Call for Papers: Special journal issue of Migration Letters

Call for Papers:

The guest editors of a forthcoming special journal issue to be published in Migration Letters invite interested researchers to submit manuscripts for an issue  titled  ‘Transnational Migrant Families: Navigating Social Fields, Family Practices, and Generational Experiences’

This special issue focuses on ‘transnational migrant family life.’ We examine different aspects of these lives such as marriage practices, polygamy in transnational context, the role of religiosity in transnational family life, transnational childcare and socialization, the ties and experiences of second generation migrants vis-à-vis their countries of origin, and the construction and management of transnational family life in legal discourses (including religious laws) and institutions. Rather than taking transnational migrant families as a given, we will examine how these families are constituted through actively produced transnational relations and practices as well as through legal and political regimes. We will examine the central theme from three dimensions. First, we will critically examine the different social fields in which transnational family life and relations are constituted and contested. Secondly, we will shed light on the heterogeneity of experiences and aspirations of family members constituting transnational kinship-based networks, particularly along the axes of gender and generation. Third, this issue will shed light on the range and diversity of transnational family practices and their multidimensional purposes and outcomes.

We are interested in soliciting article manuscripts, maximum 4000 words (excluding abstract and references), which tackle the broad theme of transnational migrant families, and which supplement or add other dimensions to the aspects of the transnational family life that we are covering. We are particularly interested in manuscripts based on empirical research on transnational migrant families based in Europe and/or North America with family backgrounds in Africa, South Asia, and/or the Middle East.

Kindly send an email of interest and any further queries to the guest editors at the emails listed below.  Deadline for submission of manuscripts is December 31, 2015.

Guest Editors:

Mulki Al-Sharmani: mulki.al-sharmani@helsinki.fi

Marja Tiilikainen:  marja.tiilikainen@helsinki.fi

Sanna Mustasaari:  sanna.mustasaari@helsinki.fi

Transnational Muslim Marriages: Wellbeing, Law, and Gender project (2013-2017, Academy of Finland)

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CFP – Visual Narratives of Faith: Religion, Ritual and Identity. Third ISA Forum of Sociology, Vienna (deadline 30th Sept)

Call for Papers Visual Narratives of Faith: Religion, Ritual and Identity. Third ISA Forum of Sociology, Vienna (Austria) July 1014, 2016.

Drawing on the work of Geertz (1973) on ritual behaviour and Claude Lévi-Strauss (1966) on ritual bricolage, this session invites papers that will discuss the use of the visual in researching rituals, faith narratives and faith-based identities. It welcomes papers that engage with themes such as:

The role of ritual objects and material culture in constructing meaning and (re)creating faith rituals
The potential of ritual bricolage to (re)create and/or disrupt rituals, faith narratives and faith-based identities
Faith rituals as (temporary) assemblage(s)
The queering of faith rituals

Panellists are strongly encouraged to use film, photographs, drawings, artefacts, bricolage, assemblages and academic critique to discuss how visual narratives intervene with, disrupt, and make audible, faith-based identities.

Call closes 30 September, 2015 24:00 GMT.

For further details see https://isaconf.confex.com/isaconf/forum2016/webprogrampreliminary/programs.html

Participants must submit abstracts on-line via Confex platform at http://www.isa-sociology.org/forum-2016/ . Abstracts must be submitted in English, French or Spanish. Only abstracts submitted on-line will be considered in the selection process.

For more information about the visual sociology Working Group of the International Sociological Association (WG03) please see http://www.isa-sociology.org/wg03.htm

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CFP: Religion and Non-Religion in Contemporary Societies

International Study of Religion in Eastern and Central Europe Association

and

European Sociological Association Research Network 34 (Sociology of Religion)

in cooperation with

Department of Sociology University of Zadar and

Croatian Sociological Association

 

CALL FOR PAPERS

12th ISORECEA conference & ESA RN34 mid-term conference

RELIGION AND NON-RELIGION IN CONTEMPORARY SOCIETIES

Theoretical, Empirical and Methodological Challenges for Research in Central and Eastern Europe and Beyond

Zadar, Croatia, April 21-24, 2016

Both religion and non-religion are subjected to remarkable changes in today’s world. Interplay between historical, cultural, and political occurrences and religion and non-religion challenge theoretical considerations of ongoing processes. Faced with different empirical data around the world secularisation theses have been contested for decades; theoretical debates about religious changes have occupied sociologists of religion. They have sought to better and more accurately understand and explain religious changes in different parts of the globe contemporary. Their points of view differ: privatization thesis, de-privatization thesis, religious economies thesis, religious bricolage, multiple secularities thesis. One angle, non-religion as religious counterpart, has been neglected in sociological research.  Indeed, until the end of the 20th century, it was only Campbell (1971) who gave a comprehensive insight into the sociology of non-religion, while many scholars wrote and published within the strand of the sociology of religion.

