose, Freie Universität Berlin; Franziska Scholl, Freie Universität Berlin; Moritz Sommer, Freie Universität Berlin Strange Bedfellows? Debating Greece’s and Germany’s Role in the Eurozone Crisis Across Borders. Konstantinos Kanellopoulos, University of Crete; Angelos Loukakis, University of Crete Discussant: Mark Bovens, Utrecht University

108. Europe by Design – Panel 1: New Communication Technologies and the Construction of EU Spheres of Interaction 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Matthew D’Auria, University of East Anglia Participants: European Council Immigration and Security Policies. a Threat to Rights and Liberties? Yasha MacCanico, University of Bristol; Tony Bunyan, Statewatch European Public Sphere and e-Participation in the Middle of an Economic and Political Crisis. Dora Papadopoulou, Forschungsinstitut für Philosophie Hannover Open Data in the European Context: A Comparative Analysis of Policy Implementation. Emiliana de Blasio, LUISS - Rome; Donatella Selva, LUISS - Rome The Value of Open Data for European Cohesion. Francesca De Chiara, Fondazione Bruno Kessler; Luigi Reggi, Italian Ministry of Economic Development, Department for Development and Economic Cohesion; Maurizio Napolitano, Digital Commons Lab, Fondazione Bruno Kessler Discussant: Michele Sorice, LUISS - Rome 109. Grounding European Remembrance: Local and Artistic Memory 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Jenny Wüstenberg, Free University of Berlin

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Participants: Peripheral East? Contested Narratives and Architectural Heritage. Sarah Schlachetzki, University of Bern A Bench, a Mirror, a Street-Sign: Dictionary of WWII German Memory. Pnina Rosenberg, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology Remembering the Past in Time of Globalization and Europeanization. Moran Pearl, Hebrew University Jerusalem How European Is the Politics of Remembrance in Vienna? Peter Pirker, University of Vienna Spicing up Memories and Serving Nostalgias: Thematic Restaurants and Transnationalisation of Memory in East-Central European Borderland Cities. Eleonora Narvselius, Lund University Discussant: Chiara De Cesari, University of Amsterdam

Thursday, July 9

110. Panel 3: LMEs and CMEs 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Chair: Jette Knudsen, Copenhagen University / Massachusetts Institute of Technology Participants: The US Growth Model and Welfare State. Herman Schwartz, University of Virgina Internal Adjustment in Germany: Institutional Complementarities Between Growth Strategies and Welfare Reforms. Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance The Nordic Models: Still Able to Adapt? Jon Erik Dølvik, FAFO Discussant: Karen Anderson, University of Southampton 111. Shaping the European Courts’ Power: National Courts, Governments, and Civil Society 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Marlene Wind, University of Copenhagen Participants: United in Diversity? National Courts and European Law. Lisa Conant, University of Denver Giving (some) Legal Rights Practical Effect: The European Union’s Uneven Policy on Access to Justice for Interest Groups. Andreas Hofmann, Centre for European Research/Political Science Department, University of Gothenburg Politics As Usual in the Court? Government Interests and Preference Alignments in the European Court of Justice 1997-2008. Olof Larsson, Centre for European Research/Political Science Department, University of Gothenburg; Daniel Naurin, Centre for European Research/Political Science Department, University of Gothenburg The Supreme Court’s Renewed Interest in Autochthonous Constitutionalism. Scott Stephenson, University of Melbourne/Yale University Supreme Courts As Gatekeepers: Studying Patterns of Supreme Courts Reaction to European Legal Integration. Marlene Wind, University of Copenhagen;

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Juan Mayoral, iCourts - University of Copenhagen; Kristoffer Krohn Schaldemose, University of Copenhagen Discussant: Susanne Schmidt, University of Bremen 112. Technological Utopias and Dystopias in European Musical Culture, 1807-2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Christopher Murray, FRS-FNRS / Université libre de Bruxelles Participants: “Une Vaine Pompe Sans but”? Operatic Spectacle Under Scrutiny in Napoleon’s Paris. Annelies Andries, Yale University Dragons, Devils, and Trains: Technology and Hypocrisy on the French Musical Stage. Mia Tootill, Cornell University Cinematic Dreams, Recorded Fantasies: Opera and Technology in Fin-De-Siècle Paris. Sarah Fuchs Sampson, Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester “Heavyweight Diva Is Passé”: Hollywood’s Influence on Opera’s Prima Donna. Gina Bombola, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill “Into a New World”: Remixing the Past, Composing the Future. Joanna Helms, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Discussant: Christopher Murray, FRS-FNRS / Université libre de Bruxelles 113. The Italian Welfare Capitalism and Its Enduring Crisis: Policy Change and Stability and their Key Determinants 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Pepper Culpepper, European University Institute Participants: Opening the Black Box of the Social Investment Welfare State: An Analysis of the Youth Guarantee in Italy. Patrik Vesan, University of Aosta Valley The Italian Variety of Capitalism and Its Constraints on Regional Development. Luigi Burroni, University of Florence; Alberto Gherardini, University of Florence A Different Type of Liberalization? Italy’s Labour Policy Reforms in the EMU Era. Stefano Sacchi, University of Milan The Rise (and the Fall?) of Universalism in the Italian Welfare State. Emmanuele Pavolini, Macerata University Discussant: David Natali, University of Bologna 114. European Integration: Policies and Models 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: Martin Heidenreich, University of Oldenburg Participants: Cultural Counterbalancing: The Contribution of Cultural Policy to EU Enlargement. Claske Vos, University of Amsterdam Unexpected Dispositions: What Models of

Implementation Can Teach Us about Policy Transfer. Ceren Ark, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne; Marc Smyrl, Université Montpellier 1 An Ever-Closer Union? Measuring Europeanization through an Expert Survey. Galina Zapryanova, University of Leicester; Kyriaki Nanaou, University of Nottingham ‘Our Steadfast European Mission’ The Role of Multinational Firms in European Integration and Building the European Union: The Cases of Volkswagen AG, Paribas and Tesco. Grace Ballor, University of California, Los Angeles European Integration: Three Models of the Future. Ulrich Krotz, European University Institute; Richard Maher, European University Institute Discussant: Kennet Lynggaard, Roskilde University

116. Making the Most of Market Power: Politics and Profit in European Trade 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chair: John Ahlquist, University of Wisconsin Participants: The Costs and Benefits of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. Martin Myant, European Trade Union Institute The EU in the World: Public Procurement Policy and the EU-WTO Relationship. Stella Ladi, Queen Mary University of London; Dimitris Tsarouhas, Bilkent University The EU's Trade Battles with Russia in Times of Crisis: A Powerless Giant or an Effective Market Power? Anke Schmidt-Felzmann, Utrikespolitiska institutet, Stockholm & Dalarna University, Falun How to Shoot Where the Ducks Are: Firms’ Multilevel Lobbying Strategies in EU Free Trade Negotiations. Margaux Kersschot, Catholic University of Leuven/ University of Antwerp The Politics of Counter-Sanctions: The Domestic Drivers and Constraints of Russian-EU Trade

117. The Future of European Economic Integration 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: Shawn Donnelly, University of Twente Participants: Heavy Handed ECB and Incompetent Domestic Management Compounded Irish Euro Crisis. John Ryan, University of Cambridge More Integration, Less Federation: The European Integration of Core State Powers. Philipp Genschel, European University Institute; Markus Jachtenfuchs, Hertie School of Governance Berlin Out of the EU Crisis – a Way Forward or Multiple Voices? George Ross, Université de Montréal; Jane Jenson, Université de Montréal Discussant: Gareth Davies, VU University Amsterdam 118. Comparative Perspectives on Muslims in Europe I: Cultural Distance and Social Interaction 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Marcel Maussen, University of Amsterdam Participants: Is the ‘Gap’ Between the Majority and Muslim Minority in Britain Just about ‘Culture’, or Does It Run Deeper? Paul Statham, University of Sussex Islam in Context: Opportunities for Inter-Cultural Relations in Europe. Manlio Cinalli, Sciences Po, CEVIPOF; Marco Giugni, University of Geneva Islamic Religious Rights in Germany: A Contentious Issue? Attitudes Towards Religious Symbols and Minarets. Sarah Carol, Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES) Discussant: Olav Elgvin, Fafo Institute for Applied International Studies

Thursday, July 9

115. European Migration and Religious Diversity 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: Margarita Markoviti, New York University Participants: Teasing out the Ethnic Penalty: Economic Assimilation of Immigrants in Western Europe. Elyakim Kislev, Columbia University, New York Immigrant Subjective Well-Being in Europe: The Role of Social and Symbolic Boundaries. Boris Heizmann, Universitaet Hamburg; Petra Böhnke, Universitaet Hamburg European State Formation and Regimes of Ethnicity: Explaining the Distribution of State Policies Toward Ethnic and Religious Diversity Across Europe. Sener Akturk, Koc University, Istanbul The Neo-Assimilationist Turn and the Role of Local Stakeholders in Protecting Migrants’ Basic Rights. Maria Teresa Cappiali, University of Montreal

Relations. Masha Hedberg, European University Institute/School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), Johns Hopkins University

119. Education, Social Investment, and Inequality in PostCrisis Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: Daniel Clegg, University of Edinburgh Participants: Low Skill Youth and the Social Investment Society. Carsten Jensen, Aarhus University; Cathie Martin, Boston University Social Investment or Social Closure: Education Reform in Contemporary Europe. Jane Gingrich, University of Oxford Stuck Between School Wars and School Choice? The Politics of Comprehensive Education in England and France. Charlotte Haberstroh, European University Institute Trade-Offs in Public Support for Social Investment in European Welfare States. Marius Busemeyer, University of Konstanz Discussant: Julian Garritzmann, University of Konstanz

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120. Envisioning European Spaces 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Participants: Trade, International Relations and the Spatial Regime of South East Europe. Visions of the Northern Balkans in the European Danube Commission after 1856. Luminita Gatejel, IOS Regensburg Greater Europe. the Debates about Europe’s Colonial Spaces after the First World War. Jakob Vogel, Sciences Po, Centre d’Histoire Dividing By Uniting ‘Southern Europe’. the MarshallPlan and the Vision for a European Anatolia, 1947 to 1960. Heinrich Hartmann, University Basel Envisioning a Post-Cold War Europe: Conflicting Visions of Détente in the 1970s. Mario Del Pero, Sciences Po, Centre d’Histoire Discussant: Iris Schröder, University of Erfurt

Thursday, July 9

121. From Consensus to Contestation: The RePoliticization of Central Banking 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Aidan Regan, University College Dublin Participants: To Concentrate or to Disperse? Choosing Among Governance Arrangements in Macroprudential Regulation. Manuela Moschella, Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), Scuola Normale Superiore Central Banks, Social Purpose and Macroprudential Regulation. Andrew Baker, Queen’s University Belfast; Wesley Widmaier, Griffith University Two sides of the same coin? Financialization and central bank dominance in the euro area. Benjamin Braun, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies Reading Kindleberger in Washington and Berlin: Ideas and Leadership during a Time of Crisis. Matthias Matthijs, Johns Hopkins SAIS The Smile of the Cheshire Cat: Central Bank Independence after the Crisis. Deborah Mabbett, Birkbeck College; Waltraud Schelkle, London School of Economics and Political Science Discussant: Cornelia Woll, Sciences Po, CEE, MaxPo 122. Grassroots in the City: Urban Grassroots Movements in Central and Eastern Europe and Post-Soviet Space 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: Kerstin Jacobsson, University of Gothenburg Participants: From ‘Local’ to ‘Urban’: The Example of the Kaliningrad Protest Movement in 2009-2010. Karine Clément, Saint-Petersburg State University Community Initiatives in Moscow: Demanding the Right to the Post-Socialist City? Christian Fröhlich, Södertörn University Urban Community Mobilizations in Lithuania: The Withdrawal of the State and the Development of Citizens’ Initiatives. Jolanta Aidukaite, Mykolas Romeris University

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The Rise and Development of Urban Social Movements in Poland. Dominika Polanska, Södertörn University Discussant: Adam Fagan, Queen Mary, University of London 123. How Outsider Parties Use the European Parliament: A Comparative Perspective 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chair: Nicholas Startin, University of Bath Participants: The Rise of New Green Party in the 2014 European Parliament Elections in Croatia. Danijela Dolenec, University of Zagreb; Daniela Sirinic, Central European University On the Way to the Mainstream? The Party of Free Citizens in the Czech Republic. Petr Kaniok, Masaryk University Beyond Euroscepticism. How the French Communists Use the European Parliament. Nicolas Azam, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne Discussant: Robert Ladrech, Keele University 124. Invented Neighborhoods: How Migration Shapes the Borderlands of Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Thibaut Jaulin, Sciences Po Participants: Navigating Change in the European External Migration Policy. Agnieszka Weinar, European University Institute Regulating Migration and Asylum in the Maghreb: Which Inspiration for an Accelerated Legal Development? Delphine Perrin, Université d’AixMarseille Unwanted Neighbours: Looking Beyond the South/ East Dichotomy in the European Union’s Irregular Migration Policies. Lyubov Zhyznomirska, Saint Mary’s University Dealing with “Difficult Neighbours”: Interdependent Dynamics of Migration Policy Transfer in the Cases of Libya and Russia. Oleg Korneev, University of Sheffield Discussant: Thibaut Jaulin, Sciences Po 125. Labor Relations, Unions, and Business 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Jenny Andersson, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Participants: Union Membership and Voting Choice in a Time of Economic Insecurity. Line Rennwald, University of Amsterdam; Christoph Arndt, Aarhus University Business Support and the Costs of Welfare State Development. Dennie Oude Nijhuis, Leiden University Creating French-Style Pension Funds: Business, Labour and the Battle over Patient Capital. Marek Naczyk, Sciences Po, CEE Discussant: Jenny Andersson, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS 126. Motors, Measures, and Methods: Analyzing the

Dynamism of Party Politics in Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham Participants: Propensity-Based Measures of Electoral Volatility. Cees Van Der Eijk, University of Nottingham Exogenous Electoral Volatility. a Proposal to Create a New Index of Party System Institutionalization. Ignacio Lago, Universitat Pompeu Fabra; Mariano Torcal, Universitat Pompeu Fabra Fluid Parties, Fickle Voters, Fixed Spaces: Assessing the Stability of Party Competition in Eastern Europe. Jan Rovny, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP; Jonathan Polk, University of Gothenburg From the Bottom up: Measuring Party System Change and Institutional and Electoral Volatility in Both Eastern and Western Europe. Kevin Deegan-Krause, Wayne State University; Fernando Casal Bertoa, University of Nottingham; Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham Discussant: Nicolas Sauger, Sciences Po, CEE

128. The EU’s Crisis and Its Effects on Decision-Making and Policies (Roundtable) 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Gerda Falkner, University of Vienna Discussants: Brigid Laffan, European University Institute; Fritz Scharpf, Max Planck Institute, Cologne; Zdenek Kudrna, University of Vienna; Gerda Falkner, University of Vienna 129. The Geography of Inequality in North America and Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: David Rueda, University of Oxford Participants: Who Speaks for the Poor? The Implication of Electoral Geography for the Political Representation of Low-

130. The Political Responses and the Fall-Out of Austerity II 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Carl Levy, Goldsmiths College Participants: The Contracting State: Cameronism and the Politics of Austerity. Simon Griffiths, Goldsmiths College The Irish Response to Austerity. Maura Adshead, University of Limerick The Politics of Austerity. Andrew Gamble, Cambridge University Resilient Neoliberalism. Dorothee Bohle, Central European University; Bela Greskovits, Central European University Discussant: Georg Menz, Goldsmiths College, University of London

Thursday, July 9

127. The Diffusion of the Extreme Right and Radical/Far Right in Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chairs: Steven Van Hauwaert, Université catholique de Louvain; Sarah de Lange, University of Amsterdam Participants: A Crisis of Representation? Euro-Skepticism and Extreme Right Online Politics in Western Europe. Manuela Caiani, SNS (Scuola Normale Superiore), Florence; Elena Pavan, University of Trento Anti-Racism Legal Action Against Political Parties and Their Members in Europe, 1965-2015. Joost Van Spanje, University of Amsterdam United in Opposition? the Populist Radical Right’s Response to the European Crisis. Andrea L. P. Pirro, University of Siena; Stijn van Kessel, Loughborough University/Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf Discussant: Steven Van Hauwaert, Université catholique de Louvain

Income and Working Class Citizens. Karen Jusko, Stanford University The Dark Side of Proportionality: Two-Dimensional Coalition Bargaining and Fiscal Choices. Francesc Amat, University of Oxford Geography and Capacity. Pablo Beramendi, Duke University; Melissa Rogers, Claremont Graduate University Region versus Class, or Region as Class? Framing Health Inequalities in France and Belgium. Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania Discussant: David Rueda, University of Oxford

131. The Political Sources of Solidarity in Diverse Societies 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Virginie Guiraudon, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Participants: Keith Banting and Will Kymlicka, “The Strains of Commitment: Political Sources of Solidarity in Diverse Societies." Keith Banting, Queen’s University “The Political Sources of Solidarity." Peter Hall, Harvard University Celine Teney and Marc Helbling, “Solidarity Between Elites and Masses in Germany." Marc Helbling, WZB Berlin Social Science Center “Diversity and Solidarity in Denmark and Sweden." Karin Borevi, Södertörn University Discussants: Virginie Guiraudon, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS; Christian Larsen, Aalborg University 132. The Politics of Ethnic Leveraging: How and Why Status Majorities Elevate One Minority to Downgrade Another 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Erik Bleich, Middlebury College Participants: Black Pete, Islam, and the Sexualization of Cultural Protectionism in the Netherlands. Markus Balkenhol, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam; Paul Mepschen, University

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of Amsterdam Gender and Socio-Cultural Leveraging in France. Kimberly Morgan, George Washington University Structural Leveraging: The Case of Race and America’s World War II Military. Tom Guglielmo, George Washington University Discussant: Cybelle Fox, University of California, Berkeley

Thursday, July 9

133. The Vanity Fair of European Football: Performances, Representations, Identities 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Alexandra Schwell, University of Vienna Participants: Barça: Football and the Right to Decide. Elga Castro, New School for Social Research Does Qualifying Really Qualify? Comparing the Representations of the Euro 2008 and Euro 2012 in the Turkish Media. Basak Alpan, Middle East Technical University Mapping Europeanness in Football. Negotiations of Distance and Relatedness during a Mega-Event. Alexandra Schwell, University of Vienna Loyalty Jungle. Flexible Football Fan Identities and EURO 2012. Nina Szogs, University of Vienna Can Supporters Make a Difference? the Role of Fans in European Football’s Governance. Borja Garcia Garcia, Loughborough University 134. Winning Hearts and Minds in the Cold War: Comparative Perspectives on State Socialist Transnational Practices 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Nadège Ragaru, Sciences Po, CERI Participants: Nationalization of Soviet Achievements: Russian ProGovernmental Youth Fora. Anna Schwenck, Berlin Graduate School of Social Sciences/ European Doctoral Program Institutions for Assessing Popular Consumption Preferences Under State Socialism. Martin Dimitrov, Tulane University Weaponizing Women’s Rights: Cold War Politics and the U.N. Decade for Women, 1975-1985. Kristen Ghodsee, Bowdoin College The East in the West: Cold War Cultural Cooperation and Cultural Globalization in the 1970s. Theodora Dragostinova, Ohio State University Discussant: Nadège Ragaru, Sciences Po, CERI 135. Beyond Hysteria and Denial: Political Responses to Court-Driven Free Movement 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Michael Blauberger, University of Salzburg Participants: The Myth of Override. Gareth Davies, VU University Amsterdam Why Is the European Court of Justice Accepted? Three Mechanisms of Opposition Abatement. Benjamin

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Werner, University of Bremen Unfit for Patient Rights in Cross Border Healthcare? The Universalist Healthcare Model Meets the European Union. Dorte Martinsen, University of Copenhagen; Juan Mayoral, iCourts - University of Copenhagen Risk Sharing Between Member States through Migration As a Social Right. Waltraud Schelkle, London School of Economics and Political Science Welfare Migration? Free Movement of EU Citizens and Access to Social Benefits. Susanne Schmidt, University of Bremen; Michael Blauberger, University of Salzburg Discussant: R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University 136. Europe by Design – Panel 2: CyberEurope: Internet, Security and Citizens’ Rights 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Francesco Amoretti, University of Salerno Participants: Global Internet Governance and Europe: A Regional International Organization Perspective. Nanette Levinson, American University School of International Service; Meryem Marzouki, Ecole des Médias et du Numérique de la Sorbonne Governing Digital Networks: European Policies on Internet Governance. Mauro Santaniello, University of Salerno Europe and Privacy: For a Protection Embedded in (Decentralized) Technical Architecture? Francesca Musiani, Ecole des Médias et du Numérique de la Sorbonne Societal Security As a European Project – a Joint Venture of Citizens, Industry, and States? Reinhard Kreissl, VICESSE - Vienna Centre for Societal Security Europe By Media Design: Gender-Aware Digital Policies? Claudia Padovani, University of Padova Technologies of Neoliberalism: Is the Evaluation of European Digital Policies a Vehicle for the Neoliberalization of the Public Sector? Diego Giannone, Seconda Università di Napoli Discussants: Robin Mansell, London School of Economics and Political Science; William Drake, University of Zurich 137. Memory in European and Transnational Relations 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Aline Sierp, Maastricht University Participants: From Silencing to Commemorating: Conceptualizing and Measuring Official Narratives of Dark Pasts. Jennifer Dixon, Villanova University Bombing and Memory: A Framework for Analysis. Andrew Knapp, University of Reading Balkanization of Europe: Competing Representations of Europe in the Collective Memory of the Western Balkans. Senka Neuman, University of Groningen Heroes, Courts and Normative Clashes: The Different Effects of the Icty and Domestic War Crimes Trials on Norm Change in Croatia. Ivor Sokolic, University College London

Turkey on Europe’s Memory Edge: State-Led Genocide Denial and Challenges From Below. Mark Wolfgram, Oklahoma State University

139. Offshore Europe on the Move: The Dynamics of EuroCaribbean Societies and Politics in the XXIst Century (Part 1) 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: Bruno Cousin, University of Lille 1 Participants: The Kingdom of the Netherlands in the Caribbean: Will De-Colonization Ever End? Lammert de Jong, Independent Scholar; Ron van der Veer, Council of State (NL) The British Overseas Territories in the Caribbean: Edging Towards Decolonisation? Peter Clegg, University of the West of England The French Caribbean Between Egalitarian Aspirations and Identity Assertions: Towards a Shift in the Relationship to the State? Justin Daniel, University of the French West Indies and Guyana 140. Panel 4: Mixed Market Economies 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Chair: Anke Hassel, Hertie School of Governance Participants: National Growth Strategies and Welfare State Reforms: The Case of Spain. Ana Guillen, University of Oviedo Trying to be Cheap While Having the Most Expensive Welfare State: The French National Growth Strategy. Bruno Palier, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP, CNRS Squaring the Circle in Europe’s Emerging Markets: The

141. Party Transformation and Parliamentary Opposition in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: Luca Verzichelli, University of Siena Participants: Types of Opposition in the Netherlands. Simon Otjes, Groningen University; Tom Louwerse, Trinity College Dublin; Arco Timmermans, Montesquieu Institute/ Leiden University The Opposition Parties in the Polish Parliament. Agnieszka Kloskowska-Dudzińska, Polish Academy of Sciences; Witold Betkiewicz, Polish Academy of Sciences To Oppose or Not to Oppose: Legislative Voting Strategies of Opposition Parties. Or Tuttnauer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Parliamentary Elites in Time of Crisis: The Case of Czech Republic. Petra Rakusanova-Guasti, Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic; Zdenka Mansfeldova, Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic The Power of Party System Change and Parliamentary Rule Changes on the Opposition Behavior: The Case of Hungary. Gabriella Ilonszki, Corvinus University of Budapest; Réka Várnagy, Corvinus University of Budapest Discussant: Elisabetta De Giorgi, NOVA University of Lisbon, FCSH

Thursday, July 9

138. Musical Nationalism and Geography 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Gina Bombola, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Participants: Belgian National Identity in the Work and Writings of François-Joseph Fétis. Chikako Osako, Université libre de Bruxelles / Japan Society for the Promotion of Science On Tour with Paganini and Baillot in 1833. Diane Tisdall, King’s College London Polish Émigrés and Parisian Intellectuals: Imagining a Nationalist European Future through Polish Music. Virginia Whealton, Indiana University, Bloomington Labels and Agendas: The Jeune école Française in Brussels and Paris, 1888–1893. Melissa Khong, The Graduate Center, CUNY Studying Musicians in Times of Crisis: The Case of Interwar Brussels. Christopher Murray, FRS-FNRS / Université libre de Bruxelles “Congolese” Musical Idioms As Expressions of Belgian National Identity. Catherine Hughes, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Discussant: Annelies Andries, Yale University

Case of Poland. Abby Innes, LSE National Growth Strategies and Welfare State Reform: The Case of Greece. George Pagoulatos, Athens University of Economics And Business Discussant: Sofia Perez, Boston University

142. The Italian Welfare Capitalism and Its Enduring Crisis: Institutions, Interests, and Political Dynamics 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Pepper Culpepper, European University Institute Participants: Italy and Mixed Market Economies in the Euro-Zone Crisis: A Tale of Convergence? Oscar Molina, Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona New Crisis, New Realignments, New Solutions: Time for Another Breakthrough in Italian Politics and Public Policy? Zsofia Barta, SUNY Albany The Limited Recalibration of the Italian Welfare State: When Vices Do Not Turn into Virtues. Chiara Agostini, Centro Einaudi Torino Changing Patterns of Social Concertation: Trade Unions’ Decline in Italy. Andrea Pritoni, University of Bologna Discussant: David Natali, University of Bologna 143. Defining Parity: Paths toward Gender Equality in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Ov Cristian Norocel, Stockholm University

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Thursday, July 9

Participants: Varieties of Gender Equality Politics: Higher Ed Reforms in Germany and US. Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin Madison When Does Federalism Matter? Gender Equality Policies in Germany and Austria. Birgit Sauer, Universität Wien; Sabine Lang, University of Washington; Ayse Dursun, University of Vienna Southern European Women and the Economic Crisis – Assessing Problems, Policies, and Practices (2009-2014). Ana Prata, California State University Northridge Considering Goettingen’s Radical Left Groups As a Laboratory for Gender Equality: The Creation of Feminist “Safe” Spaces. Emeline Fourment, Sciences Po. CEE Conservative Quotas? How the Bavarian CSU Handles Its Women’s Quota. Jasmin Siri, Ludwig-MaximiliansUniversity Munich Discussant: Anna van Der Vleuten, Radboud University Nijmegen 144. Educating Europe: Learning and Belonging in Contemporary Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Tim Reeskens, Tilburg University Participants: European Education and Social Cohesion: Which Way Forward? Dídac Gutiérrez-Peris, University College London, Institute of Education The Role of the Erasmus Programme in Overcoming Prejudices and Construction of a European Identity: The Case of Turkey. Selcen Öner, Bahçeşehir University (İstanbul) Educational Policies for Immigrants: A Comparative Study of France and Germany. Neeta Inamdar, Manipal University; Varsha Chawla, Manipal University Political Elites As Educational Elites. Anchrit Wille, Leiden University; Mark Bovens, Utrecht University Ethnic Minority Religious Education and Partisan Politics in Europe. Irina Ciornei, University of Bern US and EU Approaches to Academic Programs Addressing Women with Disabilities. Nancy Castle, Northern Illinois University; Kristen Myers, Northern Illinois University Discussant: Marino Regini, University of Milano, Italy 145. Ensuring European Economic and Military Security in Perilous Times 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Tatiana Skripka, Maastricht University Participants: Norm Advocacy Coalitions and Military Operations: The Changing Character of EU Military Operations. Trineke Palm, VU University Amsterdam Banking Union and the Reform of the Financial Supervisory System: An Effective Resolution for the

