EMCA Section of ASA Seattle 2016

From emcawiki
Revision as of 22:17, 1 March 2016 by SaulAlbert (talk | contribs) (SaulAlbert moved page Call for Papers EMCA Section of ASA Seattle, August 20-23 to EMCA Section of ASA Seattle 2016 without leaving a redirect)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
ASA EMCA 2016
Type Conference
Categories (tags) ASA, Sociology
Dates 2016/08/20 - 2016/08/23
Link http://www.asanet.org/AM2016/callforpapers.cfm
Address
Geolocation 47° 36' 22", -122° 19' 55"
Abstract due
Submission deadline
Final version due
Notification date
Tweet EMCA Section of ASA Seattle, August 20-23 / New Directions in EM/CA Research
Export for iCalendar

Call for Papers EMCA Section of ASA Seattle, August 20-23:


Details:

Call for Papers EMCA Section of ASA

Seattle, August 20-23

http://www.asanet.org/AM2016/callforpapers.cfm

Submission Deadline: January 6, 2016, 3PM EST

Regular Sessions (Organized by ASA)

Conversation Analysis.

David Gibson, University of Notre Dame

Ethnomethodology.

Robert Dingwall, Nottingham Trent University


Section Sessions (Organized by the Section)

  • New Directions in EM/CA Research (one-hour).

This session invites submissions from researchers who are, broadly speaking, taking EM/CA research in new directions. For example, these researchers may be using an EM/CA approach in a previously under-studied context with under-studied types of participants, or they may be researching new interactional/practical sensemaking phenomena altogether. Alternatively, they may have made new advances in traditional areas of EM/CA scholarship.

Session Organizer: Tim Berard, Kent State University

  • Session will be 1-hour in length; followed by the Section’s 40-minute business meeting


Current Studies in Conversation Analysis

This session invites submissions from researchers who use the approach of conversation analysis to understand naturally occurring interaction. Typically, this means that researchers will make use of audio or videotaped data in real world settings, but the session is open to consideration of researchers who may use other methods to understand the close coordination of interactional conduct and the cultural and relational factors that bear on this conduct.

Session Organizer: Mardi Kidwell, University of New Hampshire