Non-religion started to occupy attention of sociologists since the beginning of this century especially in UK and USA influenced by different appearances in Western world: the rise of declared non-religious people, the appearance of so-called a New atheism movement (inspired by books by R. Dawkins, S. Harris, D. Dennett, and C. Hitchens), numerous organizations and associations of non-religious people and their enhanced activities as an alternative to religious conservativism, growing influence of religion in public sphere and fundamentalist expressions of religion connected to terrorism. Researchers mostly based their work on theories of subcultural identities, identity politics and new social movements; yet, some authors also drew on the theory of religious economies. In spite of this strands, non-religion remains theoretically underdeveloped and under-researched. Interesting is the fact that this particularly refers to former communist countries where atheism was enforced as part of the official ideology; more research would have been expected on non-religiosity and atheism there. Independently of the exact geopolitical context, non-religion and in particular the interplay between religion and non-religion in different dimensions seem to be a key for understanding contemporary religious changes.

This international conference would like to encourage scholars from various parts of the world to share their theoretical, empirical and methodological considerations on religion and non-religion and take part in discussion on different related topics, like:

  • Social theory of religion and non-religion
  • Comparative empirical data on religion and non-religion
  • Methodological challenges of research on religion and non-religion
  • Historical development of religion and non-religion
  • Non/religious minority and majority
  • Human rights, religion and non-religion
  • Religion, non-religion and State
  • Religion, non-religion and social inclusion/exclusion
  • Religion and non-religion in the intersectional perspective (involving gender, age, socio-economic aspects, etc.)
  • Religion and non-religion in everyday life
  • Religious and non-religious activism

Please submit a 200-300 words abstract of your presentation by e-mail to: isorecea2016@idi.hr by November 15, 2015.

If you are interested in a specific topic related to the study of religion and/or non-religion, we encourage you to organize a session/panel. In this case, please submit a 300-400 words proposal with full session details (names and affiliation of contributors, titles of their presentations) by November 15, 2015 to the same email address.

Key dates

Submission of paper and session/panel proposals – November 15, 2015.
Notification of acceptance and opening of the registration – December 15, 2015.
The final date of the registration for the conference – January 31, 2016.

Final program – February 20, 2016.

 

Fees
Membership fees

Please note that in order to present a paper you need to be a member of ISORECEA for the years 2016-2017 or a member of ESA in the year 2016.

The conference fees are as follows (in EURO):

For members of ISORECEA

List of Countries*

A

B

C

Regular members

80

60

40

Students and unemployed

30

18

12

Retired

40

30

20

* This is according to the Table of Economies used by the International Sociological Association:
http://www.isa-sociology.org/table_c.htm

For members of ESA

List of countries*

Band 1

Band 2

Country falling under A or B category of ISA**

Country falling under C category of ISA**

Regular members

80

60

40

Early career scholars***

60

60

40

Students and unemployed

30

18

12

Retired

40

30

20

* Band 1 and Band 2 are defined by ESA at: http://www.europeansociology.org/member/

** This is according to the Table of Economies used by the International Sociological Association:
http://www.isa-sociology.org/table_c.htm

*** As defined by ESA at: http://www.europeansociology.org/membership.html

For those who are not members of ISORECEA or ESA*

List of Countries**

A

B

C

Regular participants

160

120

80

Students and unemployed

80

60

40

Retired

80

60

40

Conference fee paid on the spot

25% higher (each category)

* Only those who do not present a paper can participate in the conference as non-members.

** This is according to the Table of Economies used by the International Sociological Association:
http://www.isa-sociology.org/table_c.htm

 

Those accepted for the conference will be asked to pay their fees through the PayPal system at the ISORECEA website. For the information on how to become a member of ISORECEA or ESA, or renew the membership, please visit these organisations’ websites: http://isorecea.net/ or http://www.europeansociology.org/. The information about accommodation and the conference venue will be given in the second half of December 2015. In case of any earlier questions, please send an email to: isorecea2016@idi.hr.

Miklós Tomka Award

The ISORECEA Board has established the Miklós Tomka Award to honour Miklós Tomka, the internationally acknowledged and widely esteemed scholar of religion specializing in the Central and Eastern European region, who died unexpectedly in 2010.