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Eurozone Crisis. Hideki Sato, Kanazawa University Internal Contradictions and Institutional Contestations: Debating Kosovo’s Status in the European Union. Lorinc Redei, University of Texas at Austin The EU External Action and the “Global”: Using the “Global” to Strengthen EU Competences in External Action. Catherine Hoeffler, Catholic University of Lille, Associate Researcher of Sciences Po, CEE; Nora El Qadim, Sciences Po, CEE Investing in Policy: Political Conditionality and Chinese Foreign Direct Investment in the European Union. Sophie Meunier, Princeton University; Jee Lee, Princeton University Discussant: Alan Cafruny, Hamilton College 146. Europe’s Dilemma: The Roma Question 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Peter Vermeersch, University of Leuven, Belgium Participants: The Quest for Social Justice: The Case of the Nomadic Roma within the E.U. Cristina Dragomir, SUNY Oswego Europe’s Grey Zone – the Roma Paradox. Ivana Djuricic, Göteborgs Universitet Roma Women and the Holocaust: Sexual Violence in Romanian Camps. Michelle Kelso, The George Washington University; Daina Eglitis, The George Washington University Premises and Barriers of Inclusive Access and Successful Participation of Roma People in Higher Education in Romania. Diana Cismaru, National School of Political Studies and Public Administration; Delia Gologan, National School of Political Studies and Public Administration/Executive Agency for Higher Education, Research, Development and Innovation Funding (UEFISCDI); Cristina Fiț, Executive Agency for Higher Education, Research, Development and Innovation Funding (UEFISCDI) Beyond Recognition and Redistribution: An Analysis of European Debates on Roma Representation and Participation. Huub van Baar, University of Amsterdam/University of Giessen; Peter Vermeersch, University of Leuven Discussant: Kathryn Kozaitis, Georgia State University 147. Labor Relations and Unemployment in the Eroding Welfare State 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva Participants: Analysing the Support for Conditional and NonConditional Activation Policies in Western Europe: The Effect of Labour Market Risk, Socioeconomic Status and Ideology. Flavia Fossati, University of Zurich Does Labor Market Dualization Translate into Welfare State Dualization? The Case of Germany. Allison Rovny, University of Gothenburg

Institutions and Inequality in Liberalizing Markets: Explaining Different Trajectories of Institutional Change in Social Europe. Chiara Benassi, LSE; Virginia Doellgast, London School of Economics and Political Science; Katja Sarmiento-Mirwaldt, Brunel University ‘Creaming and Parking’ in Marketized Welfare-toWork Services: Evidence from Germany, the UK, and France. Ian Greer, University of Greenwich; Lisa Schulte, University of Greenwich; Katia Iankova, University of Greenwich; Graham Symon, University of Greenwich Reducing High Unemployment and Defending Social Equality in Hard Times: The Difficult Strategy of Social Democracy in France and Italy. Fabio Bolzonaro, University of Cambridge Discussant: Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva

149. The Shadow of Dictatorships: Researching Attitudes towards the Past 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Filipa Raimundo, Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon Participants: CAN the EU Cure Nostalgia for Communism? A Comparative Assessment of Attitudes in Eastern Europe. Sergiu Gherghina, Goethe University Frankfurt Lithuanian Political Elite’s Attitudes Towards the Soviet Past in Electoral Campaigns of 2008 and 2012. Irmina Matonyté, ISM University of Management and Economics Elite Perceptions of Public Opinion As a Determinant of Early Transitional Justice Policies. Brian Grodsky, University of Maryland An Ever-Shadowed Past? Portuguese Citizens’ Attitudes Towards the Dictatorial Regime and the Democratic Transition. José Santana-Pereira, Institute of Social Sciences/ University of Lisbon; Filipa Raimundo,

150. Combating Inequalities through Social Innovation: A Comparative Perspective in Urban Contexts 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Francesco Della Puppa, University of Venice Participants: Addressing Global Social Inequalities from the Diversity of the Local Context: Social Innovation of and for Young People in Barcelona. Olga Jubany, University of Barcelona; Berta Güell, University of Barcelona The Governance of Social Innovation in Italy: The Public-Private Relations in Two Practices of Citizens’ Empowerment. Francesca Campomori, University of Venice; Francesco Della Puppa, University of Venice Young People’s Experiences in the Transition to Independence in Hamburg. Anne-Marie Gehrke, Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften; Simon Güntner, Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften; Louis Henri Seukwa, Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften Metropolitan Manoeuvers: A Case Study of Young People’s Everyday Strategies of Survival and Innovation in a Post-Crisis UK City. Ajmal Hussain, Aston University; Helen Higson, Aston University Discussant: Tommaso Vitale, Sciences Po, CEE

Thursday, July 9

148. Territorial Politics and the Logic of Secession 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: David Siroky, Arizona State University Participants: Identity, Redistribution, and Secession. Experimental Evidence from Catalonia. Laia Balcells, Duke University; Alexander Kuo, Cornell University Collective Identity and Support for Regional Redistribution in Spain: Combining Evidence of Laboratory and Survey Experiments. Theresa Kuhn, University of Amsterdam; Sergi Pardos-Prado, Merton College, University of Oxford Secession from an EU Member State: A Brief Analysis. Lucía Payero López, University of Oviedo The Right (Time) to Secede: Why Nationalist Parties Demand a Referendum for Independence When They Do. Gemma Sala, Grinnell College Discussant: Michael Hechter, Arizona State University

Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon Discussant: Leonardo Morlino, LUISS ‘G. Carli’

151. Comparative Perspectives on Muslims in Europe II: Cultural Distance and Social Interaction 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Paul Statham, University of Sussex Participants: Does Muslim Voice Make a Difference? The Impact of Organized Muslims and Consultative Structures upon Public Policy in Britain. Marcel Maussen, University of Amsterdam What Do Muslim Religious Leaders in Western Europe Think about the Relationship Between Sharia’ Law, Liberal Democracy and Secularity? Olav Elgvin, Fafo Institute for Applied International Studies Coping with Anti-Muslim Sentiments, How Representatives of Organisations Handle Prejudice. Anja van Heelsum, University of Amsterdam 152. Europe’s Neighborhoods in Disarray: The Challenge for EU Policy 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: Anthony Jones, Northeastern University Participants: Navigating the Iranian Nuclear File Through Turbulent Institutional Waters. Logics of Inclusion and Exclusion in the EU’s Foreign Policy Government. Stefan Waizer, Université Libre de Bruxelles / Sciences Po Aix Russia’s View of Its Neighborhood. Marie Mendras, Sciences Po, CERI, CNRS Russian Definitions of Security and European Policies.

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Igor Delanoe, St. Petersburg Academic University Discussant: Jacques Rupnik, Sciences Po, CERI 153. Globalized Minds, Roots in the City: Urban UpperMiddle Classes in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chair: Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex Discussants: Steffen Mau, University of Bremen; Marisol Garcia, Autonomous University of Barcelona; Luigi Burroni, University of Florence; Virag Molnar, New School for Social Research

Thursday, July 9

154. Health Inequalities in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Jason Beckfield, Harvard University Participants: Health Effects of Unemployment in Europe. Investigating Social Inequality and Country Variation Using EU-SILC (2008-2011). Anne Grete Tøge, Oslo and Akershus University College Inequalities in Unmet Needs in Select European and Commonwealth Countries. Helen Cerigo, McGill University; Amelie Quesnel-Vallée, McGill University Cure or Catalyst- How the Healthcare System Affects Health Inequalities. Nadine Reibling, University of Mannheim The Welfare State and Health Inqualities. Sigrun Olafsdottir, Boston University Discussant: Jason Beckfield, Harvard University 155. ICTs, (Digital) Media, and Anti-Austerity Protests 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chair: Emiliano Treré, Autonomous University of Queretaro, Mexico Participants: #Rbnews: A Case of Hashtag Use By Alternative Media in Austerity-Ridden Greece. Nikos Smyrnaios, University of Toulouse; Michail Batikas, Universitat Pompeu Fabra Open-Source Networks and Secret Facebook Groups: Exploring the Use of Social Media in Student Activist Groups. Alex Hensby, University of Kent Social Networking Sites in Spaces of Occupation in Anti-Austerity Movements. Christine Emeran, The New School for Social Research Protest Spaces Online and Offline: The Indignant Movement in Syntagma Square. Anastasia Kavada, University of Westminster; Orsalia Dimitriou, Goldsmiths College The Role of ICTs in Anti-Austerity Protest Media Ecologies: A Comparative Analysis of Communication Flows in Southern Europe. Alice Mattoni, European University Institute; Sandra Jeppsen, Lakehead University Orillia Citizen Networks and ICTs in Greece: The Case of ‘Solidarity for ALL’ Platform. Dimitris Boucas, London School of Economics and Political Science Discussant: Cristina Flesher Fominaya, University of

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Aberdeen 156. Ideas About the Euro: Crisis Debates and Responses in the EU’s Core, in the Periphery, and at the EU Level 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University Participants: Merkel’s Leadership during the Eurocrisis: The Role of Ideas. Sarah Wiliarty, Wesleyan University From Paradox to Missed Opportunities: French Statist Liberalism and the Euro Crisis. Mark Vail, Tulane University Ideas, Institutions and Policy-Making in Hard Times: The Case of Southern European Labour Reforms. Kenneth Dubin, Anglia Ruskin University Ideas, Institutions and Policy-Making (part II). Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics and Political Science Contested Governance: The Impact of EU-Level Debates on the Eurozone Crisis. Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University Discussant: Nicolas Véron, Bruegel 157. Mobilizing Culture after War in Twentieth-Century Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: Michael Wintle, University of Amsterdam Participants: (World) Literature for Europe. Marleen Rensen, University of Amsterdam Selling Cigarettes, Art and Peace: Overlapping and Mutually Exclusive Goals behind Corporate Collecting for the Stuyvesant Collection. Arnold Witte, University of Amsterdam The European Inheritance. Tamara van Kessel, University of Amsterdam Mediator and Example. The Low Countries’ SelfPerceived Role As a Guide Country in Postwar Western Europe. Robin de Bruin, University of Amsterdam 158. Reimagining European Futures at the End of the Cold War 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Juhana Aunesluoma, University of Helsinki Participants: Past, Present and the Future in the Baltic Revolutions, 1987-1991. Kaarel Piirimäe, University of Tartu/ University of Turku; Pertti Grönholm, University of Turku, Turku Institute of Advance Studies The End of Socialist Economic Integration. Cmea Members and the Attraction of the EC. Suvi Kansikas, University of Helsinki Troubled Advance – Finland, Sweden and the European ‘Relaunch’ 1983–1989. Veera Mitzner, University of Helsinki An Image of the Future? The Committee for

International Information (1988-1990) and Modern Finland. Louis Clerc, University of Turku Discussant: Marla Stone, Occidental College

160. The Twilight Zone: The Transformation of European Shadow Banking into Capital Markets Union 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: Cornel Ban, Boston University Participants: The Reform of European Repo Markets. Daniela Gabor, University of West England Light in the Shadows? The Fsb Vs. the European Commission’s Attempts to Illuminate Shadow Banking. Jakob Vestergaard, Danish Institute for International Studies Wild to Conservative: Bringing European Money Market Funds into the Fold. Oddny Helgadottir, Brown University “You Can Have the Cake and Eat It." The Role of Ratings in Collateral-Based Financial Systems. Giulia Mennillo, University of St. Gallen Discussant: Aitor Erce, European Stability Mechanism 161. Towards a New European Growth Model: Exploring the Alternatives 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: James Cronin, Boston College Participants: Building a Growth Strategy on a New Social Settlement: The UK Case. David Coates, Wake Forest University Reimagining Europe As a Space of Competition: Three Models of British Political Economy in the PostCrisis EU. Ben Rosamond, University of Copenhagen

162. Waves of Contentious Politics and their Consequences: 1848 in Comparative Perspective 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Dorothee Bohle, Central European University Participants: Not Waving, Not Drowning: Just Struggling to Learn Self-Government. Laurence Whitehead, University of Oxford Waves of Authoritarian Backlash Since the Revolutions of 1848. Kurt Weyland, University of Texas Hybrid Regimes and Hybrid Interventions: Putin and Milosevic. Valerie Bunce, Cornell University; Aida Hozic, University of Florida Discussant: Mark Beissinger, Princeton University

Thursday, July 9

159. The Changing Relationship between EU Law and Politics: Trust, Transparency, and the Fragmentation of Executive Power 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chair: Uwe Puetter, Central European University Participants: AFSJ Rule-Making Methdologies: External Norm Primacy in the Post-Lisbon Legislative Cycle. Elaine Fahey, City University London Trust and Treaty Revisions in the EU: Towards a Theory of Two-Level Legitimacy. Imelda Maher, University College Dublin; Dermot Hodson, Birkbeck College, University of London Empty Democracy: The Law and Politics of Secrecy in the European Union. Deirdre Curtin, University of Amsterdam Reconfiguring Britain and Europe: Lessons from the Scottish Referendum. Kenneth Armstrong, University of Cambridge The Eu’s Participatory Contradictions: How to Accommodate Models of Direct Democracy within a Multi-Level Polity. Fernando Mendez, University of Zurich Discussant: Marie Granger, Central European University

The Case for a Reformed Neoliberalism. Terrence Casey, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Post-Dirigisme and the Political Economy of French Capitalist Restructuring in the Wake of the Global Financial Crisis. Ben Clift, University of Warwick Discussant: Andrew Gamble, Cambridge University

163. Historical Study of States and Regimes Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 164. Immigration Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 165. Radicalism and Violence in Europe Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 166. Territorial Politics and Federalism Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 167. Dilemmas and Contradictions in Social Investment: The Case of Child Care 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Birgit Pfau-Effinger, University of Hamburg Participants: Investing in Child-Care in the Visegard Countries? Privatization As the Dominant Paradigm. Dorota Szelewa, Warsaw University and ICRA Explaining Social Inequality in Childcare Use Across 30 European Countries: What (if any) Is the Role of Social Spending? Wim Van Lancker, University of Antwerp Obstacles to Childcare Services for Low Income Families. Giuliano Bonoli, Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration; Aurélien Abrassart, University of Konstanz Social Investment and Child Care Expansion: A Perfect Match? Margarita León, ‘Rmón y Cajal’, Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain 168. Do Parties Make a Difference in Policy-Making?

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Thursday, July 9

Rethinking the Party-Policy Link 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: Simon Persico, Sciences Po, CEE Participants: Party Competition, the Transmission of Policy Agendas, and the Gap Between Electoral Priorities and Policy Outputs. Federico Russo, NOVA University of Lisbon; Enrico Borghetto, Nova University Lisbon; Marcello Carammia, University of Malta Do Parties Matter for Policymaking? Capacity, Incentives and Partisan Agenda Setting in France. Sylvain Brouard, Sciences Po Bordeaux; Caterina Froio, European University Institute/Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assass; Emiliano Grossman, Sciences Po, CEE; Isabelle Guinaudeau, Sciences Po Grenoble, CNRS; Simon Persico, Sciences Po, CEE When Parties Do Not Matter. French Employment Policies in Times of Crisis. Hélène Caune, Sciences Po, CEE/Universita degli Studi di Milano Who’s in Control? Voters, Parties and Policy Sectors. Claire Dupuy, Sciences Po Grenoble/Sciences Po, CEE; Raul Magni-Berton, Sciences Po Grenoble Do Parties Matter for School Reform? Revisiting the Partisan Explanation for Redistributive Outcomes in Education. Charlotte Haberstroh, European University Institute Discussant: Simon Persico, Sciences Po, CEE 169. Europe’s Bright Future: Multilingual? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: Hugo El Kholi, Sciences Po, CERI Participants: Multilingualism and the Construction of New Political Identities. Peter Kraus, Universität Augsburg The Case for Future Norms: Multilingualism in Europe. Ariel Colonomos, Sciences Po, CERI, CNRS European Perspectives on Multilingualism: Towards a Utilitarian Language Policy in the European Union. Vicent Climent-Ferrando, Universitat Pompeu FabraBarcelone Towards a Lingua Franca for Europe: Difficulties and Opportunities. Lucie Ramiere, Sciences Po European Multilingualism and Democracy: Implementing a Multilingual Language Regime Against Citizens’ Preferences? Nuria Garcia, Sciences Po, CEE Discussant: Astrid von Busekist, Sciences Po, CERI 170. Legal Mobilization: The Role of Individual and Collective Actors 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chair: Aude Lejeune, Université Lille 2, CERAPS, CNRS Participants: The Curious Invisibility of Environmental Rights in the EU Legal Order. Chris Hilson, University of Reading Historical Oppression & Contemporary Racism As Barriers to Legal Mobilization: A Case Study of the Roma in Europe. Jacqueline Gehring, Allegheny

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College Theorizing Legal Mobilization. Dagmar Soennecken, York University Rights Mobilization Beyond the Courts: Movement Participation in Disability Rights Allocation in France. Anne Revillard, Sciences Po, OSC, LIEPP Discussant: Liora Israël, EHESS, CMH 171. Memory Actors and Early European Integration 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Aline Sierp, Maastricht University Participants: The Historical Inheritance of Democracy in the European Union, 1948-1957. Eric O’Connor, European University Institute “Europeanizing” History and History Instruction in the French Union: Tensions Between United Europe and Postwar Empire, 1944-1958. Emily Marker, University of Chicago The German Newsreels As Agent for Europe. Sigrun Lehnert, Hamburg Media School The Evolving Politics of Commemoration: French Socialists, German Social Democrats, and the “Founding Fathers” of European Integration, 1958 to 1980. Brian Shaev, University of Pittsburgh EU Memory, Amnesia and the “Ukrainian Crisis." Catherine Guisan, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Discussant: Oriane Calligaro, Institut für Zeitgeschichte 172. Nomadic Subjectivity and the Reconfiguration of Iberian Cultural Identities 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Sonia Roncador, The University of Texas at Austin Participants: Theorizing Spanish Literature of Migration Across the Strai(gh)t: Envisioning Contradictory Spanish Futures. Gema Pérez-Sánchez, University of Miami Crossing the Strai(gh)t of Contradiction: Iberian Dreams and Queer Awakenings. Walter Temple, University of Miami Intellectual Migration: Trafficking Ideas, Trafficking Bodies. Victoria Ketz, Iona College Visions of Migration, Climate Change, and Women’s Role in Europe’s Future in Contemporary Narratives from Spain. Maryanne Leone, Assumption College Discussant: Adolfo Campoy-Cubillo, Oakland University 173. Offshore Europe on the Move: The Dynamics of EuroCaribbean Societies and Politics in the XXIst Century (Part 2) 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: Sébastien Chauvin, University of Amsterdam Participants: Caribbean Jurisdictions and Corporate Tax Avoidance. Ronen Palan, City University London Second-Order Effects from Global Financial Governance on ‘Offshore Europe’. William Vlcek,

Zbigniew Truchlewski, Central European University Asymmetric Adjustments and the Governance of the Eurozone Debt Crisis: A Complex Causation Perspective. Michel Goyer, University of Birmingham; Miguel Glatzer, La Salle University; Rocío Valdivielso del Real, Liverpool Business School, Liverpool John Moores University Discussant: Nicolas Véron, Bruegel

174. Revolutions: Causes and Processes 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: Krzysztof Jasiewicz, Washington and Lee University Participants: Structural Conditions, Political Context and Rapid Political Change in the Post-Cold War Period. Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University; Graeme Robertson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Armies and the Art of Revolution Revisited. Jeff Goodwin, New York University Revolutionary Coalitions: Causes, Patterns, Consequences and the Case of Portugal, 1974-1975. Tiago Fernandes, New University of Lisbon Fear and Loathing on the Post-Communist Street: Why Bulgaria’s 2013 Protest Fizzled out, but Ukraine’s Euromaidan Escalated. Maria Popova, McGill University Discussant: Valerie Bunce, Cornell University

177. Democratization: Waves and Pathways 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Henri Vogt, University of Turku Participants: Societal Empowerment and Europeanisation: Revisiting the Eu’s Impact on Democratisation. Gergana Noutcheva, Maastricht University The Three Worlds of First Wave Democratization. Julio Valenzuela, University of Notre Dame Building Democratic Capacities. Sultan Tepe, University of Illinoist at Chicago Discussant: Daniel Stockemer, University of Ottawa

175. The Law and Politics of Multi-Level Governance 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Juan Mayoral, iCourts - University of Copenhagen Participants: Mapping European Law: The Evolving Subnational Reception of the Preliminary Reference Procedure. R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University; Tommaso Pavone, Princeton University ‘Judicial Cooperation in Civil Matters’: The Politics of Civil Justice Under the EU’s Area of Freedom, Security and Justice. Helen Hartnell, Golden Gate University School of Law/FUBiS-FU Berlin The Multilevel Governance of Citizenship. Willem Maas, York University The UK Supreme Court and Avenues of (European) Judicial Dialogue. Noreen O’Meara, School of Law, University of Surrey Discussant: Marlene Wind, University of Copenhagen 176. Debt and Savings in the EU 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Natascha Van der Zwan, New School for Social Research Participants: Accumulation and Variation: The Sectoral Transformation of Debt in Europe. Gregory Fuller, American University The State Strikes Back: The German Rescue of the Eurozone. Remy Davison, Monash University The Social Sources of Austerity in the UK and France.

Thursday, July 9

University of St Andrews Gatekeepers for Global Wealth? a Fiscal Sociology of Caribbean Offshore Financial Centers. May Hen, University of California, Irvine Colonial Continuities in the French Caribbean: An Economic Perspective. Guy Numa, Institute for New Economic Thinking Discussant: Bruno Cousin, University of Lille 1

178. No Future for the Young? The Lives of European Youth 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Manlio Cinalli, Sciences Po, CEVIPOF Participants: Entrepreneurship Among Young Europeans: Opportunities, Potentials, and Actual Intentions. Marian Holienka, Comenius University, Bratislava; Monika Muehlboeck, University of Vienna; Julia Warmuth, University of Vienna; Bernhard Kittel, University of Vienna “It’s Time:” Europeanization in the Hands of Young Urbanites in Greece. Kathryn Kozaitis, Georgia State University Closing the Opportunity Gap for Socially Vulnerable Young Women in Germany. Pinar Güner, Harvard University Young Employed and Their Siblings in Europe: Only a Social Class Matter? Tiziana Nazio, Collegio Carlo Alberto/University of Turin; Marianna Filandri, University of Turin; Jacqueline O’Reilly, University of Brighton Discussant: Frank Tros, University of Amsterdam 179. Rediscovering Religion in European Studies 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Harald Wydra, Cambridge University Participants: Race, Catholic Charity, and the Cold War in Postwar Italy. Silvana Patriarca, Fordham University The Enemy within: Catholic Anti-Communism in Cold War Italy. Rosario Forlenza, Columbia University - The Blinken Institute Sacralizing Nature and Naturalizing the Sacred: Sex, Secularism, and the Nature of France. Kimberly Arkin, Boston University Relations Between State and Religious Organisations

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Under Pressure to Reform: The Change of the Public Role of Religious Organisations in Europe Against the Background of Secularization and Religious Pluralisation. Matthias Kortmann, University of Munich Discussant: Marla Stone, Occidental College

Thursday, July 9

180. The Central Role of the Peripheries in the Making of Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: Besnik Pula, Virginia Tech Participants: German Geopolitics in and Towards Putin’s Russia. Stefan Auer, The University of Hong Kong Turkish Delight and Discontent in “European” Lithuania. Gediminas Lankauskas, University of Regina Race to the Euro: Why Latvia Joined Earlier Than Lithuania? Anastazija Markevičiūtė, Vilnius University; Vytautas Kuokstis, Vilnius University Poland’s Foreign Policy during the Ukraine Crisis and the Future of the Eastern Partnership. Maria Krasnodebska, University of Cambridge Europeanization or Instrumentalization? Comparing Legitimacy Strategies of Political Parties from Ukraine and Georgia. Agnieszka Cianciara, Institute of Political Studies Polish Academy of Sciences Discussant: Niamh Hardiman, University College Dublin 181. “The Future of Capitalism” 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room JM Chairs: Christine Trampusch, University of Cologne, Cologne Center for Comparative Politics; Julia Moses, University of Sheffield Discussants: Margaret Somers, University of Michigan; Wolfgang Streeck, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies; Robert Boyer, Centre pour la Recherche Economique et ses Applications (CEMPREM) 182. Author-Meets-Critics: Adrian Favell, Immigration, Integration and Mobility: New Agendas in Migration Studies. Essays 1998-2014. 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Chair: David Swartz, Boston University Discussants: Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Frank Bean, University of California, Irvine; Nancy Foner, Grad Centre, CUNY; Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, CEE; Mirna Safi, Sciences Po, OSC 183. Borders on the Move: From the Soviet Union into Eurasia? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chair: Ganna Gerasymenko, Institute for Demography and Social Studies, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Participants: Poland’s Changing Borders. Agnieszka Smelkowska, University of California at Berkeley

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Expanding Religious Borders? The New Influence of Some Old State Churches. Gerhard Besier, Sigmund Neumann Institute for the Research on Freedom, Liberty and Democracy Shifting Borders: Unpredictability and Strategic Distrust at the Finnish-Russian Border. Jussi Laine, University of Eastern Finland Ukraine and Russia in Crisis. Katarzyna Stoklosa, University of Southern Denmark Discussant: Gerhard Besier, Sigmund Neumann Institute for the Research on Freedom, Liberty and Democracy 184. Comparative Perspectives on New Immigrant Destinations 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chair: Andreas Wüst, University of Mannheim Participants: Diversity Proliferation in New Immigrant Destinations. Anthony Messina, Trinity College But They Are Not “Just the Same As Us”!: The Political Incorporation of Immigrants in Dublin and Madrid. Elista Molles, Boston College Immigrant Integration Policy Frames in Italy: A Multilevel Governance Perspective. Tiziana Caponio, University of Turin; Francesca Campomori, University of Venice The Challenges of Immigrant Incorporation in the Context of Multiple Transition Processes: The Case of Poland. Magdalena Lesiñska, University of Warsaw; Aleksandra Grzymała-Kazłowska, University of Warsaw Discussant: Rodney Hero, University of California, Berkeley 185. Creating a Neoliberal World Order? Discussing James Cronin’s GLOBAL RULES 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: George Ross, Université de Montréal Participant: Discussants: George Ross, Université de Montréal; Mark Wickham-Jones, University of Bristol; Helen Parr, University of Keele; James Cronin, Boston College; Donald Sassoon, Queen Mary University, London; Mario Del Pero, Sciences Po, Centre d’Histoire 186. Experiencing European Integration: Transnational Lives and European Identity 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Ettore Recchi, Sciences Po, OSC Discussants: Theresa Kuhn, University of Amsterdam; Sophie Duchesne, CNRS, ISP; Steffen Mau, University of Bremen; Frédéric Mérand, Université de Montréal 187. Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) and the EU: Politics, Regulation, Social Movements 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Ronald Herring, Cornell University Participants: Deciding over Controversial Issues: Voting Behavior

in the Council and the European Parliament on Genetically Modified Organisms. Monika Muehlboeck, University of Vienna; Jale Tosun, Heidelberg University Golden Rice in European and Global Conflicts over Biotechnology. Klaus Ammann, University of Bern Switzerland Measuring the Europeanization of the Anti-GM Movement. Evidence from Five EU Countries. Franz Seifert, University of Vienna Discussant: Ronald Herring, Cornell University

189. LGBT Activism and the Making of Europe: A Rainbow Europe? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Virginie Guiraudon, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Discussants: Pascale Dufour, Université de Montréal; Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam; Nancy Naples, University of Connecticut; Carlo Ruzza, University of Trento; Markus Thiel, Florida International University; Mieke Verloo, IWM, Institute for Human Sciences 190. Multi-level State Dynamics and the Economic Crisis in Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Sean Mueller, Bern University Participants: Robust or Rigid? Federal Dynamics during the Economic Crisis in Germany’s Federal System. Arthur Benz, University of Darmstadt; Jared Sonnicksen, Technische Universität Darmstadt The Socioeconomic Basis of Scotland’s Bid for Independence. Eve Hepburn, University of Edinburgh The Impact of the Economic Environment on the Electoral Success of Regionalist Parties in Belgium.

