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What is VIP?

The Violence, Instability, and Peace (VIP) Workshop is a virtual forum for scholars studying conflict, protest, crime, peace, and related topics to receive feedback on research-in-progress, including working papers and well-developed pre-analysis plans. The workshop is open to scholars from political science and related disciplines (e.g., sociology, economics, psychology, communication), and from across subfields.

Fall 2024 Workshop Lineup

September 26, 2024 8am PST/11am EST/3pm GMT

October 24, 2024 8am PST/11am EST/3pm GMT

November 21, 2024 8am PST/11am EST/3pm GMT Register here for zoom link!

Workshop Information

Sign up here to join our Google groups to receive emails with updates directly.

We consider submissions of full papers (e.g., to be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal, a chapter in an edited volume, or a job market paper) and well-developed research designs or pre-analysis plans. If accepted, you will provide a short presentation (about 5 minutes) and receive about 25 minutes of feedback from a discussant and attendants.

We are open to work from scholars at all career stages, although we particularly aim to provide opportunities for junior scholars and early career researchers, including pre-tenure and non-tenure track faculty, post-docs, and graduate students. We are also committed to promoting opportunities for scholars from historically excluded communities.

Do you want to discuss your peers' work? Volunteer as a discussant here.

Scholars at varying stages of their careers (from advanced PhD candidates to tenured scholars) can serve as discussants, as long as they are willing to read research-in-progress and provide about 10 minutes of feedback. We will do our best to match you with a paper that fits your area of expertise.

Format

Our workshops are one-hour-long sessions dedicated to providing feedback on two featured papers; accordingly, authors will only provide a short 5-minute presentation to provide an overview of the paper. Each paper will then receive 25 minutes of dedicated feedback from both a chosen discussant and other participants. Manuscripts will be circulated at least one week in advance, and all participants are expected to read them.

Organizers

Past Workshops

Spring 2024

April 25, 2024 8am PST/11am EST/3pm GMT

February 15, 2024 8am PST/11am EST/4pm GMT:

  • Kirssa Ryckman (University of Arizona) “Return to the Streets: The Recurrence of Civil Resistance Campaigns”

    Discussant: Austin Mitchell (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)

  • Carly Millerd (University of Iowa) “The Emergence of Networks of Women’s Civil Society Organizations During Civil Wars”

    Discussant: Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham (University of Maryland)

March 14, 2024 8am PST/11am EST/3pm GMT

Fall 2023

November 9, 2023 8am PST/11am EST/5pm GMT

  • Sean Paul Ashley (Dartmouth) "Wartime Institutions and the Durability of Rebel Regimes"

    Discussant: Andres Uribe (Stanford University)

  • Sigrid Weber (Stanford) "Where to flee? Exploring household-level destination choices and political integration during displacement in the Kasai, DRC"

    Discussant: Mateo Villamizar Chaparro (Duke University)

October 12, 2023 8am PST/11am EST/4pm GMT

  • Frank Wyer (Naval Postgraduate School) "Who's to Blame? How Postconflict Violence Affects Public Support for Peace"

    Discussant: Juan Albarracín (University of Illinois, Chicago)

  • Lucía Tiscornia (University College Dublin), co-authors: Ines Fynn (Universidad Catolica del Uruguay), Veronica Perez Bentancur (Universidad de la Republica), Gustavo Diaz (McMaster University), "In the Crevices of the State: Criminal Governance in Contexts of High State Presence and Low Violence"

    Discussant: Nicholas Barnes (University of St Andrews)

September 21, 2023 8am PST/11am EST/4pm GMT

  • Sule Yaylaci (UPenn), co-author: Chris Price (Bates College) "Collective Targeting of Violence and Identity Shift: Evidence From Bosnia"

    Discussant: Baylee Harrell (University of Kentucky)

  • Nihad Aboud (University of Essex) "Affiliation and Jihadist Rhetoric Dynamics: The Case of Boko Haram"

    Discussant: Emma Boyle (Penn State Harrisburg)

Spring 2023

Fall 2022