The Award is granted based on a competitive basis for the best conference paper submitted to the award committee. The paper should refer to the conference theme. The competition is open to early career scholars, with a special focus on PhD students. The Award comprises:

– The publication of the paper in the ISORECEA on-line journal Religion and Society in Central and Eastern Europe;

– Exemption from the conference fee;

– Covering accommodation costs at the conference.

Early career scholars interested in entering the competition are invited to submit their full papers to the email address isorecea2016@idi.hr by January 10, 2016. The winner will be announced by January 31, 2016, which is the final date for registration for being on the program of the conference.

Papers submitted for the Award should be between 5,000 and 7,000 words long and should strictly follow the rules applying to papers submitted to the ISORECEA journal Religion and Society in Central and Eastern Europe. For details see: http://www.rascee.net/index.php/rascee/about/submissions#authorGuidelines

We are looking forward to receiving your papers!

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Call for panels and Papers: Populism as movement and rhetoric (Jyväskylä, Finland 17-19 March 2016)

CALL FOR PANELS AND PAPERS

Populism as movement and rhetoric

International conference

Jyväskylä, Finland on 17–19 March 2016

Venue: University of Jyväskylä, Seminarium (S)

Period for applying until October 7th 2015

In Finland as elsewhere in Europe, rapid social change, multicultural challenges, social inequality, and the way different kinds of threat are disseminated by the media for public imagination, have given rise to populist protests and appeals to cultural values usually combining anti-elite and anti-immigrant nationalism with nationally and locally bounded demands of social justice. In the conference, the populist movement and populist rhetoric are in the focus. We invite papers that study populism as a phenomenon with multiple sources and multiple agendas. Issues of nationality, Europeanness, ethnicity, gender, and environmental issues can be explored against the backdrop of the new public sphere and the intermingling of the private and the public in it.

 

Keynote speakers:

Yannis Stavrakakis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

Ruth Wodak, professor emerita, Lancaster University

Eoin Devereux, University of Limerick,

Mikko Lehtonen, University of Tampere

 

Coordinators of the conference: PhD Urpo Kovala and PhD Tuija Saresma, Department of Art and Culture Studies, University of Jyväskylä, Finland.

Conference secretary: Irma Hirsjärvi populistrhetoric2016@jyu.fi  Tel +358 40 8053518

Possible topics of the panels and presentations include, but are not limited to:

  • abusive empowerment in the rhetoric of protest
  • articulations of religion in populist agendas
  • from protest to power: populism in the margin and in the centre
  • cultural expressions of populism; cultural populism
  • politics and culture of populism
  • populist discourse
  • populist movements
  • populist rhetoric
  • populism and the ‘people’

 

Participation

Submissions for panel sessions
The deadline for proposals for panel sessions is October 7th 2015. The proposal has to include the title and a general description of the panel as well as the names of the individual contributors and the titles of their presentations. The maximum length is 300 words, excluding possible references.

 

Submissions for individual paper presentations
Individual paper presentations are organized in parallel sessions with 30 minute slots that include discussion time. The deadline for individual paper proposals is October 7th 2015. The maximum length is 300 words, excluding possible references. The acceptance will be notified in two weeks after the deadline

If you wish to participate without presenting a paper, please contact the conference secretary.

Submissions and registration https://www.jyu.fi/en/congress/populistrhetoric2016 (will open 22.9.2015)

Fees, scholarships and grants

Early bird fee is 140 euro (students 40 euro) until February 14th. Lunches, refreshments and conference dinner are included. Further information about travel and accommodation in Jyväskylä can be found in the conference website https://www.jyu.fi/en/congress/populistrhetoric2016

A number of scholarships and grants for PhD students and those coming from the low income countries and are in need of financial support will be provided. They consist in a reduction of the participation fee and include all meals. Please note that the deadline for applying for a scholarship or grant is October 7th. The application process and criteria are explained in greater detail on the website: https://www.jyu.fi/en/congress/populistrhetoric2016

Practical information

The conference takes place in the city of Jyväskylä (http://visit.jyvaskyla.fi/en). It is organized by the research project Populism as Movement and Rhetoric, funded by the Academy of Finland (2014–2016) together with the Department of Art and Culture Studies, University of Jyväskylä (https://www.jyu.fi/en)

About the research project: https://www.jyu.fi/hum/laitokset/taiku/opiskelu/nykykulttuuri/tutkimus/projektit/populismi

Email:populistrhetoric2016@jyu.fi

 

Facebook: Populism as movement and rhetorics

 

Web page: https://populismasmovementandrhetoric.wordpress.com/

 

Twitter: during the conference #populistculture

The post Call for panels and Papers: Populism as movement and rhetoric (Jyväskylä, Finland 17-19 March 2016) appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