191. The Political Economy of Skills and Education 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Alessia Lefebure, Alliance Participants: Education and Explanations for the Welfare State: Selective Schooling in England and Germany. Gregory Baldi, Western Illinois University Creating Collective Skill Formation? The Politics of Vocational Training Reform in Liberal Market Economies. Janis Vossiek, University of Konstanz Partisanship and Higher Education Development: Is There a Left-Right Divide? A Perspective on Central and Eastern Europe. Silvana Tarlea, European University Institute Discussant: Sotiria Grek, University of Edinburgh 192. The Politics of Heritage 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: Genevieve Zubrzycki, University of Michigan Participants: Going East: Colonial Conquest and the Creation of National Parks during World War II. Stefan Bargheer, University of California, Los Angeles “Making It to the West through the Wild East”: Poland’s Post-1989 Branding of Nature. Genevieve Zubrzycki, University of Michigan To Preserve or Not to Preserve a Historic Neighborhood: The Strange Case of Budapest’s “Jewish District." Alexandra Kowalski, Central European University Rock, Paper, Chisels: The Problem of Heritage Abundance in Italy. Fiona Rose-Greenland, University of Chicago Discussant: Nadège Ragaru, Sciences Po

Thursday, July 9

188. Is Islam Contradictory to Political Participation in Europe? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Jocelyne Cesari, Harvard University Participants: Political Participation of Muslim Citizens in Europe: What Does Religion Have to Do with It? Jocelyne Cesari, Harvard University Ethncity, Color-Divide or Religion? Where Does the Politization of the Immigrant-Origin French Come From? Vincent Tiberj, Sciences Po, CEE Conventional and Unconventional Muslim Participation As a Response to Securitization in Europe. Ariane Chebel d’Appollonia, Rutgers University What Causes Political Marginality? A Comparative Analysis of Western Muslims and the White Working Class. Justin Gest, George Mason University Explaining Variation in Western Muslim Elected Officials Roles in Religious and Identity Based Conflicts. Abdulkader Sinno, Indiana University Discussant: Martin Schain, New York University

Régis Dandoy, Université Libre de Bruxelles Multi-Level State Dynamics and the Economic Crisis in Italy. Alex Wilson, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Discussant: Arjan Schakel, Maastricht University

193. Through the Looking-Glass: Union Citizenship as a Game Changer for Social Policy in Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Susanne Schmidt, University of Bremen Participants: Union Citizenship As a Game Changer for Higher Education Systems in Member States. Anne van Wageningen, University of Amsterdam, Faculty of Humanities European Citizenship As a Game Changer for Student Mobility and Transnational Study Finance in the European Union. Angelika Schenk, University of Bremen Different Approaches in Promotion of Mobility of Students and Patients in the European Union. Filip Krepelka, Masaryk University in Brno (CZ), Faculty of Law Exploring the Concept of Union Citizenship in Relation

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to Labour Law: Its Potentials and Pitfalls. Miriam Kullmann, Maastricht University Political Choice and Constraints Imposed By Financial Markets – Understanding the Nexus of National Executives, Parliaments and Citizens in European Union Decision-Making at Times of Crisis. Uwe Puetter, Central European University; Robert Csehi, Central European University Discussant: Benjamin Werner, University of Bremen 194. Urban and Housing Policies and their Socioeconomic Effects (Sponsored by LIEPP) 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Bruno Palier, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP, CNRS Discussants: Etienne Wasmer, Sciences Po, Département d’économie, LIEPP; Patrick Le Galès, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS; Guillaume Chapelle, Sciences Po, LIEPP

Thursday, July 9

195. Do Parties Make a Difference in Electoral Campaigns? Policy Positions and Issue Competition in Modern Democracies 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Participants: Party Competition and Climate Policy: Comparing Mainstream Parties’ Manifestos in France, Germany, Ireland and the UK. Robert Ladrech, Keele University; Neil Carter, University of York; Conor Little, University of Copenhagen Do Manifestos Matter? Exploratory Remarks about Socialist Party Candidate Hollande’s Positions on Taxation during the 2012 French Presidential Election. Rafaël Cos, Université de Lille 2 Electoral Realignment and the Position of Social Democratic Parties on Welfare Policies. Silja Häusermann, University of Zurich Do Parties Differ in Terms of Salience and Positions? The Case of the Environment in France and the UK. Simon Persico, Sciences Po, CEE/Sciences Po Grenoble The Politics of Representation. The Role of Political Parties in Europe in an Age of Globalization and Liberalization. Yvette Peters, University of Bergen All about Issues: Electoral Systems, Interparty Dynamics, and Public Opinion Shifts. Florence So, Aarhus University Discussant: Nicolas Sauger, Sciences Po, CEE 196. Flexibility vs. Effectiveness 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chair: Mariolina Eliantonio, Maastricht University Participants: EU Water Governance: Striking the Right Balance Between Regulatory Flexibility and Enforcement? Andrea Keessen, Utrecht University; Marleen van Rijswick, Utrecht University European Soft Governance and Worker Protection: Making Ends Meet? Nina Büttgen, Maastricht University The Cultural Open Method of Coordination: Is It Fit

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for Purpose? Evangelia Psychogiopoulou, Maastricht University Redundancy in Multilevel Energy Governance: Why (and when) Regulatory Overlap Can be Valuable. Martijn Groenleer, Delft University of Technology Non-Binding Coordination in EU Telecoms Regulation. Procedural and Organizational Factors of Effective Coordination. Emmanuelle Mathieu, German Research Institute for Public Administration (Speyer) Discussant: Roberto Caranta, University of Turin 197. Migration and Cultural Citizenship in Contemporary Iberia 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Gema Pérez-Sánchez, University of Miami Participants: Multi-Ethnic Lisbon: From Foreign Land to Global City. Sonia Roncador, The University of Texas at Austin Architectural Representations of Migration and Interculturality in Mouraria. Catalina Iannone, The University of Texas at Austin Cultural Responses to Terrorism: The March 11, 2004 Bombings in Madrid. Jill Robbins, The University of Texas at Austin Digital Poetics and Saharawi Immigrant Culture in Spain. Debra Faszer-McMahon, Seton Hill University Emancipate Your Self: Political Agency in Najat El Hachmi and Farida Belghoul. Adolfo Campoy-Cubillo, Oakland University Discussant: Jill Robbins, The University of Texas at Austin 198. Narrating Europe: Theoretical and Conceptual Perspectives 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Danilo Breschi, UNINT - Rome Participants: Meanings of Europe and Meaning in History. Rolf Petri, University of Venice European Civilization: A Long-Term Narrative Based on European Values. Michael Wintle, University of Amsterdam Civilization, Modernity and Europe: The Making and Unmaking of a Conceptual Unity. Gavin MurrayMiller, University of Cardiff Christian Culture and the Idea of Europe during the XX Century. Lucio Valent, University of Milan Toward Eurasia: A New Paradigm for Narrating Europe. Federico Leonardi, Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele Discussant: Matthew D’Auria, University of East Anglia 199. Offshore Europe on the Move: The Dynamics of EuroCaribbean Societies and Politics in the XXIst Century (Part 3) 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: Peter Clegg, University of the West of England Participants: A Sociology of Business Owners in Martinique. Audrey Célestine, Université Lille 3 UFR Angellier; Aurélie

Roger, University of the French West Indies and Guyana Postcolonial Challenges to French Legal Culture: Analysis of Activist Discourse Concerning the 2009 General Strikes in Guadeloupe and Martinique. Jennifer Fredette, Ohio University Deconstructing Development: Immigration, Society and Economy in Early Twenty-First Century Cayman. J. A. Roy Bodden, University College of the Cayman Islands Class Takes Place: Group-Making and Transatlantic Elite Sociability in St. Barts. Bruno Cousin, University of Lille 1; Sébastien Chauvin, University of Amsterdam Discussant: Edenz Maurice, Sciences Po, Centre d’Histoire

201. What Is Wrong with Efficiency? 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: Nuria Garcia, Sciences Po, CEE Participants: Economy and Politics of Mono- Vs. Multilingualism in the EU (Some Aspects). Roman Szul, University of Warsaw, Centre for European Regional and Local Studies Multilingualism As Social Policy: Assessing the Fairness of the EU’s Language Regime. Michele Gazzola, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany Communicating in Europe: Should the Most Efficient Means be Chosen? Isaac Taylor, St. Anne’s College, University of Oxford The Helvetic System: Prototype or Victim of Europe’s Language Policy? Till Burckhardt, Université de Genève The Genealogy of Multilingualism. Astrid von Busekist, Sciences Po, CERI; Hugo El Kholi, Sciences Po, CERI Discussant: Peter Kraus, Universität Augsburg 202. What Shapes Legal Mobilization within Different Settings? Constraints and Resources in the Mobilization of Law 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chair: Dagmar Soennecken, York University

203. An Equal Place: The Historical Struggle for Women’s Citizenship 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Alison E. Woodward, Institute for European Studies Participants: Sport and Social Movements: The Case of Catholic Feminist Lilí Álvarez in 20th Century Spain. Celia Valiente, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid A Transnational Gender History of Southern European Feminisms (1900-1939). Anne Cova, Institute of Social Sciences of Lisbon University The Confessional, the International, or Loyalty? An Examination of Partisan Performance after Women’s Enfranchisement. Dawn Teele, LSE; Mona MorganCollins, LSE Unanticipated Consequences of Women Movements in Europe and Italy. Liana Daher, University of Catania An Unlikely Refuge: Latvian and Jewish Women Volunteers of the Red Army in World War II. Daina Eglitis, The George Washington University Discussant: Laura Frader, Northeastern University

Thursday, July 9

200. Revolutions: Short and Long-Term Consequences 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Participants: Revolutionary Change and the Prospects for Democracy: Appraising the Impact of Revolutionary Violence on Regime Formation. Michael Bernhard, University of Florida; Jeffrey Kopstein, University of Toronto Good Revolutions Vs. Bad Revolutions: The Fate of Democracy in Europe in Post-Revolutionary States. Jack Goldstone, George Mason University The Revolution Eats Its Own Children? The Paradoxical Fate of the Communist Successor Parties in East Central Europe. Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan Discussant: Oxana Shevel, Tufts University

Participants: Stampede for Justice? Legal Mobilization before the European Court of Human Rights. Lisa Conant, University of Denver Strategies of Resistance in the Courthouse: The Case of the Belgian Field Liberation Movement. Graeme Hayes, Aston University Litigious Policies and Access to Labor Court: Constraints and Resources in the Mobilization of the Law Against Discrimination in Europe. Aude Lejeune, Université Lille 2, CERAPS, CNRS Taking Trade Union Discrimination to Court: A Sociology of Support and Resources for Legal Action. Vincent-Arnaud Chappe, EHESS, CEMS, IMM The Diffusion of Disability Rights in Europe. Lisa Vanhala, University College London, Department of Political Science Discussant: Jacqueline Gehring, Allegheny College

204. Change and Reform in the Contemporary Welfare State 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Allison Rovny, University of Gothenburg Participants: The Recalibration of EU Welfare States after the Eurocrisis: Which Road (if any) Towards Social Investment? Stefano Ronchi, University of Cologne, GK SOCLIFE Contradictions Between Austerity in the European Union and the Multilevel Legal Framework: Reinforcing a Rights-Based Approach to Solidarity. Alexandre de le Court, Pompeu Fabra University Barcelona The Effects of Communicating Pressures a Comparative Experimental Study of Reform Pressure Framing on Citizens Perceptions of Welfare State Sustainability

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in Germany, Norway and Sweden. Staffan Kumlin, Institute for Social Research, Oslo; Achim Goerres, University of Duisburg-Essen; Rune Karlsen, Institute for Social Research Oslo Discussant: Karen Jusko, Stanford University

Thursday, July 9

205. Cultural Dimensions of Europeanization 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Nanette Levinson, American University School of International Service Participants: Europeanisation of Ideas, Europeanisation of Memories? The Corpus-Analytic Exploration of Memory Transnationalisation Across Western Europe. Eric Sangar, King’s College London/Institut de Recherche Stratégique de l’Ecole Militaire (IRSEM), Paris The Pan-European Union Interpretation of Symbols and Myths. Kennet Lynggaard, Roskilde University Towards the European Public Sphere – EU News and Debate Websites. Malgorzata Winiarska-Brodowska, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland Discussant: Claske Vos, University of Amsterdam 206. Euroscepticism: Causes and Contradictions 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: Doreen Allerkamp, University of Mannheim Participants: The Flawed Politics of Simple Solutions: Why a British Referendum on EU Membership Will Not Solve the Europe Question. Andrew Glencross, University of Stirling Does Eurosceptic Campaigning Influence Mainstream Parties? A Comparative Analysis of the Netherlands and France in the 2014 European Parliament Elections. Maurits Meijers, Hertie School of Governance The Paradox of Polish Euroscepticism: Explaining the Undercurrent Discontent with Europe of the Most Enthusiastic Supporter of the European Project. Joanna Fomina, Polish Academy of Sciences Spillovers and Euroscepticism. Jean-François Jamet, European Central Bank; Johannes Kleibl, European Central Bank; Demosthenes Ioannou, European Central Bank Discussant: Nicolò Conti, Unitelma Sapienza of Rome 207. Experiencing European Identity 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Ben Revi, University of Chester Participants: Literary Nationalism, Contemporary Canonicity, and the Unrealized Promise of the European Book Prize. Nicholas Mason, Brigham Young University The Battlegrounds of European Identity: On the Meaning of Identification with Europe. Christof Van Mol, University of Antwerp/Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI) / KNAW / UG; Helga de Valk, Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Loving It but Not Feeling It Yet? European Identity in Eastern and Western Europe. Aleksandra Sojka, University of Granada; Besir Ceka, Davidson College Adulterated Oil, Adulterated Nation: Anxiety and the Production of Italian Extra Virgin Olive Oil. Daniel Shattuck, University of New Mexico Identity without Territory? Why European Geography Matters. Axel Marion, Fondation Pierre du Bois Discussant: Sophie Duchesne, CNRS, ISP 208. Going Green? - Environmental Politics in Europe 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Stella Ladi, Queen Mary University of London Participants: EU Climate Governance and Burden Sharing: Comprehensive Analysis Based on Interest and Norm. Chi Ming Wang, Tunghai University Policy Feedback, Sectoral Fragmentation and Germany’s Elusive Solar Economy. Timur Ergen, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies Movement Parties As Programmatic Parties: Substantive Gains and the Electoral Success of West European Green Parties. Steffen Blings, Cornell University 209. The Challenges of Regulating Labor in Europe 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Susan Milner, University of Bath Participants: Refit and the Reform of European Labour Law. Isabelle Schoemann, European Trade Union Institute The Politics of Time: The Revolution of Working Time Regulations in 21 OECD Countries from 1900 to 2010. Magnus Rasmussen, Aarhus University The Politics of Pension Reform Under EU Constraints: Southern European Trade Unions Facing Conditionality. Angie Gago, University of Milan The Twin Follies of Wage Restraint and Coercive Active Labour Market Policy. Charles Umney, University of Greenwich; Ozlem Onaran, University of Greenwich; Ian Greer, University of Greenwich; Graham Symon, University of Greenwich The European Court of Justice and the Fixed-Term Work Directive: Still Fixed, but at Least Equal. Caroline de la Porte, Roskilde University; Patrick Emmenegger, University of Southern Denmark Labor Standards and External Promotion of European Norms. Pawel Frankowski, Jagiellonian University Discussant: Tobias Schulze-Cleven, Rutgers University 210. Transnationalization of CEEE Economies 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: Agnieszka Cianciara, Institute of Political Studies Polish Academy of Sciences Participants: What Exceptionalism? Post-Communist Human Development in the Larger Global Arena. Rudra Sil, University of Pennsylvania When Do Industries Become Competitive? States and

Markets in Industrial Restructuring in Postsocialist Economies. Besnik Pula, Virginia Tech Beyond Overcapacity: The Political Construction of the European Automobile Market. Bernard Jullien, Université de Bordeaux; Tommaso Pardi, IDHES CNRS The Evolution of Backyard Management in Europe. Visnja Vukov, European University Institute; Laszlo Bruszt, European University Institute The Political Economy of Currency Boards and the Crisis in Central and Eastern Europe. Magnus Feldmann, University of Bristol; Vytautas Kuokstis, Vilnius UniversityVilnius University Discussant: Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich

212. Better Regulation Principles: From Conflict to Consensus (and Back?) 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Denis Duez, Saint-Louis University-Brussels Participants: Harmony-Thinking and Post-Political Ethics in Global Governance. Kerstin Jacobsson, University of Gothenburg; Christina Garsten, Stockholm University Resistance to Policy Change in the European Union: An Actor-Centered Perspective. Amandine Crespy, Université Libre de Bruxelles; Sabine Saurugger, Sciences Po Grenoble Engaging with Civil Society: Institutional Discourses, Practices and ‘Civil’ Responses to Consultation Mechanisms. Ludivine Damay, Saint-Louis University - Brussels Data Protection By Design and By Default: Out of Sight, Out of Politics? Rocco Bellanova, Peace Research Institute Oslo; Raphaël Gellert, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Discussant: Claudia Schrag Sternberg, University of Oxford

214. Contradictions, Crisis, and Capitalist Institutionalist Diversity 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Patrick Le Galès, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Discussants: Wolfgang Streeck, Max-Planck-Institut fuer Gesellschaftsforschung; Andrew Gamble, Cambridge University; Vivien Schmidt, Boston University; Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva; Andy Smith, Sciences Po, Bordeaux; Colin Hay, Sciences Po, CEE

Thursday, July 9

211. An Epistemic Turn in Migration Studies: Causes and Consequences for Research and Policy 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Chair: Andrew Geddes, University of Sheffield Participants: The ‘Epistemic Turn’ in Immigration Policy Analysis. Christina Boswell, University of Edinburgh Does Policy Learning Lead to Fundamental Policy Change? Learning, Change and Migrant Integration Policies in Europe. Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam Framing the Causes and Consequences of Immigration: Evidence Form the European Union. Andrew Geddes, University of Sheffield Epistemic Prerequisite for ‘Remote Control’? Risk As a Governance Tool in European Border Control. Regine Paul, University of Bremen Sources and Uses of Information in EU Migration Governance. Leila Hadj-Abdou, University of Sheffield Discussant: James Hampshire, University of Sussex

213. Can the EU Defend Democracy at Home? 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Turkuler Isiksel, Columbia University/Princeton University Participants: Autocracy Enhancing Multilateralism in the EU? Turkuler Isiksel, Columbia University Systemic Infringement Actions: How to Enforce EU Values without Treaty Change. Kim Scheppele, Princeton The Promise of the Pre-Article 7 Procedure. Dimitry Kochenov, Groningen Graduate School of Law The Normative Foundation for the EU Role on Protection of Democracy in Member States. Carlos Closa, European University Institute Europe’s Other Democratic Deficit. R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University Discussant: Matteo Bonelli, Maastricht University

215. Diaspora Policies of Sending States at Home and Abroad 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Kristin Surak, School of Oriental and Asian Studies, University of London Participants: Why Do States Develop Multi-Tier Emigrant Policies? Evidence from Egypt. Gerasimos Tsourapas, SOAS, University of London Sending States and the Making of Intra-Diasporic Politics. Fiona Adamson, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London Government Vs. Party Efforts to Expand to Diasporas Abroad: Kosovo As a Case of Contested Sovereignty. Maria Koinova, Warwick University Bounded Transnationalism: Canada, Germany and the Politics of Diaspora. Phil Triadafilopoulos, University of Toronto at Scarborough Argentina: The Politics of On-and-Off Inclusion of Emigrants. Ana Margheritis, University of Southampton The Strategic Logic of Diaspora Management. Harris Mylonas, George Washington University Discussant: Kristin Surak, School of Oriental and Asian Studies, University of London 216. Governance and Affective Circuits of Care in African

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Thursday, July 9

and Asian Migrations to Europe 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Laurence Kotobi, University of Bordeaux Participants: Transnational Therapy Management, Affective Circuits, and State Regulation: Senegal River Valley Migrants in France. Carolyn Sargent, Washington University in St. Louis; Stéphanie Larchanché, Centre F. Minkowska, Paris Navigating Between Inclusion and Exclusion: Young Cape Verdean Migrants in Portugal. Elizabeth Challinor, Centre for Research in Anthropology, Portugal On the Non-Circulation of Children: Migrants’ Infrequent Fostering Arrangements Between Germany and Cameroon. Pamela FeldmanSavelsberg, Carleton College “Fistful of Tears”: Encounters with Transnational Affect, Chinese Immigrants and Italian Fast Fashion. Elizabeth Krause, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Massimo Bressan, IRIS (Institute of Research and Social Interventions), Prato Integrating into a Disintegrating French Middle Class: Reproducing Affective Circuits and Economic Morality in Senegalese Households in Paris. Chelsie Yount-André, Northwestern University, EHESS Discussant: Christian Groes-Green, Roskilde University 217. Holocaust Memory in Europe and Exclusion of Minorities 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Karolina Follis, Lancaster University Participants: Networking Memory: Germany’s Holocaust Memorials to Romani, Jewish, and Gay Victims. Nadine Blumer, Concordia University Holocaust Memory and Racial Amnesia. Fatima ElTayeb, University of California, San Diego Monumental Memory, Moral Superiority, and Contemporary Disconnects: Racisms and Noncitizens in Europe, Then and Now. Damani Patridge, University of Michigan Holocaust Memory and the Rhetoric of Multiculturalism in Poland. Yifat Gutman, Tel Aviv University Philo-Semitism As Routine Accomplishment: Holocaust Memory and Xenophobia in Germany. Irit Dekel, Humboldt University of Berlin/Bard College Berlin Europeanization of Holocaust Memory, Racialization of Anti-Semitism. Esra Ozyurek, London School of Economics and Political Science Discussant: Gokce Yurdakul, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 218. Old Routes, New Migrations: South­-North Mobility of EU Citizens in Times of Crisis 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chairs: Mikolaj Stanek, Centro de Estudos Sociais University of Coimbra; Roxana Barbulescu, College of

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Europe Participants: Immobility in Times of Crisis: The Case of Greece. Michalis Moutselos, Princeton University; Georgia Mavrodi, European University Institute Structural Emigration: The Revival of Portuguese Outflows. José Carlos Marques, Polytechnic Institute of Leiria, CESNOVA (unit Leiria); Pedro Gois, University of Porto/Centro de Estudos Sociais - University of Coimbra New Immigration and Emigration Flows and Policies in Spain. Elisa Brey, CEDEM University of Liege; Anastasia Bermudez, CEDEM University of Liege Southern European Migrants in Belgium: From “Heroes” to “Welfare Shoppers." Mikolaj Stanek, Centro de Estudos Sociais - University of Coimbra; Jean-Michel Lafleur, CEDEM University of Liege A New Source of Labour for Low Skilled Sectors? Young Southern Europeans in the UK. Eleonore Kofman, Middlesex University; Alessio D’Angelo, Middlesex University Discussant: Irial Glynn, Leiden University 219. Private Debt, Public Debt, and the Fiscal State 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Henrik Enderlein, Hertie School of Governance Participants: Explaining the Responsiveness of Political Systems to Economic Downturns. Jonas Kraft, Aarhus University; Carsten Jensen, Aarhus University Private Debt, Public Virtues; On the Relationship Between Welfare and Household Debt. Martino Comelli, SciencesPo, MaxPo The Financialization of Sovereign Debt: A CrossNational Analysis of 23 OECD Countries. Michael Schwan, University of Cologne, CGS; Florian Fastenrath, University of Cologne; Christine Trampusch, University of Cologne, Cologne Center for Comparative Politics The Electoral Origin of the Fiscal State. Pablo Beramendi, Duke University; Didac Queralt, Juan March Institute Public Debt and Private Pensions: The Financialization of the State in the Late Twentieth Century. Natascha Van der Zwan, Leiden University Discussant: Gregory Fuller, American University 220. The Dynamics of Multi-Level Politics: Competences, Elections, and Accountability 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Michael Tatham, University of Bergen Participants: On Subnational Debt and Bailouts: Does Fiscal Decentralization Lead to Overborrowing? Hanna Kleider, VU University Amsterdam Multi-Level Governance in Action: The Competence Allocation Preferences of Regional élites. Michael Tatham, University of Bergen; Michael Bauer, German

University of Administrative Sciences Speyer Government Accountability in the European Multilevel Electoral System. Arjan Schakel, Maastricht University Making Accountability Work Under Asymmetric Devolution. The British Case. Sandra León, University of York; Lluís Orriols, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Why Decentralize Authority Asymmetrically? André Kaiser, University of Cologne; Leonce Röth, University of Cologne Discussants: Hanna Kleider, VU University Amsterdam; Michael Tatham, University of Bergen

222. Cosmopolitan Europe!? A Conversation 6:00 to 7:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume Boutmy Chair: Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, CEE Participants: Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, CEE Juan Díez Medrano, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Chris Rumford, University of London Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex 223. Presidential Reception (Sponsored by LIEPP) 7:45 to 9:30 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Hall & Garden

224. Importing and Exporting Migration Theory across Continents: Europe, North America, and East Asia / (1) Importing North American Theory in Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, CEE Discussants: James Hollifield, Southern Methodist University David Abraham, University of Miami Frank Bean, University of California, Irvine Erik Bleich, Middlebury College; Nancy Foner, CUNY Graduate Center 225. Narrating Europe: Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Florian Greiner, University of Augsburg Participants: “Reformation” and “Renaissance”: Modernity and the Shaping of European Identities in the Historiography of the XIX Century. Fernanda Gallo, University of Lugano From Europe to America and Back: Tocqueville’s Narrative of Europe As the West. Danilo Breschi, UNINT, Rome Order and Disorder in Henri Pirenne’s Europe. Giuseppe Foscari, University of Salerno Discussant: Cathie Carmichael, University of East Anglia

Friday, July 10

221. The Role of Religion in European External Affairs 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Jim Guth, Furman University Participants: Promoting Secularism, Advocating Human Rights, Honouring Christian Heritage and Solidarities? How the EU Deals with Religion in External Affairs. François Foret, Université Libre de Bruxelles Defining a Secular Identity in an Increasingly Religious World? Religion in EU Foreign Policy. Anne Jenichen, University of Bremen Does Religion Matter? The EU Enlargement and Neighborhood in Polish and European Foreign Policy. Magdalena Gora, Jagiellonian University Explaining the Religious Engagement Agenda in Transatlantic Foreign Policies. Sarah Wolff, Queen Mary, University of London

Friday, July 10

226. Politicizing Europe? The Effect of the Euro Crisis on Attitudes towards European Integration 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: Mirjam Dageförde, Sciences Po, CEE Participants: Assessing the Depoliticization of European Citizens in a More Politicized Union. Virginie Van Ingelgom, Université catholique de Louvain Alter-Europeans: Towards a Politicization of Attitudes Towards Europe? Laurie Beaudonnet, Université de Montréal Did the Euro Change Attitudes Towards EU Integration? A Comparison Between Non-Euro Member States and Member States Participating in the Euro (19992014). Julie Nielsen, University of Copenhagen Yellow Cards and Orange Cards: Does Euroskepticism Affect the Usage of the Early Warning System? Christopher Williams, European University Institute Elite Cues and International Fiscal Solidarity: New Evidence from a Survey Experiment. Florian Stoeckel, European University Institute; Theresa Kuhn, University of Amsterdam Discussant: Céline Belot, Sciences Po Grenoble, PACTE 227. The Impact of the Crisis upon the Attitudes of National Elites towards the EU: Politicization, Perception of Institutions, and Threats 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14

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Chair: Maurizio Cotta, University of Siena Participants: Perceptions of the Role of European Union Institutions in the Management of the Eurozone Crisis and its Consequences: The View from the Perspective of Domestic Political Elites. José Real-Dato, University of Almería Integration By Fear? Attitudes of National Political Elites Towards Europe in the Crisis. Heinrich Best, Friedrich Schiller University Jena; Lars Vogel, Friedrich Schiller University Jena How Parties Politicised Europe (and Euroscepticism) in Italy at the Time of the 2014 EP Elections. Nicolò Conti, Unitelma Sapienza of Rome; Luca Verzichelli, University of Siena How Do Croatian MPs Perceive EU Threats? Bojana Kocijan, Central European University; Marko Kukec, Berlin Graduate School of Social Sciences Discussant: Gyorgy Lengyel, Corvinus University of Budapest

Friday, July 10

228. Transparency and Participation vs. Effectiveness 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Mariolina Eliantonio, Maastricht University Participants: Commercial Confidentiality in EU Pesticide Law: An Environmental Risk? Anne Vries-Stotijn, Tilburg University Paradoxes of the EU Regulatory Framework: The Application of a New Mode of Governance Does Not Increase Legitimacy and Effectiveness: Case Study to Dutch Water Quality. Ernst Plambeck, Utrecht University The Compliance Promoting Toolkit of the European Commission: Enhancing or Undermining Accountability through New Techniques of Governance? Melanie Smith, Cardiff Law School Discussant: Martijn Groenleer, Delft University of Technology 229. Arenas of Citizenship: Local and Transnational Dynamics 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Dorota Dakowska, University of Strasbourg Participants: Citizenship Rights for Immigrants in the West and Beyond. Ines Michalowski, WZB Berlin Social Science Center; Ruud Koopmans, WZB Berlin Social Science Center Intersecting Citizenship Regimes: The Production of New Citizens in Brussels. Eva Swyngedouw, University of Chicago Post-Imperial Citizenship: Russia, France, and Great Britain Compared. Oxana Shevel, Tufts University Practicing Transnational Citizenship: Dual Nationality and Simultaneous Political Involvement among Emigrants. Andrea Schlenker, University of Lucerne; Ieva Birka, University of Latvia; Joachim Blatter, University of Lucerne

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Why Do Parties Support External Citizenship? Eva Ostergaard-Nielsen, Autonomous University of Barcelona; Irina Ciornei, University of Bern; JeanMichel Lafleur, CEDEM University of Liege 230. Innerworkings of the European Commission and Council 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chair: Adriana Bunea, University College London Participants: New Paths of Professionalization in EU Policy-Making: A Social Topology. Sebastian Büttner, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg; Lucia Leopold, University of Bremen; Steffen Mau, University of Bremen; Matthias Posvic, University of Bremen Transposing EU Directives: The Effect of Being Outvoted in the Council of the EU. Brigitte Pircher, Institute for European Integration Research (EIF), University of Vienna Between Potential, Performance and Prospect. Revisiting the Political Leadership of the EU Commission President. Henriette Mueller, Humboldt University, Berlin The Presidency Effect. Doreen Allerkamp, University of Mannheim Discussant: Anchrit Wille, Leiden University 231. New Challenges from the Radical Right 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Mauro Barisione, University of Milan Participants: The Transformation of the Radical Right Gender Gap: The Case of the 2014 European Elections. Mauro Barisione, University of Milan; Nonna Mayer, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Policy Hostility, Group Hostility and Voting for Radical Right: Micro-Level Evidence from Slovakia. Lenka Bustikova, Arizona State University The EU Crisis and the Rise of Far Right Parties. Hassan Ansary, Al Akhawayn University Discussant: Manuela Caiani, Scuola Normale Superiore, Florence 232. Rethinking Gender Equality in the Crisis 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Agnès Hubert, European Commission Discussants: Françoise Milewski, Sciences Po, OFCE; Réjane Senac, Sciences Po, CEVIPOV, CNRS; Sylvia Walby, Lancaster University 233. Better Governance through Institutional Innovation? Assessing Democratic Legitimacy in the Post-Lisbon European Union 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: David Paternotte, Université Libre de Bruxelles Participants: Towards a ‘Green Card’ ? Rethinking Parliamentary

Engagement in the EU Governance. Karolina Boronska-Hryniewiecka, Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM) A Cosmopolitan Polity? Exploring Cosmopolitan Legimitacy in the EU’s Immigration & Asylum Policies. Jeffrey Maslanik, Florida International University Democratic Legitimacy and the Court of Justice of Justice of the European Union. Peter Gjortler, Riga Graduate School of Law Input and/or Output Legitimacy in Participatory Governance: The Case of the EU Fundamental Rights Agency and Platform. Markus Thiel, Florida International University Discussant: Philip Ayoub, Drexel University

235. Civil Society Organizations in the EU Context: A Political-Sociology Approach 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Carlo Ruzza, University of Trento Discussants: Hakan Johansson, University of Lund, Sweden; Rosa Sanchez Salgado, University of Amsterdam; Luis Bouza Garcia, College of Europe; Sabine Saurugger, Sciences Po Grenoble; Didier Georgakakis, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne 236. Crisis and Contradiction in European Higher Education 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Christine Musselin, Sciences Po, CSO, CNRS Participants: Liberalization and the Emergence of Regulatory Welfare States in Higher Education. Tobias Schulze-Cleven, Rutgers University Varieties of Credentialism in Crisis: Class Formation

237. Democracy and Authoritarianism’s Coexistence: Lessons about Contradictions from Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chair: Steffen Kalitz, Hannah Arendt Institute Participants: Liberalization and Democratization in 19th and Early 20th Century Spain: Illusion or Reality? Thomas Ertman, New York University The Democratization of Authoritarian Enclaves in Historical England and France. Kelly McMann, Case Western Reserve University What Do We Know about Interwar Regime Changes? Established Findings and Neglected Issues. SvendErik Skaaning, Aarhus University; Jørgen Møller, Aarhus University Discussants: Ekkart Zimmerman, Dresden University of Technology; Deborah Boucoyannis, University of Virginia

Friday, July 10

234. Between Neoliberal Convergence and New Divergences: Change in European Industrial Relations since the Economic Crisis 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: Robert Hancké, London School of Economics and Political Science Participants: Neoliberal Trajectories of European Industrial Relations: The Current Crisis and the Longue Durée. Lucio Baccaro, University of Geneva; Chris Howell, Oberlin College Politics and Corporate Restructuring in France and the United Kingdom: A QCA Analysis. Michel Goyer, University of Birmingham Dual Trajectories of Industrial Relations in Europe: Nationally Separated but Sectorally Equal? Bernd Brandl, University of York; Barbara Bechter, University of York One Capitalism, Six Industrial Relations: Change in European Labour Market Governance, 1992-2012. Guglielmo Meardi, University of Warwick Discussant: Rosemary Batt, Cornell University

in German and US-American Higher Education. Tilman Reitz, University of Jena Academic Governance: The Perspective from below. Johannes Angermuller, University of Warwick “Elitism” in Economics: The Construction of Global Academic Discourses after the Bologna Process. Jens Maesse, University of Warwick Discussant: Marino Regini, University of Milano, Italy

238. Democracy vs. Demoicracy: A Fundamental Contradiction in European Integration? 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: Peter Lindseth, University of Connecticut School of Law Discussants: Miriam Ronzoni, University of Manchester; Antoine Vauchez, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne, CNRS; Kalypso Nicolaidis, Oxford University 239. Economic Inequality, Legitimacy, Conflict, and Social Trust 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: Christian Larsen, Aalborg University Participants: How Americans Think Politically about Economic Inequality. Leslie McCall, Northwestern University The Rise and Fall of Social Cohesion: How Perceptions of Living in a Meritocratic Middle-Class Socity Affect Attitudes to Income Inequality and Social Trust. Christian Larsen, Aalborg University The Democratic Class Struggle Revisited: The Welfare State As a Vehicle of Social Cohesion and Political Conflict. Arvid Lindh, Umeå University Social Trust in Times of Economic Crisis. Assessing the Relevance of Inequality and European Economic Governance. Sonja Zmerli, Goethe University Frankfurt Discussant: Keith Banting, Queen’s University 240. European States and Institutions in International Intervention

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9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Lise Howard, Georgetown University Participants: Caught Between Idealism and Pragmatism - European Conflicts in Supporting Regional Integration in Africa. Frank Mattheis, University of Pretoria The Rise of the Norm of Peace Enforcement in European Military Doctrine. Lise Howard, Georgetown University The Politics of Influence: EU Intervention and Security Governance in Conflict-Affected Countries. LouisAlexandre Berg, Harvard University, John F. Kennedy School of Government Discussant: Joachim Koops, Vesalius College, Vrije Universiteit Brussel

Friday, July 10

241. Grand Designs: Locating Macro and Micro Ideas in the EU’s Political Economy 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Chair: Ben Rosamond, University of Copenhagen Participants: EU Institutional Actors’ Pathways to Legitimation for Their Changing Crisis Responses. Vivien Schmidt, Boston University From Great Moderation to Great Macroprudence: The Macroprudential Ideational Shift in International Economic Policy Coordination. Charlotte Rommerskirchen, University of Edinburgh; Holly Snaith, University of Copenhagen The Competition Policy of the European Union: Action Plan for a Competitive Europe or Tool for Crisis Management? Brigitte Leucht, University of Copenhagen; Katja Seidel, University of Westminster The Euro Crisis’ Theory Effect: Northern Saints, Southern Sinners, and the Demise of the Eurobond. Matthias Matthijs, Johns Hopkins SAIS; Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University Problematizing Preferences: The New Intergovernmentalism and the Political Economy of Post-Maastricht European Integration. Christopher Bickerton, University of Cambridge, Associate Researcher of Sciences Po, CEE; Dermot Hodson, Birkbeck College, University of London; Uwe Puetter, Central European University Discussant: Emmanuel Mourlon-Druol, University of Glasgow 242. Housing Finance and European Welfare States: Bubble and Bust in Comparative Perspective 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: Paulette Kurzer, University of Arizona Participants: Beyond the Asset-Based Welfare State: The Promotion of Homeownership in Small Welfare States. Karen Anderson, University of Southampton; Paulette Kurzer, University of Arizona The Politics of Government Support in Housing

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Finance: Explaining Institutional Change in Housing Finance Policy in Germany. Alexander Reisenbichler, George Washington University Why Asset Based Welfare Can’t Work: Debt, Demography, and the Disastrous 2010s. Herman Schwartz, University of Viriginia Discussant: Waltraud Schelkle, London School of Economics and Political Science 243. Immigration and Political Representation 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Karen Schönwälder, Max Planck Institute for the study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity Participants: Migrants and Natives in German City Politics. Karen Schönwälder, Max Planck Institute for the study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity; Alex Street, Carroll College; Daniel Volkert, Max Planck Institute for the study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity Political Parties and Ethnic Diversity: Understanding Convergences and Divergences Between the Socialist Party (PS) in Paris and the Social Democratic Party (SPD) in Berlin. Daniel Volkert, Max Planck Institute for the study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity Ethnicity and Preferential Voting in Belgium. Silvia Erzeel, Université catholique de Louvain; Pierre Baudewyns, Université catholique de Louvain; Steven Van Hauwaert, Université catholique de Louvain Political Opportunity Structure, the Conservative Party and the Gap Between Substantive and Descriptive Representation of Ethnic Minorities in Britain. Maria Sobolewska, University of Manchester Discrimination Against Minorities: An Experimental Study of the Effect of Candidate Gender and Origin on Voters’ Behavior Regarding Prejudice. Ina Bieber, Goethe-University Frankfurt Discussant: Floris Vermeulen, University of Amsterdam 244. Mainstreaming Research on National Parliaments in the EU: Parliamentary Scrutiny across EU Policy Fields 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: Katrin Auel, Institute for Advanced Studies, Vienna Participants: The Density of Networks in Different Policy Fields: National Parliaments and the EU Legislative Process. Rik de Ruiter, Institute of Public Administration, Leiden University; Jelmer Schalk, Institute of Public Administration, Leiden University Subsidiarity in the Field of Justice and Home Affairs: The Yellow Card for the European Public Prosecutor’s Office Proposal and the Lessons to be Learned Concerning the Subsidiarity Early Warning Mechanism. Gavin Barrett, University College Dublin European Economic Governance: The Dual Emergence of a New Interparliamentary Conference and Trends of Multi-Speed Interparliamentary Cooperation? Diane Fromage, European University Institute EU Parliamentary Scrutiny at Times of Crisis: Losing

Ground or Adopting New Influence Strategies? Mette Christensen, University of Southern Denmark Liberty or Security? The Role of National Parliaments in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice. Angela Tacea, Sciences Po Discussant: Katrin Auel, Institute for Advanced Studies, Vienna

246. The Politics of Advanced Capitalism 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Silja Häusermann, University of Zurich Discussants: Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva; Peter Hall, Harvard University; Bruno Palier, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP, CNRS; Michael Becher, University of Konstanz; Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics and Political Science; Pablo Beramendi, Duke University 247. The Return of Street Politics: Claims, Representation, and Territoriality 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Aron Buzogany, Freie Universität Berlin Participants: Territoriality and Performance in Contemporary Protest Movements. Aidan McGarry, University of Brighton The 2013 Bulgarian Protest Movement: Europeanization from Below? John O’Brennan, Maynooth University Reclaiming Power: The Re-Emergence of People’s Political Agency in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Dario Brentin, University of Graz Discussant: Aidan McGarry, University of Brighton 248. International Organizations and Austerity in Southern and Eastern Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chair: Michael Breen, Dublin City University Participants:

249. Theorizing European Integration with a Gender Lens: Engaging New Dialogues 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Gabriele Abels, University of Tübingen Participants: Gendering Europeanisation: Some Contradictions of State-Society Transformation in Europe and Beyond. Ulrike Liebert, University of Bremen, Centre for European Studies Gendering Legal Theories of European Integration. Jessica Guth, Bradford University Gendering Civil Society Perspectives on the EU. Gabriele Wilde, University of Muenster Intergovernmentalisms: Gendering the Dinosaur? Anna van Der Vleuten, Radboud University Nijmegen European Integration and the Politics of Scale. a Gender Perspective. Birgit Sauer, Universität Wien; Sabine Lang, University of Washington Discussant: Thomas Diez, University of Tübingen

Friday, July 10

245. Multilevel Voting in Europe 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Linda Berg, University Gothenburg Participants: Congruence Between European, National and Regional Elections in the European Multilevel Electoral System. Arjan Schakel, Maastricht University Multi-Level Voting When Elections Coincide: The May 25 Elections in Belgium. Louise Hoon, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Party Manifesto Strategies in Simultaneous Elections in Belgium. Régis Dandoy, Université catholique de Louvain Multi-Level Voting Behaviour in the Swedish ‘Super Election Year’. Linda Berg, University Gothenburg The Consequences of Incongruence: Evidence from European Party Systems. Jonathan Polk, University of Gothenburg; Ryan Bakker, University of Georgia; Seth Jolly, Syracuse University Discussant: Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel

Learning By Doing in the Eurocrisis. Cornel Ban, Boston University; Leonard Seabrooke, Copenhagen Business School; Aitor Erce, European Stability Mechanism Subnational Debt Crises, International Conditionality, and the Rise and Demise of Local Democracy in Weimar Germany and Post-Socialist Hungary. Dorothee Bohle, Central European University Voice, Exit and Coalition-Building inside the Troika. Manuela Moschella, Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), Scuola Normale Superiore Disagreeing with the IMF: A View from the Romanian Central Bank. Daniela Gabor, University of West England Discussant: Ben Clift, University of Warwick

250. What Prospects for an Inclusive Job-Rich Recovery in South Europe? 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Philippe Pochet, Université catholique de Louvain Participants: Prospects for a Job-Rich Recovery Among Young Workers in Spain. Ana Guillen, University of Oviedo; Rodolfo Gutiérrez, University of Oviedo What Policy Innovation for Youth in Greece and Portugal? Maria Petmesidou, Democritus University of Thrace Youth Labour Market Conditions in Times of Crisis. a Gender Approach on South European Countries. Paola Villa, Università degli Studi di Trento Social Innovation on the Rise: Yet Another Buzzword in Time of Austerity? Francesco Grisolia, Magna Graecia University of Cantanzaro, Italy; Emanuele Ferragina, University of Oxford Balancing Work and Care in South Europe: Policy Challenges in the Road to Recovery. Edna Costa, New University of Lisbon Discussant: Jacqueline O’Reilly, University of Brighton

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251. Importing and Exporting Migration Theory across Continents: Europe, North America, and East Asia / (2) Exporting European Migration Theory to East Asia 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, CEE Discussants: Kristin Surak, School of Oriental and Asian Studies, University of London; Akihiro Koido, Hitotsubashi University; Midori Okabe, Sophia University, Tokyo; Emiko Ochiai, Kyoto University; James Hollifield, Southern Methodist University; Anthony Fielding, University of Sussex

Friday, July 10

252. Legitimacy vs. Effectiveness 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Emilie Chevalier, University of Poitiers Participants: The Role of Guidance Documents in European Water and Environmental Law. Barbara Beijen, Utrecht University New Modes of Governance in the Private Enforcement of the EU Antitrust Rules. Sara Drake, Cardiff Law School Governing Banks in Europe. Mark Nelemans, Open University of the Netherlands Discussant: Mariolina Eliantonio, Maastricht University 253. Narrating Europe: Twentieth Century (part I) 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Richard Deswarte, University of East Anglia Participants: Narrating European History in the First Half of the ‘Age of Extremes’. Vittorio Dini, University of Salerno A European Homeland/Nation? Intellectuals and Debate on Europe in the Inter-War Period. Paola Cattani, University of Milan Between Provincial Moscow and Psychological Europe: Ukrainian Intellectuals in Search of Identity in the 1920s. Olena Palko, University of East Anglia Fighting for Europe: European Narratives and Spanish Experiences in the Blue Division. David Bryan, Birkbeck College, University of London Discussant: Jan Vermeiren, University of East Anglia 254. Output Legitimacy: Policy Performance and Legitimacy in the EU 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J103 Chair: Pavlos Vasilopoulos, Sciences Po, CEVIPOF Participants: Output Legitimacy? EU Policy Accountability, Congruence and EU Support. Mirjam Dageförde, Sciences Po, CEE / University of Stuttgart; Nicolas Sauger, Sciences Po, CEE Policy Feedbacks or Responsiveness? How Public Policies Impact upon Citizens’ Attitudes. Claire Dupuy, Sciences Po Grenoble; Virginie Van Ingelgom, Université catholique de Louvain The Impact of Exogenous and Endogenous Factors on the Media Coverage of European Integration:

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A Comparative Analysis of France, Spain and the UK (1990-2013). Isabelle Guinaudeau, Sciences Po Grenoble, CNRS; Anna Palau, University of Barcelona Discussant: Vincent Tiberj, Sciences Po, CEE 255. Regions as Actors within and beyond the State 1 – Regions in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chairs: Johanna Schnabel, University of Lausanne; Angustias Hombrado Martos, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED) Participants: Multi-Level Governance Type I and II: From Concept to Implementation. Romana Salageanu, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj The German Länder Representations in Berlin and Brussels. Members of the Same Family or Only Namesakes? Yvonne Hegele, University of Konstanz Cross-Border Institutionalization Enhancing European Integration on the Regional Layer? the European Grouping of Territorial Cooperation (EGTC) As a New Actor in the EU Multilevel Governance. Peter Ulrich, European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder) Discussant: Sean Mueller, Bern University 256. The Impact of the Crisis upon the Attitudes of National Elites towards the EU – Country Case Studies 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Maurizio Cotta, University of Siena Participants: What Greek Political Elites Thought of European Integration before and after the Onset of the Economic Crisis. Yannis Tsirbas, University of Athens; Dimitrios Sotiropoulos, University of Athens Not Enthusiastic Anymore? the Eurozone Crisis and Its Impact on Spanish Political Elites’ Support for the European Union. Juan Rodríguez-Teruel, University of Valencia; Miguel Jerez-Mir, University of Granada (R)Evolution of the Lithuanian Political Elite’s Attitudes Towards the EU (2004-2014). Irmina Matonyté, ISM University of Management and Economics Changing Attitudes of Hungarian Political Elites Towards the EU. Gyorgy Lengyel, Corvinus University of Budapest; Borbala Goncz, Corvinus University of Budapest 257. Democratic Erosion, Legitimacy, and Accountability in Contemporary Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Armin Schäfer, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies Participants: Electoral Rules, Legitimacy, and the Exercise of Supermajoritatian Powers: Evidence from Survey Experiments Around the 2014 Hungarian Elections. Jason Wittenberg, University of California, Berkeley; Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University; John Ahlquist,

University of Wisconsin; Nahomi Ichino, University of Michigan The Paradox of Accountability: Supranational Organizations, the Debt Crisis, and Democracy in Europe. Lisa Piergallini, Claremont Graduate University; Congli Huang, Claremont Graduate University; Mohammad Mahroos, Claremont Graduate University European Elections in Times of Trouble: Crisis Effects on Voter Turnout in the 2014 European Parliament Elections. Constantin Schaefer, University of Mannheim In the Business of Meddling with Politics? Sovereign Rating Agencies and Elections. Zsofia Barta, SUNY Albany; Alison Johnston, Oregon State University How Democracy Should Deal with Anti-Democratic Political Parties? Alessandra Monteiro, University of Coimbra Discussant: Michael Blauberger, University of Salzburg

259. European Politics in an Age of Austerity 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: David Cameron, Yale University Participants: The Social Democratic Tragedy of Responsibility: Why Austerity Is a Losing Game for the Left. Jonas Kraft, Aarhus University Crisis Politics. Vulnerability to Adjustment and Crisis Management in Eastern Europe and the Eurozone. Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich The Radical Character of European Politics Under Austerity. Ben Revi, University of Chester Relations Between Politicians and Society in Times of Crisis. Preliminary Results from a Federal Country in the South of Europe. Xavier Coller, Universidad Pablo de Olavide; Jean-Baptiste Harguindeguy, Universidad Pablo Olavide, Seville, Spain; Manuel Jiménez, univers-

260. Financialization, Regulation, and the European Policy Landscape 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Richard Weiner, Rhode Island College Participants: The financialization of the EU economy and the case for a prudent use of MMT: Moving beyond the neoKeynesian and the supply-side paradigm. Kristijan Kotarski, University of Zagreb; Luka Brkic, University of Zagreb Executing Robin Hood: Financial Political Power and the Case of the EU Financial Transaction Tax. Manolis Kalaitzake, University College Dublin The Power of Plastic Money: The Causes and Consequences of National Control over Payment Card Markets in Europe. Alya Guseva, Boston University; Akos Rona-Tas, University of California, San Diego The End of EU Financial Regulatory Internationalism? Elliot Posner, Case Western Reserve University; Nicolas Véron, Bruegel/Peterson Institute for International Economics Financialization and Gender. Brigitte Young, University of Muenster Why Does “the Financialization of Everyday Life” Mean Different Things for European Citizens? Elsa Massoc, University of California, Berkeley Discussant: Jacint Jordana, Universitat Pompeu Fabra

Friday, July 10

258. Embattled Eros: LGBT Rights and Movements 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: Sharon Barnartt, Gallaudet University Participants: Intimate Nation: Sexuality and Asylum in the Netherlands. Sarah Brennan, Columbia University Teachers College The Strange Victory of a Defeated Movement: Social and Political Outcomes of the French Mobilization Against Gay Marriages. Fabio Bolzonaro, University of Cambridge Portuguese Lesbian Couples Seeking Medically Assisted Reproduction in Spain. Tânia Machado, Social Sciences Research Centre of the University of Minho The Scientific and Legal Recognition of Gay and Lesbian Parenting in France and the United States: How Law and Knowledge Influence Each Other. Michael Stambolis-Ruhstorfer, University of California, Los Angeles Discussant: Sébastien Chauvin, University of Amsterdam

idad pablo de olavide; Guillermo Cordero, Universidad Pompeu Fabra; Sandra Bermúdez, Univesidad pompeu fabra; Amparo Novo, Universidad de Oviedo Economic Crises, Policy Preferences, and Political Coalitions: Evidence from Spain in the Eurozone Crisis. Jose Fernandez, CSIC; Alexander Kuo, Cornell University Discussant: Michel Goyer, University of Birmingham

261. New Developments in Education Policy 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: David Swartz, Boston University Participants: Do High-Skilled Immigrants Find Jobs Faster Than Low-Skilled Immigrants? Ruediger Wapler, Institute for Employment Research, Germany; Daniela Hochfellner, University of Michigan Ideas and Policy Change in European Education Policy. Marina Cino Pagliarello, London School of Economics and Political science The Political Economy of Higher Education Finance: A Comparative Analysis of the Politics of Tuition Fees and Subsidies. Julian Garritzmann, University of Konstanz Beyond Europe: Global Diffusion of an Education Policy Model? Comparing the Reactions of the Asia-Pacific, Latin American and African Regions to the European Bologna Reform. Tonia Bieber, Freie Universität Berlin ‘Governing By Numbers’ and the Rise of a Transnational

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Education Policy Field. Sotiria Grek, University of Edinburgh Policy Learning Across the EU: The Politics of Education Reform in Germany and France. Conrad King, University of British Columbia Discussant: Anne van Wageningen, University of Amsterdam 262. Protecting Human Rights in Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: Ralph Wilde, University College London Participants: Are Rural Moldovans Trafficked Because They Lack Awareness and Understanding about Human Trafficking? Ludmila Bogdan, Diplomatic Academy of Vienna EU Protection of Human Rights in Times of Crisis: The Case of the Roma. Ingi Iusmen, University of Southampton Religious Freedoms As Contradiction in Europe: Religious Manifestation in Schools and the Role of the European Court of Human Rights. Margarita Markoviti, New York University Discussant: Peter Gjortler, Riga Graduate School of Law

Friday, July 10

263. Reimagining Community: Nationalist Expression in Contemporary Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Dietmar Schirmer, University of Florida Participants: “Let’s Stay Together!”: The Anti-Secession Language in Madrid and London in the Catalan and Scottish Secessionist Processes. Elga Castro, New School for Social Research The Symbolic Economies of Postsocialist Nationalism. Virag Molnar, New School for Social Research “Leave Our Queen Alone You Haggis Sucker”: Evaluation, Affect, and the Politics of Agency in the Scottish Independence Referendum Debate. Jeanne Hanna, American University The Online/Offline Promotion of National Identities in Scotland. Sabrina Sotiriu, University of Ottawa Discussant: Liah Greenfeld, Boston University 264. After Neoliberalism: The Future of the Social Investment State as a New Paradigm in Social PolicyMaking 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Chair: Marius Busemeyer, University of Konstanz Discussants: Bruno Palier, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP, CNRS; Giuliano Bonoli, Swiss Graduate School of Public Administration; Silja Häusermann, University of Zurich; Marius Busemeyer, University of Konstanz 265. Authors-Meet-Critics: The Headscarf Debates: Conflicts of National Belonging, Anna C. Korteweg and Gokce Yurdakul 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B

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Chair: Irit Dekel, Humboldt University of Berlin / Bard College Berlin Discussants: Esra Ozyurek, London School of Economics and Political Science; Riva Kastoryano, Sciences Po, CERI, CNRS; John Bowen, Washington University in St. Louis; Jonathan Laurence, Boston College; Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Gokce Yurdakul, Humboldt University of Berlin; Anna Korteweg, University of Toronto 266. Citizenship in Europe - From Social to Market Values? 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Participants: The Right Not to Have Rights: Posted Worker Acquiescence and the European Union Labour Rights Framework. Nathan Lillie, University of Jyväskylä Neo-Colonial Revaluation and (Self)Disciplining of Post-Socialist EU Citizens. Barbara Samaluk, University of Greenwich The Erosion of Industrial Citizenship in Germany. Ulrich Brinkmann, Technical University Darmstadt; Oliver Nachtwey, Technical University Darmstadt; Carolin Amlinger, Technical University Darmstadt ‘Creaming and Parking’ in Marketized Welfare-toWork Services: Evidence from Germany, the UK, and France. Ian Greer, University of Greenwich; Katia Iankova, University of Greenwich; Lisa Schulte, University of Greenwich; Graham Symon, University of Greenwich Discussant: Virginia Doellgast, London School of Economics and Political Science 267. European Disintegration: A Blind Spot of Integration Theory? 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Stefan Auer, The University of Hong Kong Participants: Competing Stories? Integration, Disintegration and Accommodation. John Fossum, University of Oslo The Politicization of European Integration in Times of Crisis. Zoe Lefkofridi, Paris-Lodron University of Salzburg; Philippe Schmitter, European University Institute European Integration and Disintegration As a Dialectical Two-Level Game. Henrik Scheller, University of Potsdam; Annegret Eppler, University of Innsbruck Decline and Fall of Another Empire? Hans Vollaard, Leiden University The European Union in Crisis: How Likely Is It That Germany Will Remain “Pro-European”? Douglas Webber, INSEAD Three Scenarios of Disintegration. Jan Zielonka, University of Oxford, St Antony’s College Discussant: Stefan Auer, The University of Hong Kong 268. Fallout: Nuclear Diplomacy in an Age of Global Fracture 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot

Amphiteater Chair: Antoine Vauchez, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne, CNRS Discussants: Marie-Laure Djelic, ESSEC Business School; Stephanie Hofmann, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Ariel Colonomos, Sciences Po, CERI, CNRS; John Krige, Georgia Tech

270. Innovations in Democratic Governance: The Role of Crises and Incidents 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Marcel Maussen, University of Amsterdam Participants: Preemptive Measures Against Radicalization and Urban Democratic Innovation. Floris Vermeulen, University of Amsterdam Incidents, Improvisation, and Democracy. David Laws, University of Amsterdam; John Forester, Cornell University From Social Protests to Citizens’ Assemblies in Democratizing States. Peter Vermeersch, University of Leuven, Belgium; Yves Dejaeghere, University of Antwerp Discussant: Marcel Maussen, University of Amsterdam 271. Migrants or Mobile Citizens? Migration in the Global North 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Susan Ossman, University of California, Riverside Participants: Origins, Paths and Migratory Desire. Susan Ossman, University of California, Riverside The Two Corn Unicorn: Revising the Divide Between Lifestyle and Economic Migration in European Immigration Research. Roxana Barbulescu, College of Europe “I Couldn’t Do Anything Practical”: US Citizen Integration into European Labor Markets. Amanda

272. Must Borders Be Deadly? Technology and Fundamental Rights at the Boundaries of Europe 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chairs: Karolina Follis, Lancaster University; Estela Schindel, Konstanz University Participants: Methodological Reflections on the Contradictions of Technology and Rights. Karolina Follis, Lancaster University; Estela Schindel, Konstanz University Rescued and Caught: Dismantling the HumanitarianPolicing Mechanics of Europe’s ‘Illegality Industry’. Ruben Andersson, London School of Economics and Political Science The Border As a Space of Death: Trajectories of Bodies Found in Spain. Carolina Kobelinsky, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales Exploring the Intersection of Humanitarianism, Technology and Policing at the Borders of Europe. Polly Pallister-Wilkins, University of Amsterdam Discussant: Maurizio Albahari, University of Notre Dame

Friday, July 10

269. Immigrant Integration in Multilevel States 1 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Tiziana Caponio, University of Turin Participants: New Immigrants, New Strategies: Israeli Immigrants in Berlin. Ben Herzog, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev How Urban Actors Respond to Diversity. Karen Schönwälder, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity; Maria Schiller, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity; Alexandre Tandé, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity Re-Imagining the City? City Branding and the Governance of Super Diverse Cities. Peter Scholten, Erasmus University Rotterdam The Limits of Local Immigrant Political Incorporation: The US Case. Michael Jones-Correa, Cornell University Discussant: Ilke Adam, Vrije Universiteit Brussel

Klekowski von Koppenfels, University of Kent (Brussels) EU-Ropeans Outside EU-Rope – Labour Emigrants As an Asset to the EU…? Agnieszka Weinar, European University Institute Discussant: Ettore Recchi, Sciences Po, OSC

273. Narrative Responses to EU Crises and Challenges 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Richard McMahon, University of Portsmouth Participants: The European Frontier: Fort Europe As an Artistic Narrative. Klaas Tindemans, RITS School of Arts, Brussels A Civilisational Limit to EU Enlargement? European Studies Debates. Richard McMahon, University of Portsmouth Transformation of the European Left and the Promethean Role of Europe. Nikola Petrović, Institute for Social Research in Zagreb The Bumpy Road to Lisbon: Narratives of the EU Reform Process in European Textbooks. Marret Bischewski, Leibniz-Institut Discussant: Thomas Diez, University of Tübingen 274. New Perspectives on the Politics of Redistribution and Income Mobility 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: David Rueda, University of Oxford Participants: Ministerial Discretion and Redistribution in Parliamentary Democracies. Sabina Avdagic, University of Sussex; Lee Savage, King’s College London Redistribution within One Class: The Evolution of Spending and Taxation in the ‘Trente Glorieuses’. Lucy Barnes, University of Kent Dissolution Power and Redistribution. Michael Becher,

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University of Konstanz The Politics of Income Mobility. Pablo Beramendi, Duke University; Ben Ansell, University of Oxford; Joshua Fink, Duke University Discussants: David Rueda, University of Oxford; Jonas Pontusson, University of Geneva 275. Publishing on Social Movements: Strategies, Choices, and Challenges (RN Workshop) 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Cristina Flesher Fominaya, University of Aberdeen Discussants: Jan Willem Duyvendak, University of Amsterdam; Graeme Hayes, Aston University; Alice Mattoni, European University Institute

Friday, July 10

276. Reconfigurating European States: Contradictions in Progress 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room JM Chair: Patrick Le Galès, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Participants: The Great Managerial Turn of Public Bureaucracies. A Rationalization Perspective. Philippe Bezes, CERSA Paris II Tracking the State in a Liberal Economy: Empirical Indicators and Irish Experiences. Niamh Hardiman, University College Dublin The Rise of Non State Authority and the Transformation of the State. Philipp Genschel, EUI; Bernhard Zangl, University of Munich The Politics of European State Restructuring. Desmond King, Nuffield college, Oxford university; Patrick Le Galès, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Discussant: Colin Hay, Sciences Po, CEE 277. The Broader Picture: Re-Framing European Democratization 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford Participants: New Perspectives on Democratic Breakdown: Weimar’s Youth Mobilisation and Discourse Networks. Félix Krawatzek, Nuffield College, University of Oxford To Repress or Concede? The Evolution of the Secret Police Apparatus in Socialist East-Central Europe. Henry Thomson, Nuffield College, University of Oxford Pro-Civil Liberties but Anti-Suffrage: Why Would Legislators Support Some Dimensions of Democracy but Not Others? Laura Bronner, London School of Economics and Political Science When Democratization Helps Reactionaries: The Strange Case of Belgium’s PR Adoption. Markus Kreuzer, Villanova University Discussant: Didac Queralt, Juan March Institute 278. The European Commission: New Perspectives on the EU Executive 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh Participants:

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The Policy-Making Role of the EU Commission Cabinets. Michael Bauer, German University of Administrative Sciences Speyer Values, Beliefs and Origins: Revisiting the Socializing Effect of International Institutions. The Case of the European Commission. Sara Connolly, University of East Anglia One Commission or Several? Staff Groupings and Values. Renaud Dehousse, Sciences Po, CEE Agenda-Setting in the EU Political System: Linking Intra-Commission and Inter-Institutional PolicyMaking. Miriam Hartlapp, University of Leipzig Leading the European Commission. Prodi, Barroso and Juncker in Comparative Perspective. Hussein Kassim, University of East Anglia Discussant: B. Guy Peters, University of Pittsburgh 279. Gender and Sexuality Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 280. Political Economy and Welfare Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 281. Social Movements Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 282. Narrating Europe: Twentieth Century (part II) 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S11 Chair: Matthew D’Auria, University of East Anglia Participants: Federico Chabod’s History of the Idea of Europe. Marcello Gisondi, University of Lugano A Part of European History? Narrating the Age of the World Wars after 1945. Florian Greiner, University of Augsburg Narrating Europe from a Forgotten British Perspective. Richard Deswarte, University of East Anglia British Intellectuals and the European Idea: Narrating Europe Between History and Politics (1956-1989). Marzia Maccaferri, Goldsmiths College, University of London Exhibiting a European History – Only the Minimum Consensus of the National Histories? Andrea Brait, University of Vienna Discussant: Matthew D’Auria, University of East Anglia 283. Regions as Actors within and beyond the State 2 – Regions and Diversity 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 Chairs: Johanna Schnabel, University of Lausanne; Angustias Hombrado Martos, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED) Participants: Patterns of Regional Democracy. Government Forms and Performance in Federal and Decentralised West-European Countries. Giulia Sandri, Catholic University of Lille; Régis Dandoy, Université catholique

de Louvain Patterns of Regional Democracy. Government Forms and Performance in Federal and Decentralised West-European Countries. Giulia Sandri, Catholic University of Lille Classifying Cases in Federal Studies. An Illustration of Why Political Scientists Should Do More Cluster Analysis. Johanna Schnabel, University of Lausanne; Damien Wirths, University of Lausanne On a Successful Road to Federal Diversity? The Impact of the Federalism Reform of 2006 on the German Länder. Iris Reus, Bamberg Graduate School of Social Sciences Strategies Towards Independence: The Role of the External Actors and the Nationalist Movements in Spain. Óscar Hidalgo-Redondo, University of New York in Prague / University of Tampere Fiscal Equalization and Conflicts in Federations. A New Theoretical Framework Based on Regional Actors. Christian Ruiz-Palmero, University of Lausanne Discussant: Angustias Hombrado Martos, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)

285. Contemporary Repertoires of Collective Action 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H201 Chair: Karine Clément, Saint-Petersburg State University Participants: Socio-Cultural Factors and Disability Policies Affecting Western European Disability Protests 1970 - 2012. Sharon Barnartt, Gallaudet University Rupture and Continuity in Street Protests in Turkey, from the 1970s to 2000s. Selin Bengi Gümrükçü, Izmir University Affective and Voluntary Labor in Post-Yugoslav Societies and the Politics of the Future. Tanja Petrovic, Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts

286. MEPs at Work: European Parliament under Construction 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S10 Chair: Lorinc Redei, University of Texas at Austin Participants: Explaining Reelection to the European Parliament: Expertise, Influence, and Intergroups. Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Jack van Thomme, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Steven Wilson, University of Wisconsin-Madison Decision-Making in the European Parliament: Compromising on the Two-Pack. Lea Roger, TU Kaiserslautern; Harmen van der Veer, Universiteit van Amsterdam; Simon Otjes, Groningen University Specialists, Party Members or National Representatives: Patterns in Co-Sponsorship of Committee Amendments in the European Parliament. Inger Baller, University of Antwerp Who Do Meps Represent? Territorial Representation in the European Parliament. Nathalie Brack, Université libre de Bruxelles; Olivier Costa, College of Europe / Sciences Po Bordeaux, CNRS A Portrait of the New Italian Meps: Women, Young and…Revolutionary? Caterina Paolucci, James Madison University; Ryan Prusator, James Madison University Questioning the Executive: Parliamentary Control of the Appointment of European Commissioners. Anchrit Wille, Leiden University; Carly Relou, Leiden University Discussant: Diane Fromage, European University Institute

Friday, July 10

284. Rule of Law vs. Effectiveness 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J104 Chair: Martijn Groenleer, Delft University of Technology Participants: Opinions of EU Agencies: Between Judicial Review and Procedural Legitimacy. Emilie Chevalier, University of Poitiers Judicial Review and the New Modes of Governance: The Case of Co- and Self-Regulation. Mariolina Eliantonio, Maastricht University European Union Soft Law: Taking Stock of the Transparency Paradox. Oana Stefan, King’s College London The Cjeu’s Selective Use of Soft Law to Enhance the Rights of EU Citizens: Reversing the Hierarchy of Norms? Eadaoin Ni Chaoimh, University of SaintLouis, Brussels Better Governance and Judicial Review. Roberto Caranta, University of Turin Discussant: Melanie Smith, Cardiff Law School

Discussant: Jeff Goodwin, New York University

287. Migration and Cultural Identity 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J101 Chairs: Nora El Qadim, Sciences Po, CEE; Lyubov Zhyznomirska, Saint Mary’s University Participants: Cultural Diversity, Cultural Rights and Cultural Freedom: A Triadic Approach to the Management of Cultural Diversity. Mónica Ibañez, University of Burgos Why the Future of Mobility Is ‘Now’? On Concepts and Evidence. Saime Ozcurumez, Bilkent University Migrant Women As the Future of the Netherlands: Hymenoplasty Consultations and the Reshaping of Sexual Values in Dutch Medical Institutions. Sherria Ayuandini, Universiteit van Amsterdam Headscarf Policies and the Political Integration of Muslim Women in France: A Case Study of ‘Mamans Toutes égales’ and ‘Sorties Scolaires Avec Nous’. Alexandra Kassir, École des hautes études en sciences sociales; Jeffrey Reitz, University of Toronto Discussants: Abdulkader Sinno, Indiana University; Levent Soysal, Kadir Has University 288. The Imagined European: Crafting National and

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Continental Identities through Art 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H405 Chair: Christina Karageorgou-Bastea, Vanderbilt University Participants: The Contradictions of ‘Brand Europe’: Identities, Images and Agendas in the French-Language Films of the Creative Europe/MEDIA Programme. Andrew McGregor, The University of Melbourne “Welcome to Europe! Linking the EU Parliament LUX Film Prize and the Impact of Migration Films to the Emergence of a European Public Sphere. Muhamed Amin, University of Ottawa The Ethics of Folklore in TV Performances. Alexandra Urdea, Goldsmiths College Popular Culture Heroes and Visions of Europe: Andre Rieu’s Waltz Politics. Irene Stengs, Meertens Institute Persuasive Vistas, Political Visions: Art and the Remaking of the Ruhr. Cynthia Browne, Harvard University Discussant: Katrin Sieg, Georgetown University

Friday, July 10

289. The Role of Media in Politics and Protest 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J102 Chair: Jasmin Siri, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich Participants: European Public Sphere and on-Line Media. Luciana Radut-Gaghi, University of Cergy-Pontoise, France; Denisa-Adriana Oprea, National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, Romania Issue Ownership, Media Coverage and Voters’ Perceptions of Parties. Anke Tresch, University of Lausanne Violent Images: Understanding Ukraine’s Euromaidan Conflicts through Twitter’s Visual Media. Andrew Asher, Indiana University; Sofiya Asher, Indiana University Representation of Roma Minority in National Newspapers in the EU 28. Roxana Barbulescu, College of Europe; Laurie Beaudonnet, Université de Montréal; Allison Harell, UQAM Discussant: Anastasia Kavada, University of Westminster 290. Between Populism and Technocracy: Politics in the Age of the Crisis of Party Democracy 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202A Chair: Marc Lazar, Sciences Po, CERI, CHSP Participants: The People and the Experts in European Party Politics. Richard Katz, John Hopkins University Populism and Technocracy: Opposites or Complements? Christopher Bickerton, University of Cambridge, Sciences Po, CEE; Carlo Invernizzi Accetti, Université Libre de Bruxelles The Italian Partito Democratico: An ‘Agnostic’ Party, Between Technocratic and Populist Discourses.. Lilia Giugni, Cambridge University; Lucia Rubinelli, Cambridge University

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The Strange Dearth of Populist Britain? Paul Taggart, University of Sussex; Emily Robinson, University of Sussex Discussant: Jonathan White, London School of Economics and Political Science 291. Comparative Political Economy: Going Forward 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 Chair: Chris Howell, Oberlin College Participants: Good in a Crisis: Constructivism’s Institutionalism and the Political Economy of Disequilibrium. Colin Hay, Sciences Po, CEE Rethinking the Power of Finance. Cornelia Woll, Sciences Po, CEE, MaxPo The Rise of the Welfare Industrial Complex: Welfare Capitalism in Sweden. Jenny Andersson, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS The Dualizations of Europe. Bruno Palier, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP, CNRS; Allison Rovny, University of Gothenburg; Jan Rovny, Sciences Po, CEE, LIEPP Discussant: Chris Howell, Oberlin College 292. Culture and Contradiction in the Second World War 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H202B Chair: Laura Hobson Faure, Sorbonne Nouvelle UniversityParis 3 Participants: Repertoires of Resistance: Musical Resources for the Reimagining of the Nation. Kelly Jakes, Wayne State University Germany’s Swing Kids As Contradictions and Misfits during the Second World War. Roberto Avant-Mier, University of Texas, El Paso Romain Gary and the Polish Circle in London. Julia Elsky, Loyola University Chicago European Perspective and (Another) World War: Alarming Déjà Vu? Julia Khrebtan, Colorado State University; Iuliia Kononenko, Rutgers University Discussant: Angéline Escafré-Dublet, Sciences Po, CERI 293. Debt, Democracy, and Austerity: Center-Periphery Dynamics in the Eurozone 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Chair: Hilary Silver, Brown University Participants: Competing Explanations of the Eurozone Debt Crisis and Their Consequences. Sofia Perez, Boston University; Emilio Ontiveros, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid Pathways from the Periphery? Growth Models and Path Dependent Development in the Context of European Integration. Niamh Hardiman, University College Dublin; Sebastian Dellepiane, University of Strathclyde; Spyros Blavoukos, Athens University of Economics And Business; George Pagoulatos, Athens University of Economics And Business

Solving the Eurozone Trilemma: Federalism By Exception. Henrik Enderlein, Hertie School of Governance After Austerity: What’s Left of Democracy? Klaus Armingeon, University of Bern; Stefano Sacchi, University of Milan Discussant: David Cameron, Yale University

295. Expertise on Gender and Minorities within the EU Polity: The Emergence of a Political Common Sense? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H101 Chair: Ioana Cirstocea, CNRS / University of Strasbourg Participants: Reframing EU Disability Policy: Expert Knowledge in the Shift from Employment to Human Rights Perspectives. Jay Rowell, University of Strasbourg, CNRS Law As Weapon of the Weak? a Comparative Analysis of Legal Mobilization By Roma and Women’s Groups at the European Level. Sophie Jacquot, Sciences Po, CEE Genesis of a Transnational Field of Expertise on Gender and Minorities in the EU Polity. for a SocioHistorical Research Agenda - Concepts, Objectives and Methodology. Emmanuel Rosas, Université Paris 1 – Panthéon Sorbonne Discussant: David Paternotte, Université Libre de Bruxelles 296. Explaining Immigration Policy Liberalisation in Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 Chair: Andrew Geddes, University of Sheffield Participants: Spain’s Immigration Policies: No ‘Numbers Versus Rights’. Joaquin Arango, Complutense University of Madrid Explaining Immigration Policy Reform in Germany and the UK: The Role of Issue Definition and Policy Legacies. Christina Boswell, University of Edinburgh;

297. How to Get Published (Journals) 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 Chair: Gill Allwood, Nottingham Trent University Discussants: Adam Fagan, Queen Mary, University of London; Paul Statham, University of Sussex; Siovahn Walker, Columbia University; Graeme Hayes, Aston University; Madeleine Markey, Routledge, Taylor & Francis 298. Immigrant Integration in Multilevel States 2 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S09 Chair: Michael Jones-Correa, Cornell University Participants: Multi-Level Governance of an Intractable Policy Problem: Migrants with Irregular Status in European Cities. Sarah Spencer, Centre on Migration, Policy and Society, University of Oxford Democratic Citizenship Challenges in Multi-Level States: How to Deal with Different Immigration Philosophies? Ricard Zapata-Barrero, Interdisciplinary Research Group on Immigration, Universitat Pompeu Fabra Innovation and Symbolism in the Middle Tier: State Immigration Policy, 2006-2011. Lina Newton, City University of New York Migratory ‘Burden Sharing’: The Allocation of Responsibilities for the Management of ‘Mixed’ Migration Flows as Contentious Core of the European Multilevel System of Migration Governance. Ferruccio Pastore, FIERI Discussant: Saskia Bonjour, University of Amsterdam

Friday, July 10

294. Electoral Clientelism and Party Realignments in Contemporary Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S12 Chairs: Alexander Kuo, Cornell University; Seth Jolly, Syracuse University Participants: Divided We Stand: Intra-Party Dissent over European Integration. Erica Edwards, Miami University Ohio European Party Federations and Alliances of National Parties in Central and Eastern Europe. Raimondas Ibenskas, University of Exeter Economic Intimidation in Romanian Elections. Aurelian Muntean, National School of Political Studies SNSPA Bucharest/Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu Electoral Intimidation in Contemporary Eastern Europe: Actors and Strategies. Isabela Mares, Columbia University Discussants: Caterina Paolucci, James Madison University; Alexander Kuo, Cornell University

James Hampshire, University of Sussex The Two Faces of Europe: Expanding Restrictions, Expanding Openness. Randall Hansen, University of Toronto The Politics of Pragmatism: Explaining Austrian and Swedish Conservatives’ Changing Stance on Immigration. Georg Menz, Goldsmiths College, University of London Discussant: James Hollifield, Southern Methodist University

299. Institutions Are Interesting, but Are Institutions Consequential? The Analysis of European Population Health for Theory Development 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Philipp Hessel, Harvard University Participants: The Social Sources of Health Inequalities. Peter Hall, Harvard University; Rosemary Taylor, Tufts University; Lucy Barnes, University of Kent Healthcare Policy and the Reduction of Social Inequality in Health: The Importance of Intersectional Dimensions of Health Inequality. Tim Huijts, Queen Mary University United in Diversity: The Evolution of Between and within Country Health Inequalities Across Europe. Philipp Hessel, Harvard University; Jason Beckfield,

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Harvard University Welfare States, Trade and Health Inequalities. Courtney McNamara, Norwegian University for Science and Technology Discussant: Sigrun Olafsdottir, Boston University

Friday, July 10

300. Labor Market Experiences, Personality, and Political Preferences 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J201 Chair: Paul Marx, University of Southern Denmark Participants: The People You Are: Personality Traits As Determinants of Redistribution Preferences. David Rueda, University of Oxford; Raymond Duch, Nuffield College, University of Oxford Taking Social Policy Personally: The Effect of Personality Traits and Regime Socialization on Welfare State Attitudes in Germany. Pieter Vanhuysse, European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research, Vienna; Markus Tepe, University of Oldenburg Off to a Bad Start: Unemployment, Personality and Political Interest Among Young Labour Market Entrants. Dominik Schraff, University of St. Gallen; Patrick Emmenegger, University of Southern Denmark; Paul Marx, University of Southern Denmark Discussant: Aina Gallego, Barcelona Institute of International Studies (IBEI) 301. Secrecy and Its Democratic Challenges in the European Union: The Cases of Security and Economic Governance 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H007 Chair: Christina Eckes, Amsterdam Centre for European Law and Governance Discussants: Vigjilenca Abazi, University of Amsterdam; Sophie Vanhoonacker, Maastricht University; Nik de Boer, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam Centre for European Law and Governance; Guri Rosen, University of Oslo, ARENA Centre for European Studies 302. Social Europe into the Crisis: Taking Stock of the Damage? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room S2 Chair: Jean-Claude Barbier, Université Paris 1 PanthéonSorbonne Participants: The Role of the EU and the Social Rights: A Two-Tier Union? Diane Roman, Université de Tours, François Rabelais Divisive Integration, Crisis Management in the European Union. Steffen Lehndorff, University of Duisburg Concepts of the Nation, Welfare and the European Question: Comparing Chapters of Dutch and Hungarian Social Policy. László Marácz, University of Amsterdam Market-Preserving Responses to the Social Crisis in

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the Eurozone. Arnaud Lechevalier, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne The EU’s Response to the Economic Crisis and its Implications for Labour Law in Europe. Aristea Koukiadaki, Manchester University Discussant: Matthias Knuth, University Duisburg-Essen 303. Territorial Governance in Western Europe: SecondOrder Regions between Economic Crisis and Political Decentralisation 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S14 Chair: Arthur Benz, Technische Universität Darmstadt Participants: The States of Convergence: An Analytical Framework for Understanding Regions in a Period of Economic Crisis. Alistair Cole, University of Cardiff Sheltering from the Storm? Welsh Devolution and Public Services in a Period of Economic Crisis. Ian Stafford, Cardiff University The Breton Model Between Convergence and Capacity. Romain Pasquier, Institute of Political Studies, Rennes Financial Crisis, Finance Policies in the Regions and the Politics of Territory in Spain. Paula Portas, Cardiff University Measuring Territorial Political Capacity in European Regions. Jean-Baptiste Harguindeguy, Universidad Pablo Olavide 304. The Governance of Financial Accountability and Audit in the EU 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H401 Chair: Aneta Spendzharova, Maastricht University Participants: A Stowaway in Unchartered Waters? Financial Accountability of the New EU Economic Governance and the European Court of Auditors. Maria-Luisa Sanchez-Barrueco, Deusto University Establishing a European Public Prosecutor’s Office: Financial Accountability in an Evolving Multi-Level Setting. Hartmut Aden, Berlin School of Economics and Law The European Court of Auditors and Its Relationship with the European Parliament: The Changing Nature of Inter-Institutional Power Relations Regarding Financial Accountability. Paul Stephenson, Sciences Po, CEE Overseas State Investors in Domestic Markets: France and German Policies Towards Equity Investment By Sovereign Wealth Funds. Mark Thatcher, London School of Economics and Political Science; Tim Vlandas, University of Reading Discussant: Aneta Spendzharova, Maastricht University 305. Varieties of Euroscepticism 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, room H402 Chair: Matthias Matthijs, Johns Hopkins SAIS Discussants: Jonathan Hopkin, London School of Economics and Political Science; Alexander Reisenbichler, George

Washington University; Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham; Harris Mylonas, George Washington University; Nicolas Jabko, Johns Hopkins University

307. What Does Capitalism Do to Contentious Politics? 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S13 Chair: Benjamin Tejerina Montaña, University of the Basque Country Participants: The Institutional Foundations of Contentious Politics. Marcos Ancelovici, Université du Québec à Montréal; Pascale Dufour, Université de Montréal Can Varieties of Welfare Capitalism Explain the Varying Encompassingness of Occupy-Type Protests? Michael Shalev, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Contention in Times of Crisis: British and German Social Actors Trying to Reframe Capitalism. Johannes Kiess, University of Siegen Discussant: Benjamin Tejerina Montaña, University of the Basque Country 308. “This Time It’s Different – Maybe.” Revisiting the EU’s Double Democratic Deficit 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S08 Chair: Joyce Mushaben, University of Missouri-St. Louis Participants: Where Women Stand: Descriptive Versus Substantive Representation." Gabriele Abels, University of Tübingen Undermining Critical Mass: The Impact of Treaty Reforms on EP Decision-Making Culture. Joyce Mushaben, University of Missouri-St. Louis

309. Envisioning Europe’s Economic Future from a LongTerm Historical Perspective 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Boutmy Auditorium Chair: Virginie Guiraudon, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Participant: Thomas Piketty, Paris School of Economics Discussant: Wolfgang Streeck, Max-Planck-Institut Fuer Gesellschaftsforschung 310. Gender Crusades: Mobilizing Against Equality in Europe 6:00 to 7:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Isabelle Engeli, University of Ottawa Participants: Phillip Ayoub, Drexel University Michael Bosia, Saint Michael’s College Eric Fassin, University of Paris 8 Elzbieta Korolczuk, University of Gothenburg Agnieszka Graff, University of Warsaw Mieke Verloo, IWM, Institute for Human Sciences Discussants: Isabelle Engeli, University of Ottawa; David Paternotte, Université Libre de Bruxelles

Friday, July 10

306. Welfare State Transformations in the 21st Century: Comparing Effects on Social, Economic, and Political Inequality within and beyond Europe 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J205 Chair: Tonia Bieber, Freie Universität Berlin Participants: The Political Foundations of Tax Competition. Philipp Genschel, European University Institute; Hanna Lierse, Jacobs University Bremen; Henning Schmidtke, Universität Bremen; Laura Seelkopf, Jacobs University Bremen; Stefan Traub, Universität Bremen; Hongyang Yang, Universität Bremen Changes in Retirement Income Provision in Germany and the US Since the 1980s: Implications for Older Workers and Their Meaning for Pension Reform in Europe. Jan Heisig, WZB Berlin Social Science Center Gender Inequality As Part of a New Family Model: A Case Study on Policy Changes and Institutional Dualization in a Conservative Welfare State Type. Irene Dingeldey, University of Bremen Freedom of Movement in the EU and Welfare State Closure. a Challenge for Mobility and Life Chances? Christof Roos, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Discussant: Melike Wulfgramm, University of Southern Denmark

Shifting Strands: Socio-Economic Austerity, Institutional Relocation and Gender Equality Organisations in the EU Anti-Discrimination Regime. Alison E. Woodward, Institute for European Studies “Keep Calm and Carry On”: Agenda-Setting and the Work of Femm. Markus Warasin, European Parliament Discussant: Sabine Lang, University of Washington

311. JCMS Annual Review / CES European Integration Research Network Lecture: Imagining Europe: The Cultural Foundations of EU Governance 6:00 to 7:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Boutmy Auditorium Chairs: Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham; Nathaniel Copsey, Aston University Participant: Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University Discussants: Ben Rosamond, University of Copenhagen; Alan Cafruny, Hamilton College 312. Gender & Sexuality Research Network Semi-Plenary Reception 7:45 to 8:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater

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Plenaries & Meetings ❧ Wednesday, July 8 052. European Integration and Global Political Economy Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 053. Political Parties, Party Systems and Elections Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 054. Transnational Memory and Identity Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210

Plenaries & Meetings

062. Plenary Session: Current and Future Prospects for Funding European Research 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, Erignac Amphiteater Chair: Juan Díez Medrano, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Participants: Anna Hofmann, ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius Martin Hynes, European Science Foundation Luc Luyten, Evens Foundation Juan Díez Medrano, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Klaus Linsenmeier, Heinrich Böll Foundation Michael Baum, Luso-American Foundation 106. Plenary Session: Envisioning European Futures 6:00 to 7:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Boutmy Auditorium Chairs: Robert Fishman, Carlos III University Madrid; Jenny Andersson, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Participants: Kim Scheppele, Princeton Peter A. Hall, Harvard University Jacques Rupnik, Sciences Po, CERI Gokce Yurdakul, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

❧ Thursday, July 9 163. Historical Study of States and Regimes Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 164. Immigration Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 165. Radicalism and Violence in Europe Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J211 166. Territorial Politics and Federalism Research Network Luncheon

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12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 222. Plenary Session: Cosmopolitan Europe!? A Conversation 6:00 to 7:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Boutmy Auditorium Chair: Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, CEE Participants: Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, CEE Juan Díez Medrano, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Chris Rumford, University of London Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex 223. Presidential Reception 7:45 to 9:30 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Hall & Garden

❧ Friday, July 10 279. Gender and Sexuality Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room S07 280. Political Economy and Welfare Research Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J210 281. Social Movements Network Luncheon 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 13 rue de l’Université, room J208 309. Plenary Session: Envisioning Europe’s Economic Future from a Long-Term Historical Perspective 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Boutmy Auditorium Chair: Virginie Guiraudon, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Participant: Thomas Piketty, Paris School of Economics Discussant: Wolfgang Streeck, Max-Planck-Institut fuer Gesellschaftsforschung 310. Plenary Session: Gender Crusades: Mobilizing Against Equality in Europe 6:00 to 7:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater Chair: Isabelle Engeli, University of Ottawa Participants: Phillip Ayoub, Drexel University Michael Bosia, Saint Michael’s College Eric Fassin, University of Paris 8 Elzbieta Korolczuk, University of Gothenburg Agnieszka Graff, University of Warsaw Mieke Verloo, IWM, Institute for Human Sciences Discussants: Isabelle Engeli, University of Ottawa David Paternotte, Université Libre de Bruxelles 311. Plenary Session: JCMS Annual Review / CES European Integration Research Network Lecture: Imagining Europe: The Cultural Foundations of EU Governance

6:00 to 7:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Boutmy Auditorium Chairs: Tim Haughton, University of Birmingham; Nathaniel Copsey, Aston University Participant: Kathleen McNamara, Georgetown University Discussants: Ben Rosamond, University of Copenhagen Alan Cafruny, Hamilton College 312. Gender & Sexuality Research Network Semi-Plenary Reception 7:45 to 8:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères, Caquot Amphiteater

Research Network Sessions ❧ Alliance Program

055. Fiscal Welfare in Europe: Dismantling or Reshaping Solidarity? Session 2 Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H401 182. Author-Meets-Critics: Adrian Favell, Immigration, Integration and Mobility: New Agendas in Migration Studies. Essays 1998-2014. Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - Erignac Amphiteater 226. Politicizing Europe? The Effect of the Euro Crisis on Attitudes towards European Integration Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103 254. Output Legitimacy: Policy Performance and Legitimacy in the EU Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103 295. Expertise on Gender and Minorities within the EU Polity: The Emergence of a Political Common Sense? Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101

❧ European Integration and Global Political Economy 011. Economic Policy Challenges for the European Union: Securing the Transatlantic Trade and Investment

017. Persistent Neo-liberalism during the Great Recession Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - J210 023. The European Union at a Crossroads: Political Tensions, Economic Weakness, and the Integration Process in Danger Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - Caquot Amphiteater 041. (In)consistencies of European Regulation of Capitalism Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - Caquot Amphiteater 046. Round-Table “50/50, No More Excuses”: Brainstorming for Equality After Lisbon Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S13

Research Network Sessions

028. Fiscal Welfare in Europe: Dismantling or Reshaping Solidarity? Session 1 Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H401

Partnership and Maintaining the Common Currency Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - J211

050. Whose Design? Institutionalizing the European Banking Union Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H405 071. Paradigm Shifts – Europe’s New Financial Architecture Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101 074. Reforming Social Europe in Times of Crisis Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202B 102. The political economy of financial instability in Europe Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S10 111. Shaping the European Courts’ Power: National Courts, Governments, and Civil Society Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104 121. From Consensus to Contestation: The RePoliticization of Central Banking Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S08 128. The EU’s Crisis and Its Effects on Decision-Making and Policies (Roundtable) Thursday, July 9

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9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S13 135. Beyond Hysteria and Denial: Political Responses to Court-Driven Free Movement Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104 156. Ideas About the Euro: Crisis Debates and Responses in the EU’s Core, in the Periphery, and at the EU Level Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - Caquot Amphiteater 160. The Twilight Zone: The Transformation of European Shadow Banking into Capital Markets Union Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103

Research Network Sessions

167. Dilemmas and Contradictions in Social Investment: The Case of Child Care Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S10 175. The Law and Politics of Multi-Level Governance Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104 183. Borders on the Move: From the Soviet Union into Eurasia? Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J101 213. Can the EU Defend Democracy at Home? Thursday, July 9 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S10 235. Civil Society Organizations in the EU Context: A Political-Sociology Approach Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H402 241. Grand Designs: Locating Macro and Micro Ideas in the EU’s Political Economy Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - Erignac Amphiteater 248. The Tale of Two Troikas: International Organizations and Austerity in Southern and Eastern Europe Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S12 278. The European Commission: New Perspectives on the EU Executive Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A 302. Social Europe into the Crisis: Taking Stock of the

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Damage? Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room S2 304. The Governance of Financial Accountability and Audit in the EU Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H401 305. Varieties of Euroscepticism Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H402 311. JCMS Annual Review / CES European Integration Research Network Lecture: Imagining Europe: The Cultural Foundations of EU Governance Friday, July 10 6:00 to 7:45 PM - 27 rue Saint-Guillaume - Boutmy Auditorium

❧ Gender and Sexuality 019. Queering Anti-Austerity: Gender, Sexuality, and Social Movements Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A 082. The Tricky Issues?: Prostitution, Abortion, Same-Sex Families, and the EU Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A 100. Inequalities and Care Challenges: Migration, Markets, and the Shifting Configurations in Policy Regimes Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A 189. LGBT Activism and the Making of Europe: A Rainbow Europe? Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - Caquot Amphiteater 232. Rethinking Gender Equality in the Crisis Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - Caquot Amphiteater 308. “This Time It’s Different – Maybe.” Revisiting the EU’s Double Democratic Deficit Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S08 310. Gender Crusades: Mobilizing Against Equality in Europe Friday, July 10

6:00 to 7:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - Caquot Amphiteater

❧ Historical Study of States and Regimes 008. Bonapartism in Europe: Contradictions of Democracy in France and Italy Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room S2 042. Authoritarian Legacies and Challenges to PostAuthoritarian Democracies Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101 134. Winning Hearts and Minds in the Cold War: Comparative Perspectives on State Socialist Transnational Practices Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H201

174. Revolutions: Causes and Processes Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101 200. Revolutions: Short and Long-Term Consequences Thursday, July 9 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101 237. Democracy and Authoritarianism’s Coexistence: Lessons about Contradictions from Europe Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S07 277. The Broader Picture: Re-Framing European Democratization Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J211

❧ Immigration 002. The Role of EU Institutions in Migration and Asylum Policies: Jurisprudence and Enforcement Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H007 016. Patterns of Migrant Mobilization at the National and Local Level in the US and Europe After 9/11 (SOMI Project) Wednesday, July 8

024. The Institutional and Cultural Integration of Immigrants in Europe Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J208 031. The Role of EU Institutions in Migration and Asylum Policies: Policy Design and Interinstitutional Relations Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H007 067. Europe’s Diversity Regarding Immigrant Integration Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J102 070. Migration Politics and Contradictions in Times of Political and Economic Crisis Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H402 101. New Media and Immigration: Online Identities and Belongings Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104

Research Network Sessions

149. The Shadow of Dictatorships: Researching Attitudes towards the Past Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H201

9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H402

103. The Politics of Migration and Integration in Germany Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H402 104. The Politics of Mobility and Diversity: The Effects of Migration on European Politics and Societies Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - Caquot Amphiteater 118. Comparative Perspectives on Muslims in Europe I: Cultural Distance and Social Interaction Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J208 124. Invented Neighborhoods: How Migration Shapes the Borderlands of Europe Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J210 131. The Political Sources of Solidarity in Diverse Societies Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - Caquot Amphiteater 132. The Politics of Ethnic Leveraging: How and Why Status Majorities Elevate One Minority to Downgrade Another Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H402 151. Comparative Perspectives on Muslims in Europe II:

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Cultural Distance and Social Interaction Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J208 184. Comparative Perspectives on New Immigrant Destinations Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S07 188. Is Islam Contradictory to Political Participation in Europe? Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J208 211. An Epistemic Turn in Migration Studies: Causes and Consequences for Research and Policy Thursday, July 9 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - Erignac Amphiteater

Research Network Sessions

215. Diaspora Policies of Sending States at Home and Abroad Thursday, July 9 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J208 216. Governance and Affective Circuits of Care in African and Asian Migrations to Europe Thursday, July 9 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J210 224. Importing and Exporting Migration Theory across Continents: Europe, North America, and East Asia / (1) Importing North American Theory in Europe Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J210 243. Immigration and Political Representation Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09 251. Importing and Exporting Migration Theory across Continents: Europe, North America, and East Asia / (2) Exporting European Migration Theory to East Asia Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J210 265. Authors-Meet-Critics: The Headscarf Debates: Conflicts of National Belonging, Anna C. Korteweg and Gokce Yurdakul Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202B 269. Immigrant Integration in Multilevel States 1 Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09 296. Explaining Immigration Policy Liberalisation in Europe

68

Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J211 298. Immigrant Integration in Multilevel States 2 Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09

❧ Political Economy and Welfare State 007. After Austerity: Southern Europe in Hard Times Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S13 015. Inequalities and the Welfare State Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S10 018. Political Salience, Private Interests, and the Regulation of Finance Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H401 048. Social Dialogue and Collective Bargaining for Vulnerable Groups of Workers in Europe: Opportunities and Barriers Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A 057. Panel 1: National Growth Strategies and Welfare State Reform Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room JM 068. Measuring Welfare Stateness in Advanced Industrialized Countries and Beyond Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104 079. The European Future of Permanent Austerity? – New Approaches to Comparative Analysis of Welfare and Family Policies Including Old and New EU Member Countries Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J201 084. Panel 2: Adjustment and Trajectories Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room JM 086. The Role of Social Actors and Ideas in the Context of Marketization and Contra Trends Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202B 110. Panel 3: LMEs and CMEs Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room Erignac

Amphiteater 113. The Italian Welfare Capitalism and Its Enduring Crisis: Policy Change and Stability and their Key Determinants Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09 119. Education, Social Investment, and Inequality in PostCrisis Europe Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101 125. Labor Relations, Unions, and Business Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room S2 140. Panel 4: Mixed Market Economies Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - Erignac Amphiteater

154. Health Inequalities in Europe Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J210 181. The Future of Capitalism Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room JM 191. The Political Economy of Skills and Education Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room S2 219. Private Debt, Public Debt, and the Fiscal State Thursday, July 9 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S13 234. Between Neoliberal Convergence and New Divergences: Change in European Industrial Relations since the Economic Crisis Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202B 236. Crisis and Contradiction in European Higher Education Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room S2 242. Housing Finance and European Welfare States: Bubble and Bust in Comparative Perspective Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101

264. After Neoliberalism: The Future of the Social Investment State as a New Paradigm in Social PolicyMaking Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - Erignac Amphiteater 274. New Perspectives on the Politics of Redistribution and Income Mobility Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room S2 291. Comparative Political Economy: Going Forward Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J210 293. Debt, Democracy, and Austerity: Center-Periphery Dynamics in the Eurozone Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - Erignac Amphiteater

Research Network Sessions

142. The Italian Welfare Capitalism and Its Enduring Crisis: Institutions, Interests, and Political Dynamics Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09

246. The Politics of Advanced Capitalism Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J208

300. Labor Market Experiences, Personality, and Political Preferences Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J201

❧ Political Parties, Party Systems and Elections 044. Crisis of Democracy? Party Politics and Representation in Times of Austerity Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14 126. Motors, Measures, and Methods: Analyzing the Dynamism of Party Politics in Europe Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H007 245. Multilevel Voting in Europe Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H405 290. Between Populism and Technocracy: Politics in the Age of the Crisis of Party Democracy Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A

❧ Radicalism and Violence 69

026. Cross-Disciplinary Approaches to Radicalism and Violence Wednesday, July 8 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S08 056. Methodological Dilemmas and Approaches to Studying Radicalism and Violence Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S08 087. Theoretical and Ideological Issues in the Study of Radicalism and Violence Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S08

❧ Social Movements 022. The European Citizens’ Initiative Wednesday, July 8 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J101

Research Network Sessions

077. Socialist Memory: Contradictions & Confrontations a Generation After the Break-Up of the Soviet Bloc Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S07 081. The Political Power of Protest in Europe since the Great Recession Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J205 122. Grassroots in the City: Urban Grassroots Movements in Central and Eastern Europe and Post-Soviet Space Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J102 155. ICTs, (Digital) Media, and Anti-Austerity Protests Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S12 170. Legal Mobilization: The Role of Individual and Collective Actors Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S12 202. What Shapes Legal Mobilization within Different Settings? Constraints and Resources in the Mobilization of Law Thursday, July 9 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S12 247. The Return of Street Politics: Claims, Representation, and Territoriality Friday, July 10 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H201

70

275. Publishing on Social Movements: Strategies, Choices,

and Challenges (RN Workshop) Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H201 307. What Does Capitalism Do to Contentious Politics? Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S13

❧ Territorial Politics and Federalism 076. Secession vs. Federalism: Successes and Failures of Intergroup Bargaining for Cultural Identity Wednesday, July 8 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S13 083. How to Analyze the Europeanization of Regional Parliaments Wednesday, July 8 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J208 120. Envisioning European Spaces Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S11 190. Multi-level State Dynamics and the Economic Crisis in Europe Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09 220. The Dynamics of Multi-Level Politics: Competences, Elections, and Accountability Thursday, July 9 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09 255. Regions as Actors within and beyond the State 1 – Regions in Europe Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S07 276. Reconfigurating European States: Contradictions in Progress Friday, July 10 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room JM 283. Regions as Actors within and beyond the State 2 – Regions and Diversity Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S07 303. Territorial Governance in Western Europe: SecondOrder Regions between Economic Crisis and Political Decentralisation Friday, July 10 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14

❧ Transnational Memory and Identity in Europe 109. Grounding European Remembrance: Local and Artistic Memory Thursday, July 9 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14 137. Memory in European and Transnational Relations Thursday, July 9 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14 171. Memory Actors and Early European Integration Thursday, July 9 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14

Mini-Symposia

❧ The Role of EU Institutions in Migration and Asylum Policies: Liberal Constraint? 002. The Role of EU Institutions in Migration and Asylum Policies: Jurisprudence and Enforcement. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H007 031. The Role of EU Institutions in Migration and Asylum Policies: Policy Design and Interinstitutional Relations. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H007

❧ Studying Violence and Radicalism across the Disciplines 026. Cross-Disciplinary Approaches to Radicalism and Violence. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S08 056. Methodological Dilemmas and Approaches to Studying Radicalism and Violence. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S08 087. Theoretical and Ideological Issues in the Study of Radicalism and Violence. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S08



027. Europe in the World. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H201 051. Film Screening and Discussion with Filmmaker. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 12:45 to 2:00 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H201 058. “Visible Minorities” in Contemporary Europe. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H201

❧ Fiscal Welfare in Europe: Dismantling or Reshaping Solidarity? 028. Fiscal Welfare in Europe: Dismantling or Reshaping Solidarity? Session 1. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H401 055. Fiscal Welfare in Europe: Dismantling or Reshaping Solidarity? Session 2. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H401

❧ National Growth Strategies and Welfare State Reform (Sponsored by LIEPP) 057. Panel 1: National Growth Strategies and Welfare State Reform Wednesday, July 8, 2015 02:00 PM - 03:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - JM 084. Panel 2: Adjustment and Trajectories Wednesday, July 8, 2015 04:00 PM - 05:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - JM 110. Panel 3: LMEs and CMEs Thursday, July 9, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - Erignac Amphiteater 140. Panel 4: Mixed Market Economies Thursday, July 9, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - Erignac Amphiteater

Mini-Symposia

Religion in Europe: Deep Roots and New Shoots 001. The Debate About the Axial Age. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103 029. Religion in Contemporary Europe. Wednesday, July 8, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103

Europe and Europe in the World: The Politics of Belonging and Social Inclusion

❧ Parliamentary Opposition in EU Member States in Hard Times 107. Economic Crisis and Government-Opposition Dynamics. Thursday, July 9, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A 141. Party Transformation and Parliamentary Opposition in Europe. Thursday, July 9, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A

❧ 71

Europe by Design 108. Europe by Design – Panel 1: New Communication Technologies and the Construction of EU Spheres of Interaction. Thursday, July 9, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S10 136. Europe by Design – Panel 2: CyberEurope: Internet, Security and Citizens’ Rights. Thursday, July 9, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S10

❧ Shaping Memory and Identity in Europe: Countervailing Forces from Above and Below 109. Grounding European Remembrance: Local and Artistic Memory. Thursday, July 9, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14 137. Memory in European and Transnational Relations. Thursday, July 9, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14 171. Memory Actors and Early European Integration. Thursday, July 9, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14

Mini-Symposia

❧ The Role of Domestic Institutions in European Judicial Governance 111. Shaping the European Courts’ Power: National Courts, Governments, and Civil Society. Thursday, July 9, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104 135. Beyond Hysteria and Denial: Political Responses to Court-Driven Free Movement. Thursday, July 9, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104 175. The Law and Politics of Multi-Level Governance. Thursday, July 9, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104

❧ Music Across Borders 112. Technological Utopias and Dystopias in European Musical Culture, 1807-2015. Thursday, July 9, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J201 138. Musical Nationalism and Geography. Thursday, July 9, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J201

❧ What Went Wrong? The Enduring Crisis of the Italian Welfare Capitalism After Two Decades of Reforms

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113. The Italian Welfare Capitalism and Its Enduring Crisis: Policy Change and Stability and their Key Determinants. Thursday, July 9, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09 142. The Italian Welfare Capitalism and Its Enduring Crisis: Institutions, Interests, and Political Dynamics. Thursday, July 9, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S09

❧ Offshore Europe on the Move: The Dynamics of EuroCaribbean Societies and Politics in the XXIst Century 139. Offshore Europe on the Move: The Dynamics of EuroCaribbean Societies and Politics in the XXIst Century (Part 1). Thursday, July 9, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202B 173. Offshore Europe on the Move: The Dynamics of EuroCaribbean Societies and Politics in the XXIst Century (Part 2). Thursday, July 9, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202B 199. Offshore Europe on the Move: The Dynamics of EuroCaribbean Societies and Politics in the XXIst Century (Part 3). Thursday, July 9, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202B

❧ Do Political Parties Make a Difference? Electoral Competition, Accountability and Policy Change 168. Do Parties Make a Difference in Policy-Making? Rethinking the Party-Policy Link. Thursday, July 9, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A 195. Do Parties Make a Difference in Electoral Campaigns? Policy Positions and Issue Competition in Modern Democracies. Thursday, July 9, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H202A

❧ What Future for Multilingualism in Europe? 169. Europe’s Bright Future: Multilingual? Thursday, July 9, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103 201. What Is Wrong with Efficiency? Thursday, July 9, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103

❧ Legal Mobilization in Europe 170. Legal Mobilization: The Role of Individual and Collective Actors.

Thursday, July 9, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S12 202. What Shapes Legal Mobilization within Different Settings? Constraints and Resources in the Mobilization of Law. Thursday, July 9, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S12

❧ Nomadic Subjects in 21st Century Iberian Culture 172. Nomadic Subjectivity and the Reconfiguration of Iberian Cultural Identities. Thursday, July 9, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J201 197. Migration and Cultural Citizenship in Contemporary Iberia. Thursday, July 9, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J201



❧ Contradictions and Paradoxes of the EU Regulatory Framework 196. Flexibility vs. Effectiveness. Thursday, July 9, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J101 228. Transparency and Participation vs. Effectiveness. Friday, July 10, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104 252. Legitimacy vs. Effectiveness. Friday, July 10, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104 284. Rule of Law vs. Effectiveness. Friday, July 10, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J104

❧ Narrating Europe 198. Narrating Europe: Theoretical and Conceptual Perspectives. Thursday, July 9, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S11 225. Narrating Europe: Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century. Friday, July 10, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S11

❧ Importing and Exporting Migration Theory Across Continents: Europe, North America and East Asia 224. (1) Importing North American Theory in Europe. Friday, July 10, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J210 251. (2) Exporting European Migration Theory to East Asia. Friday, July 10, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J210

❧ Attitudes Towards Europe in the Wake of the Great Recession 226. Politicizing Europe? The Effect of the Euro Crisis on Attitudes towards European Integration. Friday, July 10, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103 254. Output Legitimacy: Policy Performance and Legitimacy in the EU. Friday, July 10, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room J103

Mini-Symposia

Revolution and Democracy in Europe 174. Revolutions: Causes and Processes. Thursday, July 9, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101 200. Revolutions: Short and Long-Term Consequences. Thursday, July 9, 2015 4:00 to 5:45 PM - 28 rue des Saints-Pères - room H101

253. Narrating Europe: Twentieth Century (part I) Friday, July 10, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S11 282. Narrating Europe: Twentieth Century (part II) Friday, July 10, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S11

❧ The Impact of the Crisis Upon the Attitudes of National Elites Towards the EU 227. The Impact of the Crisis upon the Attitudes of National Elites towards the EU – Politicization, Perception of Institutions, and Threats. Friday, July 10, 2015 9:00 to 10:45 AM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14 256. The Impact of the Crisis upon the Attitudes of National Elites towards the EU – Country Case Studies. Friday, July 10, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S14

❧ Regions as Actors: Within and Beyond the State 255. Regions as Actors Within and Beyond the State 1 – Regions in Europe. Friday, July 10, 2015 11:00 to 12:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S07 283. Regions as Actors Within and Beyond the State 2 – Regions and Diversity. Friday, July 10, 2015 2:00 to 3:45 PM - 13 rue de l’Université - room S07

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This "Subject Index" is based on keywords chosen by presenters during the proposal submission process and is not exhaustive. For a more complete list of presentations on a specific topic, do a "whole words" search of the digital version of this conference program. Agriculture and Food: 187

Central Europe: 180, 210, 294

083, 091, 098, 099, 102, 105, 106, 108, 109, 111, 114, 117, 121, 123, 128, 133, 135, 136, 137, 139, 153, 156, 159, 160, 161, 167, 169, 171, 175, 176, 182, 183, 186, 187, 193, 196, 201, 205, 206, 207, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 220, 221, 226, 227, 228, 230, 233, 234, 235, 238, 241, 244, 248, 249, 252, 254, 255, 256, 260, 266, 267, 268, 273, 278, 284, 293, 295, 304, 305, 306, 308, 309, 311

Colonial and Post-Colonial Experience: 065, 132, 139, 173, 199, 224, 251

Foreign and International Relations: 021, 030, 032, 038, 065, 073, 098, 120, 152, 158, 180, 185, 221, 240, 268, 301

Comparative Politics: 003, 007, 013, 016, 018, 028, 033, 034, 037, 042, 050, 055, 057, 061, 066, 068, 076, 083, 084, 086, 094, 102, 104, 107, 109, 110, 114, 126, 127, 130, 134, 137, 139, 140, 141, 149, 156, 162, 167, 168, 170, 171, 174, 177, 184, 190, 195, 200, 202, 204, 215, 220, 226, 235, 237, 239, 244, 245, 246, 254, 255, 259, 260, 270, 277, 283, 291, 296, 303, 307

Gender and Sexuality: 019, 027, 034, 046, 060, 082, 089, 100, 101, 134, 143, 178, 189, 197, 203, 232, 249, 258, 262, 286, 287, 295, 308, 310

Parties and Party Systems: 003, 036, 044, 072, 123, 126, 127, 129, 141, 195, 206, 230, 231, 245, 257, 263, 286, 290, 305

Globalization: 037, 041, 045, 058, 134, 138, 153, 160, 173, 182, 185, 186, 222, 224, 251, 271, 276

Philosophy: 198, 225, 253, 282

Art and Literature: 051, 112, 138, 157, 172, 192, 197, 288

Subject Index

Austerity: 007, 017, 019, 023, 044, 070, 074, 079, 096, 097, 099, 102, 150, 155, 156, 181, 204, 214, 241, 259, 293, 303

Eastern Europe: 033, 077, 081, 098, 122, 124, 149, 152, 180, 183, 242, 247, 248, 256 Ecology and Environment: 025, 032, 192, 208 Economics: 011, 020, 040, 050, 059, 063, 071, 090, 093, 116, 121, 145, 160, 161, 176, 191, 194, 201, 210, 219, 236, 260, 309 Education: 085, 119, 144, 157, 169, 191, 236, 261 Elections and Electoral Politics: 026, 044, 046, 056, 072, 087, 123, 129, 168, 195, 206, 220, 243, 245, 254, 294, 300, 305, 308 Ethics and Morality: 004, 189, 201, 216, 262 European Integration and the EU: 002, 004, 009, 010, 011, 012, 020, 022, 023, 031, 033, 041, 043, 045, 046, 049, 050, 069, 071, 074, 075, 078, 080, 082,

74

Subject Index

Health and Healthcare: 013, 154, 216, 299 History: 001, 003, 008, 020, 039, 059, 065, 090, 092, 109, 120, 137, 157, 158, 171, 177, 183, 192, 198, 203, 225, 237, 241, 253, 277, 282, 285, 292, 309 Identity and Ethnicity: 024, 025, 027, 034, 047, 051, 058, 060, 066, 067, 072, 076, 088, 093, 101, 103, 118, 131, 132, 133, 151, 169, 186, 197, 198, 199, 205, 207, 215, 217, 222, 225, 229, 243, 253, 262, 263, 265, 273, 282, 283, 287, 288 Inequality: 009, 014, 015, 051, 093, 100, 119, 143, 146, 150, 178, 181, 194, 199, 217, 232, 239, 264, 274, 295, 299, 306 Labor and Labor Unions: 040, 041, 043, 048, 125, 147, 178, 209, 234, 250, 266, 285 Law and Courts: 002, 043, 063, 064, 078, 091, 111, 135, 159, 170, 175, 193, 202, 213, 238, 301, 302 Media and Popular Cultures: 006, 012, 069, 101, 105, 108, 112, 136, 155, 205,

289, 297 Migration and Immigration: 002, 009, 012, 013, 016, 024, 027, 031, 035, 047, 058, 060, 061, 064, 067, 070, 089, 100, 103, 104, 115, 118, 124, 131, 132, 144, 151, 172, 182, 184, 211, 215, 216, 218, 222, 224, 251, 265, 269, 271, 272, 287, 292, 296, 298 Music and Performing Arts: 112, 138, 292 Northern Europe: 130, 158, 242

Politics: 008, 010, 017, 018, 023, 025, 028, 031, 035, 036, 055, 070, 073, 075, 076, 082, 083, 088, 094, 097, 106, 108, 111, 116, 125, 126, 135, 136, 148, 159, 175, 184, 188, 191, 194, 208, 212, 213, 226, 230, 233, 237, 238, 243, 249, 255, 257, 263, 267, 269, 270, 274, 283, 289, 297, 298, 300, 302 Radical Right and Left: 008, 026, 056, 077, 087, 095, 127, 143, 174, 200, 231, 286, 290, 310 Religion and Secularism: 001, 024, 029, 075, 096, 115, 118, 144, 151, 179, 188, 221, 265, 310 Science and Technology: 045, 085 Security and Defense: 021, 038, 073, 094, 145, 152, 185, 240, 268, 301 Social Movements and Protest: 005, 016, 019, 022, 026, 056, 077, 081, 087, 105, 122, 155, 162, 170, 174, 187, 189, 200, 202, 212, 235, 247, 258, 270, 275, 285, 289, 297, 307 Southern Europe: 007, 064, 081, 107, 113, 124, 142, 149, 172, 190, 218, 247, 248, 250, 256, 272

Sports and Entertainment: 133 Trade and Regulation: 011, 018, 097, 116, 173 Varieties of Capitalism: 014, 017, 057, 068, 084, 086, 110, 113, 130, 140, 142, 161, 181, 214, 234, 246, 264, 293, 307 Welfare State: 014, 015, 028, 048, 055, 057, 063, 068, 074, 079, 084, 086, 099, 106, 110, 113, 119, 125, 129, 131, 140, 142, 147, 150, 154, 167, 193, 204, 232, 236, 239, 242, 246, 250, 264, 266, 274, 291, 300, 302, 306 Western Europe: 010, 047, 066, 067, 088, 153, 154, 188, 190, 218, 233, 276, 290, 291, 303

Participant Index Baccaro, Lucio, 057, 147, 234 Badulescu, Claudia, 033 Bailey, Gavin, 087 Baird, Theodore, 064 Baker, Andrew, 071, 121 Balcells, Laia, 094, 148 Baldi, Gregory, 191 Balkenhol, Markus, 132 Baller, Inger, 286 Ballor, Grace, 114 Ban, Cornel, 081, 160, 248 Banting, Keith, 131, 239 Barbier, Jean-Claude, 302 Barbulescu, Roxana, 067, 218, 271 Bargheer, Stefan, 192 Barisione, Mauro, 231 Barnartt, Sharon, 258, 285 Barnes, Lucy, 274 Barrett, Gavin, 244 Barta, Zsofia, 142, 257 Bartels, Larry, 093 Bartolacelli, Alessio, 091 Basilien-Gainche, Marie-Laure, 070 Batt, Rosemary, 234 Bauer, Michael, 278 Baum, Michael, 062 Bayulgen, Oksan, 032 Beaman, Jean, 034, 067 Bean, Frank, 182, 224 Beaudonnet, Laurie, 226, 289 Becher, Michael, 246, 274 Beckfield, Jason, 063, 154 Beijen, Barbara, 252 Beissinger, Mark, 162 Belfrage, Claes, 041 Bellanova, Rocco, 212 Belot, Céline, 006, 226 Bendel, Petra, 031 Benz, Arthur, 190, 303 Benziger, Karl, 092 Beramendi, Pablo, 129, 246, 274 Bereni, Laure, 060 Berezin, Mabel, 063, 087 Berg, Linda, 245 Berg, Louis-Alexandre, 240 Berger, Nicole, 060 Bergeron, Henri, 013 Bergmann, Julian, 021 Bernhard, Michael, 200 Bernstein, Mary, 019 Bertsou, Eri, 006 Besier, Gerhard, 183 Best, Heinrich, 227 Bezes, Philippe, 276

Participant Index

Abazi, Vigjilenca, 301 Abels, Gabriele, 046, 083, 249, 308 Abraham, David, 029, 224 Acar, Taylan, 101 Accornero, Guya, 081 Adam, Ilke, 009, 269 Adamson, Fiona, 215 Aden, Hartmut, 304 Adraoui, Mohamed-Ali, 026 Adshead, Maura, 130 Adusei-Poku, Nana, 058 Agostini, Chiara, 142 Ahlquist, John, 116, 257 Aidukaite, Jolanta, 122 Akturk, Sener, 115 Al-Rebholz, Anil, 089 Albahari, Maurizio, 272 Allerkamp, Doreen, 206, 230 Allwood, Gill, 082, 297 Alpan, Basak, 133 Amable, Bruno, 059 Amat, Francesc, 072, 129 Amin, Muhamed, 288 Ammann, Klaus, 187 Amoretti, Francesco, 136 Ana, Alexandra, 019 Ancelovici, Marcos, 307 Anderson, Karen, 110, 242 Anderson, Liam, 076 Andersson, Jenny, 106, 125, 291 Andersson, Ruben, 272 Andries, Annelies, 112, 138 Angermuller, Johannes, 236 Ansary, Hassan, 231 Apostolov-Dimitrijevic, Dunja, 059 Appel, Hilary, 032, 098 Arango, Joaquin, 296 Arias, Luz Marina, 003 Arkin, Kimberly, 179 Armingeon, Klaus, 074, 293 Armstrong, Kenneth, 159 Asher, Andrew, 289 Askola, Heli, 082 Auel, Katrin, 244 Auer, Stefan, 180, 267 Aunesluoma, Juhana, 158 Avant-Mier, Roberto, 292 Avdagic, Sabina, 274 Avril, Lola, 091 Aydemir, Nermin, 035 Aydin, Umut, 091 Ayoub, Phillip, 233, 310 Ayuandini, Sherria, 287 Azam, Nicolas, 123

75

Participant Index

Bickerton, Christopher, 049, 241, 290 Bieber, Ina, 243 Bieber, Tonia, 261, 306 Bijsmans, Patrick, 069 Biltoft, Carolyn, 090 Bischewski, Marret, 273 Blauberger, Michael, 135, 257 Bleich, Erik, 024, 047, 132, 224 Blings, Steffen, 208 Blum, Sonja, 015, 079 Blumer, Nadine, 217 Boatcã, Manuela, 027 Bodden, J. A. Roy, 199 Bogdan, Ludmila, 262 Bohle, Dorothee, 130, 162, 248 Bolukbasi, H. Tolga, 068 Bolzonaro, Fabio, 147, 258 Bombola, Gina, 112, 138 Bonelli, Matteo, 213 Bonikowski, Bart, 095 Bonjour, Saskia, 002, 298 Bonoli, Giuliano, 167, 264 Borevi, Karin, 131 Bornschier, Simon, 044 Boronska-Hryniewiecka, Karolina, 083, 233 Bosia, Michael, 310 Boston, Nicholas, 101 Boswell, Christina, 211, 296 Boucas, Dimitris, 155 Boucoyannis, Deborah, 237 Bouza Garcia, Luis, 022, 235 Bovens, Mark, 105, 144 Bowen, John, 265 Boy, John, 001 Boyer, Robert, 181 Brack, Nathalie, 286 Brait, Andrea, 282 Branco, Rui, 028 Brandl, Bernd, 234 Braun, Benjamin, 121 Breen, Michael, 102, 248 Breidahl, Karen, 086 Brennan, Sarah, 258 Brentin, Dario, 033, 247 Breschi, Danilo, 198, 225 Bressan, Massimo, 216 Brey, Elisa, 218 Bridgen, Paul, 089 Brinkmann, Ulrich, 266 Bronner, Laura, 277 Brouard, Sylvain, 168 Brown, Colin, 104 Browne, Cynthia, 288 Brudny, Yitzhak, 094 Bruno, Caruso, 043 Bryan, David, 253 Bunce, Valerie, 162, 174

76

Bunea, Adriana, 097, 230 Burckhardt, Till, 201 Burroni, Luigi, 113, 153 Bursens, Peter, 083 Busemeyer, Marius, 119, 264 Bustikova, Lenka, 231 Butler, Graham, 038 Buzogany, Aron, 083, 247 Byrnes, Melissa, 034, 065 Büttgen, Nina, 196 Büttner, Sebastian, 230 Cafruny, Alan, 011, 145, 311 Caiani, Manuela, 056, 127, 231 Callaghan, Helen, 059, 090 Calligaro, Oriane, 171 Cameron, David, 259, 293 Campomori, Francesca, 150 Campoy-Cubillo, Adolfo, 172, 197 Canalda Criado, Sergio, 040 Cantillon, Bea, 014 Capoccia, Giovanni, 042, 277 Caponio, Tiziana, 100, 184, 269 Cappiali, Maria Teresa, 035, 115 Caranta, Roberto, 196, 284 Carlson, Jennifer, 032 Carmichael, Cathie, 225 Carol, Sarah, 118 Carstensen, Martin, 017 Cartelli, Philip, 037 Casey, Terrence, 161 Castle, Nancy, 144 Castro, Elga, 133, 263 Cattani, Paola, 253 Caune, Hélène, 168 Caviedes, Alexander, 067 Célestine, Audrey, 199 Cerami, Alfio, 079 Cerigo, Helen, 154 Cesari, Jocelyne, 016, 188 Chacartegui, Consuelo, 043 Challinor, Elizabeth, 216 Champetier, Brice, 078 Chapelle, Guillaume, 194 Chappe, Vincent-Arnaud, 202 Chauvin, Sébastien, 173, 258 Chawla, Varsha, 144 Chebel d’Appollonia, Ariane, 016, 047, 188 Chevalier, Emilie, 252, 284 Chirita, Anca, 091 Christensen, Mette, 244 Christiansen, Flemming, 107 Cianciara, Agnieszka, 180, 210 Cinalli, Manlio, 118, 178 Cino Pagliarello, Marina, 261 Ciornei, Irina, 144 Cirstocea, Ioana, 295

Cleeton, David, 011 Clegg, Daniel, 028, 074, 119 Clegg, Peter, 139, 199 Clément, Karine, 122, 285 Clerc, Louis, 158 Clift, Ben, 161, 248 Climent-Ferrando, Vicent, 169 Cliquennois, Gaëtan, 078 Closa, Carlos, 213 Coates, David, 161 Cohen, Camille, 037 Cohen, James, 047 Cole, Alistair, 303 Coller, Xavier, 259 Colonomos, Ariel, 169, 268 Comelli, Martino, 219 Conant, Lisa, 074, 111, 202 Connolly, Sara, 278 Conti, Nicolò, 206, 227 Copsey, Nathaniel, 311 Corduwener, Pepijn, 008 Cos, Rafaël, 195 Costa, Edna, 250 Cotta, Maurizio, 227, 256 Cousin, Bruno, 139, 173, 199 Cova, Anne, 203 Crage, Suzanna, 070, 103 Crespy, Amandine, 212 Cronin, James, 161, 185 Culpepper, Pepper, 018, 113, 142 Curcetti, Valentina, 176 Curtin, Deirdre, 080, 159 Cuttitta, Paolo, 064 D’Angelo, Alessio, 067 D’Auria, Matthew, 108, 198, 282 Dageförde, Mirjam, 226, 254 Daher, Liana, 203 Dakowska, Dorota, 045, 085, 229 Dale, Roger, 045 Damay, Ludivine, 212 Dandoy, Régis, 190, 245 Daniel, Justin, 139 Daphi, Priska, 081, 096 Darcillon, Thibault, 093 Davidian, Anne, 062 Davies, Gareth, 117, 135 Davison, Remy, 017, 176 de Blasio, Emiliana, 108 de Boer, Nik, 301 de Bruin, Robin, 157 De Cesari, Chiara, 039, 092, 109 De Chiara, Francesca, 108 De Giorgi, Elisabetta, 141 de Jong, Lammert, 139 De La Calle, Luis, 094 de la Porte, Caroline, 023, 099, 209 de Lange, Sarah, 127

Ebert, Franz, 043 Eckes, Christina, 301 Edwards, Erica, 036, 294 Eglitis, Daina, 203 El Kholi, Hugo, 169, 201

El Qadim, Nora, 287 El-Tayeb, Fatima, 217 Eleftheriadis, Konstantinos, 019 Elfersy, Daphna, 087 Elgvin, Olav, 118, 151 Eliantonio, Mariolina, 196, 228, 252, 284 Elsky, Julia, 292 Emeran, Christine, 155 Enderlein, Henrik, 219, 293 Engeli, Isabelle, 310 Eppler, Annegret, 083 Erce, Aitor, 160 Ergen, Timur, 032, 208 Erhardt, Erwin, 033 Ersanilli, Evelyn, 089 Ertman, Thomas, 237 Erzeel, Silvia, 243 Escafré-Dublet, Angéline, 037, 292 Eschle, Catherine, 019 Esping-Andersen, Gøsta, 063 Etoke, Nathalie, 051 Fabbrini, Sergio, 049 Fagan, Adam, 122, 297 Fahey, Elaine, 091, 159 Fahey, Tony, 014 Falkner, Gerda, 128 Farquharson, Karen, 027, 058 Fassin, Eric, 310 Faszer-McMahon, Debra, 197 Favell, Adrian, 182, 222, 224, 251 Feldman-Savelsberg, Pamela, 216 Feldmann, Magnus, 059, 210 Fernandes, Tiago, 007, 174 Fernandez, Jose, 259 Ferree, Myra Marx, 143, 265 Ferrera, Maurizio, 023 Field, Bonnie, 072 Fielding, Anthony, 251 Fishman, Robert, 063, 106 Fleischer, Julia, 050, 083 Flesher Fominaya, Cristina, 019, 155, 275 Follis, Karolina, 217, 272 Fomina, Joanna, 206 Foner, Nancy, 182, 224 Foret, Francois, 075, 221 Forlenza, Rosario, 001, 179 Foscari, Giuseppe, 225 Fossati, Flavia, 147 Fossum, John, 267 Fourment, Emeline, 143 Fox, Cybelle, 132 Frader, Laura, 004, 203 Frankowski, Pawel, 209 Fredette, Jennifer, 199 Frericks, Patricia, 028, 086

Fridriksdottir, Bjarney, 031 Fromage, Diane, 244, 286 Fröhlich, Christian, 122 Fuchs Sampson, Sarah, 112 Fuller, Gregory, 102, 176, 219 Gabor, Daniela, 160, 248 Gagnon, Alain, 076 Gago, Angie, 209 Gallego, Aina, 300 Gallo, Fernanda, 225 Gamble, Andrew, 130, 161, 214 Garbaye, Romain, 047 Garcia, Maria, 011 Garcia, Marisol, 153 Garcia, Nuria, 169, 201 Garcia Calvo, Angela, 059 Garcia Garcia, Borja, 133 Garritzmann, Julian, 119, 261 Gatejel, Luminita, 120 Gazzola, Michele, 201 Geddes, Andrew, 211, 296 Gehring, Jacqueline, 170, 202 Gehrke, Anne-Marie, 150 Genschel, Philipp, 276, 306 Georgakakis, Didier, 010, 235 Gerasymenko, Ganna, 098, 183 Gest, Justin, 188 Geva, Dorit, 056 Gherghina, Sergiu, 149 Ghodsee, Kristen, 134 Giannone, Diego, 136 Gideon, Andrea, 085 Gingrich, Jane, 119 Gisondi, Marcello, 282 Giugni, Lilia, 290 Gjoksi, Nisida, 003 Gjortler, Peter, 233, 262 Gkliati, Mariana, 002 Glatzer, Miguel, 015, 176 Glencross, Andrew, 206 Glikman, Juliette, 008 Glynn, Irial, 002, 218 Goerres, Achim, 204 Goldstone, Jack, 200 Gologan, Delia, 146 Gomez-Reino, Margarita, 005, 095 Gonalons Pons, Pilar, 100 Goodman, Sara, 061, 103 Goodwin, Jeff, 174, 285 Gora, Magdalena, 221 Goyer, Michel, 234, 259 Granger, Marie, 159 Grant, Shelley, 089 Gravier, Magali, 080 Green, Simon, 103 Greenfeld, Liah, 263 Greenwood, Justin, 022

Participant Index

de le Court, Alexandre, 204 de Ruiter, Rik, 244 De Vries, Christopher, 025 Deca, Ligia, 045 Deegan-Krause, Kevin, 036, 126 De Haan, Ido, 008 DeHanas, Daniel, 016 Dehousse, Renaud, 020, 049, 278 Dekanozishvili, Mariam, 032 Dekel, Irit, 217, 265 Del Pero, Mario, 120, 185 Delanoe, Igor, 152 Della Puppa, Francesco, 150 Demiryol, Tolga, 032 Deschouwer, Kris, 245 Deswarte, Richard, 253, 282 Diaz Romero, Leocadia, 069 Diez, Thomas, 049, 249, 273 Díez Medrano, Juan, 062, 222 Dijkstra, Hylke, 021 Dimitrakopoulos, Dionyssis, 010 Dimitrov, Martin, 134 Dimitrova, Anna, 073 Dinev, Ivaylo, 077 Dingeldey, Irene, 306 Dini, Vittorio, 253 Dix-Neuf, Marc, 013 Dixon, Jennifer, 137 Djelic, Marie-Laure, 268 Djuricic, Ivana, 146 Doellgast, Virginia, 147, 266 Dolenec, Danijela, 123 Donnelly, Shawn, 050, 117 Dotti, Nicola, 085 Dragomir, Cristina, 146 Dragostinova, Theodora, 134 Drake, Sara, 252 Drake, William, 136 Dubin, Kenneth, 007, 156 Duchesne, Sophie, 186, 207 Ducros, Hélène, 092 Dudová, Radka, 100 Duez, Denis, 212 Dufour, Pascale, 189 Dumbrava, Costica, 089 Dupuy, Claire, 168, 254 Durand, Cédric, 041 Duro Mansilla, María, 031 Dursun, Ayse, 143 Duyvendak, Jan Willem, 008, 101, 189, 275 Dølvik, Jon Erik, 099, 110

77

Greer, Ian, 147, 266 Greiner, Florian, 225, 282 Grek, Sotiria, 191, 261 Griffiths, Simon, 096, 130 Grisolia, Francesco, 250 Grodsky, Brian, 149 Groenleer, Martijn, 196, 228, 284 Groes-Green, Christian, 216 Gropas, Roubini, 070 Grzymala-Busse, Anna, 200 Gueye, Abdoulaye, 034, 088 Guglielmo, Tom, 132 Guidi, Mattia, 066 Guillaud, Elvire, 093 Guillen, Ana, 140, 250 Guinaudeau, Isabelle, 254 Guiraudon, Virginie, 020, 131, 189, 309 Guisan, Catherine, 171 Guth, Jessica, 082, 249 Guth, Jim, 075, 221 Gutiérrez-Peris, Dídac, 144 Gutman, Yifat, 217 Gümrükçü, Selin Bengi, 285 Güner, Pinar, 178

Participant Index

Haapajärvi, Linda, 104 Haberstroh, Charlotte, 119, 168 Hackett, Sarah, 070 Hadj-Abdou, Leila, 030, 211 Hall, Peter, 084, 106, 131, 246, 299 Halle, Randall, 012 Halton, Eugene, 001 Hampshire, James, 211 Hancké, Robert, 099, 234 Hanna, Jeanne, 034, 263 Hansen, Randall, 296 Hanson, Stephen, 042 Hardiman, Niamh, 180, 276, 293 Harguindeguy, Jean-Baptiste, 303 Harmansah, Rabia, 039 Harmsen, Robert, 045 Hartlapp, Miriam, 097, 278 Hartmann, Heinrich, 120 Hartnell, Helen, 175 Harvey, Malcolm, 076 Hassel, Anke, 057, 110, 140 Haughton, Tim, 126, 305, 311 Hay, Colin, 214, 276, 291 Hayes, Graeme, 202, 275, 297 Hechter, Michael, 076, 148 Hedberg, Masha, 116 Hegele, Yvonne, 255 Heidenreich, Martin, 093, 114 Heinisch, Reinhard, 005, 095 Heisig, Jan, 306 Heizmann, Boris, 093, 115 Helbling, Marc, 104, 131 Helfferich, Barbara, 022, 046

78

Helgadottir, Oddny, 017, 081, 160 Hellwig, Timothy, 036 Helms, Joanna, 112 Hemerijck, Anton, 014, 074, 099 Hen, May, 173 Hensby, Alex, 155 Hepburn, Eve, 190 Hermeling, Andrew, 065 Hero, Rodney, 184 Herring, Ronald, 187 Herzog, Ben, 269 Hess, Christin, 103 Hessel, Philipp, 299 Hidalgo-Redondo, Óscar, 283 Hierro, Maria Jose, 066 Hilson, Chris, 170 Hobson, Barbara, 100 Hobson Faure, Laura, 292 Hochfellner, Daniela, 261 Hoeffler, Catherine, 038, 145 Hofmann, Andreas, 111 Hofmann, Anna, 062 Hofmann, Stephanie, 268 Hollifield, James, 224, 251, 296 Hombrado Martos, Angustias, 255, 283 Hooijer, Gerda, 015 Hoon, Louise, 245 Hopkin, Jonathan, 156, 246, 305 Howard, Lise, 240 Howard, Marc, 089 Howell, Chris, 291 Hubert, Agnès, 046, 232 Hughes, Catherine, 138 Huijts, Tim, 299 Hunger, Uwe, 035, 103 Hungin, Harpal, 050 Hussain, Ajmal, 150 Hynes, Martin, 062 Häusermann, Silja, 195, 246, 264 Högenauer, Anna-Lena, 083 Iannone, Catalina, 197 Ibañez, Mónica, 287 Ibenskas, Raimondas, 294 Ilonszki, Gabriella, 107, 141 Inglot, Tomasz, 079 Innes, Abby, 140 Isiksel, Turkuler, 213 Israël, Liora, 170 Iusmen, Ingi, 262 Jabko, Nicolas, 156, 305 Jachtenfuchs, Markus, 117 Jackson, Sam, 087 Jacobsson, Kerstin, 122, 212 Jacquot, Sophie, 295 Jakes, Kelly, 292 James, Scott, 018

Jamet, Jean-François, 206 Jasiewicz, Krzysztof, 174 Jaulin, Thibaut, 124 Jenichen, Anne, 221 Jesse, Moritz, 002, 091 Jessoula, Matteo, 079 Jimenez Blanco, Pilar, 009 Joerges, Christian, 080 Johansson, Hakan, 235 Johnston, Alison, 102 Jolly, Seth, 072, 294 Jones, Anthony, 152 Jones, Deborah, 077 Jones-Correa, Michael, 269, 298 Joppke, Christian, 024, 029 Jordana, Jacint, 260 Jozwiak, Magdalena, 091 Jubany, Olga, 150 Jusko, Karen, 129, 204 Kaiser, André, 220 Kaiser, Robert, 085 Kalaitzake, Manolis, 260 Kalantzi, Foteini, 038 Kalitz, Steffen, 237 Kanellopoulos, Konstantinos, 105 Kangas, Olli, 068 Kaniok, Petr, 123 Kansikas, Suvi, 158 Kanthak, Leon, 097 Karageorgou-Bastea, Christina, 092, 288 Karagiannis, Yannis, 066 Karatzia, Anastasia, 022 Kassim, Hussein, 010, 278 Kassir, Alexandra, 287 Kastner, Lisa, 018 Kastoryano, Riva, 029, 265 Katz, Richard, 290 Kavada, Anastasia, 155, 289 Kavka, Josef, 045 Kaynak, Akif, 095 Keaton, Trica, 027, 058 Keessen, Andrea, 196 Kelemen, R. Daniel, 135, 175, 213 Kelso, Michelle, 146 Kersschot, Margaux, 116 Ketz, Victoria, 172 Kevins, Anthony, 006 Khlevnyuk, Daria, 039 Khong, Melissa, 138 Khrebtan, Julia, 292 Kiess, Johannes, 307 King, Conrad, 261 King, Desmond, 276 Kingsbury, Marina, 089 Kislev, Elyakim, 115 Kjaer, Poul, 080 Kleider, Hanna, 220

Ladi, Stella, 116, 208 Ladrech, Robert, 123, 195 Laffan, Brigid, 128 Lago, Ignacio, 126 Laine, Jussi, 183 Lambert, Elisabeth, 078 Lang, Sabine, 308

Lankauskas, Gediminas, 180 Larsen, Christian, 131, 239 Larsson, Olof, 111 Laurence, Jonathan, 024, 265 Laws, David, 270 Lazar, Marc, 005, 290 Le Galès, Patrick, 194, 214, 276 Leach, Darcy, 056 Lebaron, Frédéric, 010 Lechevalier, Arnaud, 302 Lefebure, Alessia, 191 Lefkofridi, Zoe, 267 Lehndorff, Steffen, 302 Lehnert, Sigrun, 171 Lejeune, Aude, 170, 202 Lengyel, Gyorgy, 227, 256 León, Margarita, 086, 167 León, Sandra, 220 Leonardi, Federico, 198 Leone, Maryanne, 172 Lesiñska, Magdalena, 184 Lessard-Phillips, Laurence, 061, 089 Leucht, Brigitte, 241 Levinson, Nanette, 136, 205 Levy, Carl, 130 Lewandowsky, Marcel, 005 Liebert, Ulrike, 004, 249 Lillie, Nathan, 266 Lindh, Arvid, 239 Lindseth, Peter, 080, 238 Liñeira, Robert, 066 Linsenmeier, Klaus, 062 Lopez, Julia, 043 Lynch, Julia, 013, 129 Lynggaard, Kennet, 114, 205 Maas, Willem, 104, 175 Mabbett, Deborah, 057, 121 Maccaferri, Marzia, 282 MacCanico, Yasha, 108 Machado, Tânia, 258 Macklin, Graham, 087 Madsen, Mikael, 078 Maesse, Jens, 236 Maher, Imelda, 159 Makki, Sami, 073 Mansell, Robin, 136 Manuel, Paul, 096 Marácz, László, 302 Marcinkowski, Frank, 105 Mares, Isabela, 294 Margheritis, Ana, 215 Marin, Lavinia, 085 Marin, Luisa, 002 Marion, Axel, 207 Marker, Emily, 171 Markey, Madeleine, 297 Markoviti, Margarita, 115, 262

Markus, Stanislav, 098 Marques, José Carlos, 218 Marston, Greg, 086 Martin, Andrew, 099 Martin, Cathie, 057, 084, 119 Martinsen, Dorte, 135 Marx, Paul, 014, 300 Maslanik, Jeffrey, 233 Mason, Nicholas, 207 Masselot, Annick, 082 Massoc, Elsa, 018, 260 Mathieu, Emmanuelle, 196 Matonyté, Irmina, 149, 256 Mattheis, Frank, 240 Matthijs, Matthias, 121, 241, 305 Mattoni, Alice, 155, 275 Mau, Steffen, 093, 153, 186 Maurice, Edenz, 199 Maussen, Marcel, 118, 151, 270 Maxwell, Rahsaan, 024, 182 Mayer, Nonna, 026 Mayoral, Juan, 175 McCall, Leslie, 239 McGarry, Aidan, 247 McGregor, Andrew, 288 McIntosh, Laurie, 058 McMahon, Richard, 273 McMann, Kelly, 237 McNamara, Courtney, 299 McNamara, Kathleen, 012, 311 Meardi, Guglielmo, 040, 234 Meguid, Bonnie, 072 Mehta, Aditi, 025 Meijer, Hans, 065 Meijers, Maurits, 206 Melo, Susana, 045 Mendes, Joana, 080 Mendez, Fernando, 159 Mendras, Marie, 152 Mennel, Barbara, 012 Mennillo, Giulia, 160 Menz, Georg, 130, 296 Mérand, Frédéric, 003, 186 Messina, Anthony, 184 Meunier, Sophie, 145 Michalowski, Ines, 024, 229 Michel, Hélène, 078 Milewski, Françoise, 232 Miller-Idriss, Cynthia, 026, 056 Milner, Susan, 040, 209 Minderhoud, Paul, 009 Mitzner, Veera, 158 Molchanov, Mikhail, 098 Molina, Oscar, 048, 142 Molles, Elista, 184 Molnar, Virag, 153, 263 Monaghan, Elizabeth, 022 Monteiro, Alessandra, 257

Participant Index

Kleinman, Julie, 027 Klekowski von Koppenfels, Amanda, 271 Kloskowska-Dudzińska, Agnieszka, 141 Knapp, Andrew, 137 Knorr, Lilian, 025 Knudsen, Jette, 084, 110 Knuth, Matthias, 302 Kobelinsky, Carolina, 272 Kochenov, Dimitry, 213 Kocijan, Bojana, 227 Kofman, Eleonore, 100, 218 Koido, Akihiro, 251 Koinova, Maria, 215 Koops, Joachim, 021, 240 Kopyciok, Svenja, 093 Korkmaz, Visne, 073 Korneev, Oleg, 124 Kornetis, Kostis, 081 Korolczuk, Elzbieta, 095, 310 Korteweg, Anna, 265 Kortmann, Matthias, 179 Kotarski, Kristijan, 260 Kotobi, Laurence, 216 Kotz, Hans-Helmut, 071 Koukiadaki, Aristea, 302 Kourtelis, Christos, 030 Kousis, Maria, 105 Kovacheva, Vesela, 009 Kowalski, Alexandra, 192 Kozaitis, Kathryn, 146, 178 Kraft, Jonas, 219, 259 Krasnodebska, Maria, 180 Kraus, Peter, 169, 201 Krawatzek, Félix, 277 Kreissl, Reinhard, 136 Krepelka, Filip, 193 Kreuder-Sonnen, Christian, 010 Kreuzer, Markus, 277 Krige, John, 268 Krotz, Ulrich, 114 Kubik, Jan, 039, 092 Kudrna, Zdenek, 050, 128 Kuhn, Theresa, 104, 148, 186 Kuitto, Kati, 068 Kullmann, Miriam, 193 Kuo, Alexander, 294 Kuokstis, Vytautas, 050, 180 Kurzer, Paulette, 242 Köpping Athanasopoulos, Harald, 061

79

Morel, Nathalie, 028, 055 Morgan, Kimberly, 028, 079, 132 Morgan-Collins, Mona, 203 Morlino, Leonardo, 007, 149 Morning, Ann, 061 Morosanu, Laura, 040 Moschella, Manuela, 113, 121, 248 Moses, Julia, 181 Mourlon-Druol, Emmanuel, 020, 241 Moutselos, Michalis, 218 Muehlboeck, Monika, 178 Mueller, Henriette, 230 Mueller, Sean, 076, 190, 255 Muntean, Aurelian, 294 Muro, Diego, 007 Murray, Christopher, 112, 138 Murray-Miller, Gavin, 198 Mushaben, Joyce, 046, 082, 308 Musiani, Francesca, 136 Musselin, Christine, 236 Myant, Martin, 116 Mylonas, Harris, 215, 305

Participant Index

Naczyk, Marek, 055, 125 Nanaou, Kyriaki, 114 Naples, Nancy, 189 Narayanan, Anndal, 039 Narvselius, Eleonora, 109 Natali, David, 023, 113, 142 Nazio, Tiziana, 040, 178 Nelemans, Mark, 252 Nelsen, Brent, 075 Neuman, Senka, 003, 137 Newton, Lina, 298 Neyer, Juergen, 031 Ni Chaoimh, Eadaoin, 284 Niang, Mame-Fatou, 051 Nicolaidis, Kalypso, 238 Nielsen, Julie, 006, 226 Nielsen, Kristian, 073 Niklasson, Lars, 097 Norocel, Ov Cristian, 094, 143 Noutcheva, Gergana, 177 Numa, Guy, 173 O’Brennan, John, 247 O’Connor, Eric, 171 O’Grady, Tom, 015 O’Meara, Noreen, 175 O’Reilly, Jacqueline, 250 Obayemi, Joy, 088 Ocak, Ozden, 067 Ochiai, Emiko, 251 Okabe, Midori, 251 Oktem, Kerem, 068 Olafsdottir, Sigrun, 154, 299 Öner, Selcen, 144 Orsina, Giovanni, 008

80

Osako, Chikako, 138 Ossman, Susan, 271 Ostergaard-Nielsen, Eva, 229 Otasevic, Snezana, 094 Otjes, Simon, 141, 286 Oude Nijhuis, Dennie, 125 Ozcurumez, Saime, 287 Ozyurek, Esra, 217, 265 Padovani, Claudia, 136 Pagoulatos, George, 140 Palan, Ronen, 173 Palau, Anna, 107 Palier, Bruno, 140, 194, 246, 264, 291 Palko, Olena, 253 Pallister-Wilkins, Polly, 272 Palm, Trineke, 145 Pamukcu, Omer, 037 Paolucci, Caterina, 286, 294 Papadopoulou, Dora, 108 Papaioannou, Andromachi, 088 Pappas, Takis, 005 Pardi, Tommaso, 210 Parr, Helen, 185 Parvez, Fareen, 024 Pasquier, Romain, 303 Pastore, Ferruccio, 070, 298 Paternotte, David, 019, 233, 295, 310 Patriarca, Silvana, 179 Patridge, Damani, 088, 217 Paul, Regine, 041, 211 Paul, Ruxandra, 104 Pavolini, Emmanuele, 113 Payero López, Lucía, 148 Pearl, Moran, 109 Pearson-Patel, Jessica, 065 Pedaci, Marcello, 048 Pedersini, Roberto, 048 Pehe, Veronika, 077 Peisakhin, Leonid, 094 Penry, Sarah, 039 Perez, Sofia, 084, 140, 293 Pérez-Sánchez, Gema, 172, 197 Perrin, Delphine, 124 Persico, Simon, 168, 195 Peters, B. Guy, 278 Peters, Yvette, 195 Petmesidou, Maria, 250 Petri, Rolf, 198 Petrović, Nikola, 273 Petrovic, Tanja, 285 Petschko, Martin, 091 Pfau-Effinger, Birgit, 086, 167 Picot, Georg, 057 Piergallini, Lisa, 257 Piirimäe, Kaarel, 158 Piketty, Thomas, 309 Pillay, Kathryn, 027

Pircher, Brigitte, 230 Pirker, Peter, 109 Pirro, Andrea L. P., 127 Plambeck, Ernst, 228 Plaza, Carolina, 036 Pochet, Philippe, 048, 250 Polanska, Dominika, 037, 122 Polk, Jonathan, 044, 245 Pombeni, Paolo, 001 Pontusson, Jonas, 214, 246, 274 Pop-Eleches, Grigore, 174 Popa, Elena, 035 Popova, Maria, 098, 174 Portas, Paula, 303 Posner, Elliot, 260 Prata, Ana, 143 Pritoni, Andrea, 142 Psychogiopoulou, Evangelia, 196 Puetter, Uwe, 159, 193 Pula, Besnik, 180, 210 Puzzo, Catherine, 047 Queralt, Didac, 003, 219, 277 Radut-Gaghi, Luciana, 289 Ragaru, Nadège, 134, 192 Raimundo, Filipa, 149 Rakusanova-Guasti, Petra, 141 Ramiere, Lucie, 169 Ramos, Cristina, 067 Ramos Martin, Nuria Elena, 048 Rasmussen, Magnus, 209 Real-Dato, José, 227 Recchi, Ettore, 186, 271 Redei, Lorinc, 145, 286 Reed-Danahay, Deborah, 067 Reeskens, Tim, 096, 144 Regan, Aidan, 041, 102, 121 Regini, Marino, 144, 236 Reibling, Nadine, 154 Reich, Simon, 016, 061 Reisenbichler, Alexander, 242, 305 Reitz, Jeffrey, 034 Reitz, Tilman, 236 Rennwald, Line, 125 Rensen, Marleen, 157 Reus, Iris, 283 Revi, Ben, 207, 259 Revillard, Anne, 170 Ringe, Nils, 286 Robbins, Jill, 197 Robertson, Graeme, 042 Roccu, Roberto, 030 Rodrigues, Ricardo, 086 Rodríguez-Teruel, Juan, 256 Rodt, Annemarie, 021 Rogers, Melissa, 072 Roman, Diane, 302

Romeyn, Esther, 039 Rona-Tas, Akos, 260 Roncador, Sonia, 172, 197 Ronchi, Stefano, 204 Ronzoni, Miriam, 238 Roos, Christof, 009, 306 Roose, Jochen, 105 Rosamond, Ben, 161, 241, 311 Rosas, Emmanuel, 295 Rose-Greenland, Fiona, 192 Rosen, Guri, 301 Rosenberg, Pnina, 109 Ross, George, 117, 185 Rothstein, Sidney, 040 Rovny, Allison, 147, 204 Rovny, Jan, 126 Rowell, Jay, 295 Royo, Sebastián, 007 Rueda, David, 129, 274, 300 Ruiz-Palmero, Christian, 283 Rumford, Chris, 222 Rupnik, Jacques, 106, 152 Russo, Federico, 107, 168 Ruzza, Carlo, 022, 189, 235 Ryan, John, 117 Rössel, Jörg, 035

Somers, Margaret, 181 Sonnicksen, Jared, 097 Sorice, Michele, 108 Sotiriu, Sabrina, 263 Sotiropoulos, Dimitrios, 007 Soysal, Levent, 287 Soysal, Yasemin, 153, 222 Spektorowski, Alberto, 026 Spencer, Sarah, 298 Spendzharova, Aneta, 050, 304 Spijkerboer, Thomas, 038, 064 Stafford, Ian, 303 Stambolis-Ruhstorfer, Michael, 258 Stanek, Mikolaj, 218 Starke, Peter, 014, 068 Startin, Nicholas, 069, 123 Statham, Paul, 118, 151, 297 Stecker, Christian, 107 Stefan, Oana, 284 Stengs, Irene, 288 Stephens, John, 059, 084 Stephenson, Paul, 050, 304 Stephenson, Scott, 111 Stjepanovic, Dejan, 038 Stockemer, Daniel, 005, 177 Stoeckel, Florian, 226 Stoklosa, Katarzyna, 183 Stone, Marla, 158, 179 Stratigaki, Maria, 046 Streeck, Wolfgang, 063, 181, 214, 309 Studlar, Donley, 013 Surak, Kristin, 215, 251 Swartz, David, 182, 261 Swerts, Thomas, 037 Swyngedouw, Eva, 229 Szelewa, Dorota, 055, 167 Szikra, Dorottya, 055 Szogs, Nina, 133 Szul, Roman, 201 Szulc, Lukasz, 101

Participant Index

Sacchi, Stefano, 113 Safi, Mirna, 182 Sala, Gemma, 148 Salageanu, Romana, 255 Saldivar, Karina, 016 Salo, Sanna, 036 Samaluk, Barbara, 266 Sanchez Salgado, Rosa, 235 Sanchez-Barrueco, Maria-Luisa, 304 Sandri, Giulia, 283 Sangar, Eric, 092, 205 Santana-Pereira, José, 149 Santaniello, Mauro, 136 Sargent, Carolyn, 216 Sassoon, Donald, 185 Sato, Hideki, 145 Sauer, Birgit, 249 Sauger, Nicolas, 126, 195 Saurugger, Sabine, 020, 049, 235 Savelsberg, Joachim, 094 Schaefer, Constantin, 257 Schain, Martin, 016, 188 Schakel, Arjan, 190, 220, 245 Scharpf, Fritz, 099, 128 Schelkle, Waltraud, 074, 102, 135, 242 Scheller, Henrik, 267 Schenk, Angelika, 193 Scheppele, Kim, 106, 213 Schindel, Estela, 272 Schirmer, Dietmar, 263 Schittenhelm, Karin, 004, 061

Schlachetzki, Sarah, 109 Schlenker, Andrea, 229 Schmidt, Susanne, 111, 135, 193 Schmidt, Vivien, 023, 049, 214, 241 Schmidt-Felzmann, Anke, 116 Schmidtke, Oliver, 103 Schnabel, Johanna, 255, 283 Schoemann, Isabelle, 209 Scholten, Peter, 070, 211, 269 Schraff, Dominik, 300 Schrag Sternberg, Claudia, 212 Schrover, Marlou, 009 Schröder, Iris, 120 Schulze-Cleven, Tobias, 209, 236 Schumacher, Gijs, 044 Schwan, Michael, 219 Schwartz, Herman, 110, 242 Schwell, Alexandra, 133 Schwenck, Anna, 134 Schädel, Andreas, 076 Schäfer, Armin, 044, 257 Schönwälder, Karen, 243, 269 Scipioni, Marco, 031 Scruggs, Lyle, 068 Seabrooke, Leonard, 071 Seifert, Franz, 187 Seketa, Stephanie, 090 Senac, Réjane, 232 Shaev, Brian, 171 Shalev, Michael, 307 Shattuck, Daniel, 207 Shevel, Oxana, 200, 229 Shield, Andrew, 101 Shire, Karen, 100 Sieg, Katrin, 012, 288 Sierp, Aline, 137, 171 Sil, Rudra, 210 Silver, Hilary, 293 Simon, Patrick, 034, 060 Sinno, Abdulkader, 188, 287 Siri, Jasmin, 143, 289 Siroky, David, 076, 148 Skaaning, Svend-Erik, 237 Skorge, Øyvind, 015 Skripka, Tatiana, 098, 145 Smelkowska, Agnieszka, 183 Smith, Andy, 020, 214 Smith, Marshall, 088 Smith, Melanie, 228, 284 Smyrl, Marc, 114 Smyrnaios, Nikos, 155 Snaith, Holly, 017, 041, 241 So, Florence, 195 Sobolewska, Maria, 243 Soennecken, Dagmar, 031, 170, 202 Soentken, Menno, 014 Sojka, Aleksandra, 207 Sokolic, Ivor, 137

Tacea, Angela, 244 Taggart, Paul, 290 Tallard, Michele, 048 Tarlea, Silvana, 191 Tatham, Michael, 220 Taylor, Isaac, 201 Taylor, Rosemary, 013 Tejerina Montaña, Benjamin, 307 Tekin, Beyza, 017 Temple, Walter, 172 Teorell, Jan, 003 Tepe, Sultan, 177 Thatcher, Mark, 049, 304 Thelen, Kathleen, 084 Thewissen, Stefan, 040 Thiel, Markus, 189, 233 Thielemann, Eiko, 002, 031

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Participant Index

Thiemann, Matthias, 071 Thomas, Paul, 047 Thomson, Henry, 277 Tiberj, Vincent, 188, 254 Tindemans, Klaas, 273 Tisdall, Diane, 138 Tootill, Mia, 112 Toplak, Cirila, 033, 098 Torpey, John, 001, 029 Tosun, Jale, 097, 187 Toubeau, Simon, 072 Toygur, Ilke, 006 Traber, Denise, 044 Trampusch, Christine, 181 Trauner, Florian, 070 Treré, Emiliano, 155 Tresch, Anke, 289 Triadafilopoulos, Phil, 103, 215 Troeger, Tobias, 071 Tros, Frank, 048, 178 Truchlewski, Zbigniew, 176 Trujillo, Gracia, 019 Trumbull, Gunnar, 018 Tsirbas, Yannis, 256 Tsoneva, Jana, 077 Tsourapas, Gerasimos, 215 Tuttnauer, Or, 141 Tøge, Anne Grete, 154 Ulnicane, Inga, 085 Ulrich, Peter, 255 Ulusoy, Orcun, 064 Umansky, Karen, 056 Umney, Charles, 209 Urdea, Alexandra, 288 Vachudova, Milada Anna, 042 Vail, Mark, 090, 156 Valent, Lucio, 198 Valenzuela, Julio, 177 Valiente, Celia, 203 van Baar, Huub, 146 van der Dussen, Sophie, 100 Van Der Eijk, Cees, 126 van Der Vleuten, Anna, 143, 249 Van der Zwan, Natascha, 176, 219 Van Hauwaert, Steven, 127 van Heelsum, Anja, 151 van Heumen, Marielle, 078 van Hooren, Franca, 014 Van Ingelgom, Virginie, 226 van Kessel, Tamara, 157 Van Lancker, Wim, 167 Van Mol, Christof, 207 Van Spanje, Joost, 127 van Wageningen, Anne, 193, 261 Vanhala, Lisa, 202 Vanhoonacker, Sophie, 301

82

Vanhuysse, Pieter, 300 Vasilopoulos, Pavlos, 254 Vauchez, Antoine, 010, 238, 268 Verloo, Mieke, 046, 189, 310 Vermeersch, Peter, 146, 270 Vermeiren, Jan, 253 Vermeulen, Floris, 037, 243, 270 Véron, Nicolas, 156, 176 Verzichelli, Luca, 107, 141 Vesan, Patrik, 113 Vestergaard, Jakob, 160 Villa, Paola, 250 Vink, Maarten, 104 Virchow, Fabian, 056 Vitale, Tommaso, 150 Vlcek, William, 173 Vogel, Jakob, 090, 120 Vogt, Henri, 098, 177 Volkert, Daniel, 243 Vollaard, Hans, 267 Voltolini, Benedetta, 030 von Busekist, Astrid, 169 Vos, Claske, 114, 205 Vossiek, Janis, 191 Vries-Stotijn, Anne, 228 Vukov, Visnja, 210 Wagner, Wolfgang, 021 Waizer, Stefan, 152 Walby, Sylvia, 232 Walker, Siovahn, 297 Walter, Stefanie, 210, 259 Wang, Chi Ming, 208 Warasin, Markus, 308 Wasmer, Etienne, 194 Waters, Timothy, 003, 033 Webber, Douglas, 267 Weber, Beverly, 012 Weimer, Maria, 080 Weinar, Agnieszka, 124, 271 Weiner, Richard, 096, 260 Weng, Vivianne, 060 Werner, Benjamin, 135, 193 Weyland, Kurt, 162 Whealton, Virginia, 138 White, Elisa, 058 White, Jonathan, 010, 290 Whitehead, Laurence, 162 Wickham-Jones, Mark, 185 Wilde, Gabriele, 249 Wilde, Ralph, 002, 262 Wiliarty, Sarah, 156 Wille, Anchrit, 230, 286 Williams, Christopher, 226 Wilson, Alex, 076, 190 Wind, Marlene, 111, 175 Winiarska-Brodowska, Malgorzata, 205 Winland, Daphne, 033

Wintle, Michael, 157, 198 Witte, Arnold, 157 Wittenberg, Jason, 042 Wojnicka, Katarzyna, 060 Wolff, Sarah, 030, 221 Wolfgram, Mark, 137 Woll, Cornelia, 018, 102, 121, 291 Woodward, Alison E., 203, 308 Wulfgramm, Melike, 306 Wydra, Harald, 075, 179 Wüst, Andreas, 035, 103, 184 Wüstenberg, Jenny, 092, 109 Yanasmayan, Zeynep, 004 Young, Brigitte, 260 Yount-André, Chelsie, 216 Yurdakul, Gokce, 060, 106, 217, 265 Zapata-Barrero, Ricard, 298 Zemmour, Michaël, 028 Zhyznomirska, Lyubov, 124, 287 Ziegler, J. Nicholas, 018 Zielonka, Jan, 023, 267 Zimmerman, Ekkart, 237 Zmerli, Sonja, 239 Zuber, Christina, 072 Zubrzycki, Genevieve, 192

Venues rue des Saints-Pères • 28 75007 Paris, France

27 rue Saint-Guillaume 75007 Paris, France

Registration Desk & Session Rooms

Plenaries & Reception

13 rue de l'Université 75007 Paris, France

This map highlights the buildings that will be used for sessions and other events associated with the 22nd International Conference of Europeanists.

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Envisioning Europe's Economic Future from a Long-term Historical Perspective Events

Speaker

Chair

Thomas Piketty

Virginie Guiraudon

Paris School of Economics

Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS

Discussant

Wolfgang Streeck Max-Planck-Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung (MPIfG)

Friday July 10, 2015 4:00pm - 5:45pm Boutmy Auditorium 27 rue Saint-Guillaume

Thomas Piketty's book, Le Capital au XXIème siècle, which came out in France in 2013 and in English from Harvard University Press in 2014, created a lively debate in the U.S. on income inequality—a debate which then spread like bonfire to every corner of the world. The work is based on an impressive database on the evolution of income distribution and rates of return on the factor of production capital. For France, England, Sweden and the U.S., a continuous statistical series covers the period 1800-2007. This historical approach leads Piketty to propose policy solutions, notably fiscal reform and a world wealth tax. Wolfgang Streeck will discuss Thomas Piketty's diagnosis and policy proposals from an historical-institutionalist political economy perspective. Wolfgang's Streeck's latest book, originally written in German, is Buying Time: The Delayed Crisis of Democratic Capitalism. It accounts for the crisis of 2008 by placing it in three parallel and intertwined historical narratives that began after the end of postwar growth. 84

Presidential Plenary

Cosmopolitan Europe!? A Conversation Chair

Participants

Adrian Favell Sciences Po, Centre d'études européennes (CEE)

Juan Díez Medrano Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Chris Rumford University of London Yasemin Soysal University of Essex

Freedom of movement underlies much of the social and cultural integration taking place in Europe. Thus, this plenary addresses the extent and character of social and cultural integration within the EU, in particular the role the EU plays in the development of cosmopolitanism.

Events

Thursday, July 9, 2015 6:00pm - 7:45pm Boutmy Auditorium 27 rue Saint-Guillaume

22nd International Conference of Europeanists

Presidential Reception All registered attendees welcome. Drink and light refreshments will be provided.

••• Thursday, July 9, 2015 7:45 to 9:00 PM 27 rue Saint-Guillaume, Hall & Gardens Will directly follow the Presidential Plenary Sponsored by the Laboratoire interdisciplinaire d'évaluation des politiques publiques (LIEPP), Sciences Po 85

Plenary

Envisioning European Futures Bringing together outstanding scholars from different disciplines, this panel will address the many contradictions present in Europe today and how they shape our understanding of the continent's possible futures. Panelists Kim Lane Scheppele, Princeton University "The Moral Challenge to Europe" Peter A. Hall, Harvard University "Is there a Future for Egalitarian Democracy in Europe?"

Events

Jacques Rupnik, Sciencs Po, CERI "Normative Power Meets Geopolitics: EU and the Implosion of its Neighborhoods" Gokce Yurdakul, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin "Secularism, Religion and Diversity: The Contradictions of a European Identity"

Chairs Jenny Andersson, Sciences Po, CEE, CNRS Robert Fishman, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid

Wednesday, July 8, 2015 6:00pm - 7:45pm Boutmy Auditorium 27 rue Saint-Guillaume

86

Imagining Europe: The Cultural Foundations of EU Governance

Friday, July 10, 2015, 6:00pm - 7:45pm Boutmy Auditorium, 27 rue Saint-Guillaume

Co-sponsored by the CES European Integration & Global Political Economy Research Network and the Journal of Common Market Studies.

Kathleen McNamara Georgetown University

Discussants

Ben Rosamond University of Copenhagen Alan Cafruny Hamilton College

Chair

Nathaniel Copsey Aston University

Events

The European Union has recently been buffeted by some of its deepest and most challenging crises. Situating the EU in terms of the long historical evolution of governance forms points out the ways in which Europe's recent contestation and political upheavals have much in common with earlier episodes of state and nation building—but with important differences. Paying particular attention to the social and cultural foundations of political development, McNamara lays out the ways in which symbols and practices of everyday life legitimate the EU, but in ways that makes EU authority inherently fragile in the face of the current crises.

Speaker



Gender Crusades: Mobilizing Against Equality in Europe A new wave of opposition to gender has arisen in Europe—one that particularly targets women’s sexual and reproductive rights, as well as LGBT rights. Opposition takes various forms, such as hostile public discourse, street demonstrations or the adoption of more restrictive laws. This semiplenary gathers leading scholars of the topic to discuss these developments, and will particularly focus on the EU, the Vatican, France, Poland and Russia. A reception will follow this event.

Panelists Philip Ayoub, Drexel University Michael Bosia, Saint Michael's College Eric Fassin, University of Paris 8 Elzbieta Korolczuk, University of Gothenburg Mieke Verloo, Radboud University Nijmegen / IWM

Chairs Isabelle Engeli, University of Ottawa David Paternotte, Université Libre de Bruxelles Friday, July 10, 2015, 6:00pm - 7:45pm Caquot Amphitheater, 28 rue des Saints-Pères

87

Restaurants The following restaurants have been suggested by members of the Local Organizing Committee as a complimentary resource. None are officially endorsed by the Council for European Studies and no discounts have been negotiated. Jardins De Paris Saint Germain Cuisine: French Price: 15€ - 25€ 28 Rue Saint-Benoît 75006 Paris Pizza Vesuvio Cuisine: Italian Price: 15€ - 25€ 1 Rue Gozlin 75006 Paris http://www.vesuvio-paris-stgermain.fr/

Restaurants

Les Jardins Saint Germain Cuisine: French Price: 15€ - 25€ 14 Rue du Dragon 75006 Paris http://www.lesjardinsstgermain.fr/ Le Rouquet Cuisine: French Price: 15€ - 25€ 188 Boulevard Saint-Germain 75007 Paris Le Bizuth Cuisine: French Price: 15€ - 25€ 202 Boulevard Saint-Germain, 75007 Paris http://www.lebizuth.fr/ Galette Café Cuisine: Breton Créperie Price: 15€ - 25€ 2 Rue de l’Université 75007 Paris http://galette-cafe.fr/ Auberge Saint Germain Cuisine: Middle Eastern Price: 15€ - 25€ 204 Boulevard Saint-Germain 75007 Paris http://www.couscousparis.com/ Le Basile Cuisine: French Price: 15€ - 25€ 34 Rue de Grenelle 75007 Paris http://lebasile.fr/ Au 35 Cuisine: French

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Price: 20€ - 30€ 35 Rue Jacob 75006 Paris Le Chardenoux des Prés Cuisine: French Price: 20€ - 30€ 27 Rue du Dragon 75006 Paris http://www.restaurantauxpres.com/ Le Bistrot de l’Université Cuisine: French Price: 20€ - 30€ 40 Rue Université 75007 Paris Caffé Toscano Cuisine: Italian Price: 20€ - 30€ 34 Rue des Saints-Pères 75007 Paris Restaurant La Petite Chaise Price: 20€ - 30€ 36 Rue de Grenelle 75007 Paris http://www.alapetitechaise.fr/ Le Petit Zinc Cuisine: French Price: 25€ - 35€ 11 Rue Saint-Benoît 75006 Paris http://petit-zinc.com/ L’altro Cuisine: Italian Price: 25€ - 35€ 16 Rue du Dragon 75006 Paris http://www.laltro.fr/ Brasserie Lipp Cuisine: French Price: 25€ - 35€ 151 Boulevard Saint-Germain 75006 Paris Café de Flore Cuisine: French Price: 25€ - 35€ 172 Boulevard Saint-Germain 75006 Paris Les Deux Magots Cuisine: French

Price: 25€ - 35€ 6 Place de Saint-Germain 75006 Paris http://www.lesdeuxmagots.fr/ Ladurée Bonaparte Cuisine: French Price: 25€ - 35€ 21 Rue Bonaparte 75006 Paris La Bocca della Verita Cuisine: Italian Price: 25€ - 35€ 2 Rue du Sabot 75006 Paris http://www.boccadellaverita.fr/ Ralph’s (Ralph Lauren) Cuisine: American Price: 50€ - 75€ 173 Boulevard Saint-Germain, 75006 Paris La Ferme de Saint Simon Cuisine: French Price: 40€ - 80€ 6, rue de Saint-Simon, 75007 Paris http://www.fermestsimon.com/ Apego (Café) 22 Rue des Saints-Pères 75007 Paris Lili’s Brownies (Café) 35 Rue du Dragon 75006 Paris Eric Kayser (Bakery) 18 Rue du Bac 75007 Paris Maison Pradier (Bakery) 200 Boulevard Saint-Germain 75007 Paris http://www.maisonpradier.com/ Josephine Bakery (Bakery, no seating) 42 Rue Jacob 75006 Paris Le Carabin Gourmand (Bakery, no seating) 36 Rue des Saints-Pères 75007 Paris

Promouvoir dans le débat public une parole éclairée et engagée Un livre de la collection « Audiographie » offert pour deux titres du catalogue achetés À l’occasion du 40e anniversaire de l’EHESS les Éditions de l’EHESS publient deux nouveaux titres dans la collection « Audiographie », dont un hors commerce sera offert gracieusement à l’achat d’au moins deux titres de son catalogue. Offre valable un an à compter du 1er mai 2015, sur le catalogue diffusé par le CDE (France et export).

Entretiens avec Frédéric Mitterrand Germaine TILLION

Associations et lieux de pouvoir au Cameroun Franck BEUVIER

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« Réintégrer les fonctionnaires »

Commentaire à vive voix Émile DURKHEIM & Bruno KARSENTI

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J A N V I E R 2 0 15

Danser les funérailles

L’Allemagne au-dessus de tout

Les combats d’une ethnologue

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La règle de l’exception L’écologie du cinéma français Olivier ALEXANDRE

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Quel âge post-séculier ?

Religions, sciences et démocraties Joan STAVO-DEBAUGE, Philippe GONZALES & Roberto FREGA (eds.)

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L’après-épuration en Europe, XIXe-XIXe siècles

Pie XII après Pie XII

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Histoire d’une controverse Muriel GUITTAT-NAUDIN

« Altérités, inégalités et mobilités dans les îles de l’océan Indien »

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Revue Histoire & Mesure, no 29-2

Revue Études rurales, no 194

Revue L’homme, no 217 ISBN 978-2-7132-2477-5 20 € • Diffusion : Volumen M A I 2 0 15

J U I N 2 0 15

Théories et institutions pénales AV R I L 2 0 15

La sociologie comme elle s’écrit De Bourdieu à Latour Jean-Louis FABIANI

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La distinction des savoirs Bernard WALLISER (ed.) Coll. « Enquête » ISBN 978-2-7132-2482-9 • 25 € (env.)

« Lire Le Capital de Thomas Piketty » Revue Annales, no 2015/1

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Cours au Collège de France (1971-1972) Michel FOUCAULT

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Oublier la guerre civile ? Stasis, chronique d’une disparition Ninon GRANGÉ

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Les embarras des recruteurs Enquête sur le marché du travail Emmanuelle MARCHAL

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« Philosophie et religion » Revue Archives de sciences sociales des religions, no 169

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« Comment les socialismes envisageaient le futur »

Cosmopolitismes en Asie du Sud

Sources, itinéraires, langues (XVIe-XVIIIe siècle) Ines G. ZUPANOV, Corinne LEFÈVRE & Jorge FLORES (eds.)

Revue Cahiers du monde russe, no 56/1

ISBN 978-2-7132-2475-1 • 17,50 €

Coll. « Purushartha » ISBN 978-2-7132-2492-8 • 30 € (env.)

« Pâturage »

Revue Techniques & Culture, no 2015-1

ISBN 978-2-7132-2477-5 • 28,50 €

éditions www.editions.ehess.fr 67

EHESS

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Joint Sessions of Workshops Scuola Normale Superiore Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna University of Pisa

24 – 28 April 2016

Scuola Normale Superiore #ecprjs16 Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna University of Pisa

Bringing together political science scholars from across the world for a week of intensive, fruitful collaboration. Event includes Workshops on European issues – go to 90www.ecpr.eu and choose ‘Joint Sessions / Pisa 2016’

The Council for European Studies (CES) thanks the following sponsors for their generous support.

Additional support has also been provided by these advertisers and exhibitors: Aarhus University Press Ashgate Publishing Berghahn Books Cambridge University Press Edinburgh University Press European Consortium for Political Research Hart Publishing Luso-American Foundation

Oxford University Press Palgrave Macmillan Polity TransAtlantic Masters Program at UNC, Chapel Hill University of London Institute in Paris University of Missouri Press University of Toronto Press

Council for European Studies Columbia University, 420 West 118th Street, MC 3307, New York, NY 10027 tel: 212-854-4172 ◆ email: [email protected]

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