Call for Papers: Art Approaching Science and Religion, Turku 11-13 May 2016

CALL FOR PAPERS

Art Approaching Science and Religion
11-13 May 2016 at Åbo Akademi University, Turku, Finland

Symposium website: http://www.amoslab.fi/?page_id=214

The symposium aims at bringing together the fields of art, science and
religion. How can science and religion be explored from the perspective
of the arts? Themes to be discussed will unwind from and be elaborated
on contemporary notions of beauty, ornament, and public art. The public
and aesthetic space offer not only timeless objects of appreciation,
aesthetic value and use, but also habits and rituals. The aim is to
bring out different images of how aesthetics, as a historical and
contemporary tradition, is formed together with strands of artist
research, art criticism, art history as well as the humanities,
philosophy, and religious studies.

Keynote Speakers (12 May 2016):
Kent C. Bloomer, Chief Designer, Professor, Yale School of Architecture, USA
Melissa Raphael, Professor of Jewish Theology, University of
Gloucestershire, UK
Serafim Seppälä, Professor of Systematic Theology and Patristics,
University of Eastern Finland
Mark C. Taylor, Professor of Religion, Columbia University, USA

Call for Papers for the Roundtable seminar on 13 May 2016 is now open:

http://www.abo.fi/forskning/en/News/Item/item/10299

Proposals are welcome on the interconnectedness of art, science and
religion, including (but not restricted to) the following themes:

  • Truth claims in philosophy, art, science, and religion.
  • Art criticism, art history, and artist research.
  • Commerce and communication.
  • Technology and tradition.
  • Artefacts in science and religion.
  • Power and politics of beauty.

*Deadline: 15 November 2015***

Arranged by:
AmosLAB/Amos Anderson Laboratory for Artful Making: www.amoslab.fi
<http://www.amoslab.fi>
The Donner Institute for Research in Religious and Cultural History:
www.abo.fi/donnerinstitute <http://www.abo.fi/donnerinstitute>

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CFP: Visual Narratives of Faith – Religion, Ritual and Identity

Call for Papers Visual Narratives of Faith: Religion, Ritual and Identity. Third ISA Forum of Sociology, Vienna (Austria) July 10‐14, 2016.

Drawing on the work of Geertz (1973) on ritual behaviour and Claude Lévi-Strauss (1966) on ritual bricolage, this session invites papers that will discuss the use of the visual in researching rituals, faith narratives and faith-based identities. It welcomes papers that engage with themes such as:

The role of ritual objects and material culture in constructing meaning and (re)creating faith rituals
The potential of ritual bricolage to (re)create and/or disrupt rituals, faith narratives and faith-based identities
Faith rituals as (temporary) assemblage(s)
The queering of faith rituals

Panellists are strongly encouraged to use film, photographs, drawings, artefacts, bricolage, assemblages and academic critique to discuss how visual narratives intervene with, disrupt, and make audible, faith-based identities.

Call closes 30 September, 2015 24:00 GMT.

For further details see https://isaconf.confex.com/isaconf/forum2016/webprogrampreliminary/programs.html

Participants must submit abstracts on-line via Confex platform at http://www.isa-sociology.org/forum-2016/ . Abstracts must be submitted in English, French or Spanish. Only abstracts submitted on-line will be considered in the selection process.

For more information about the visual sociology Working Group of the International Sociological Association (WG03) please see http://www.isa-sociology.org/wg03.htm

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CFP: The Politics of Religious Heritage – Memory, Identity and Place

Call for papers, deadline 30th September 2015

This is a cfp for a panel to be held at the Third ISA Forum of Sociology in Vienna, Austria 10-14 July 2016.

The Politics of Religious Heritage: Memory, Identity and Place

Session Organizer(s)
Avi ASTOR, Universitad Autónoma de Barcelona, Spain, avi.astor@uab.cat
Marian BURCHARDT, Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Germany, Burchardt@mmg.mpg.de
Mar GRIERA, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain, mariadelmar.griera@uab.cat

Session in English

Debates on religious heritage are gaining prominence in the contemporary world amid processes of secularization, diversification and religious revitalization. As dynamics of transnationalization and global migration unsettle inherited understandings of citizenship, nationhood and belonging more broadly, questions of how religions relate to imaginations of national communities are becoming more and more important. In this scenario, processes of negotiation, contestation and reinterpretation of religious pasts take on greater saliency in the public, cultural and political spheres.

The session suggests that these processes feed into new forms of politics of religious heritage redrawing symbolic boundaries around affectively charged cultural cores, and explores how these politics play out in different fields. We welcome contributions examining the framing of religion as heritage in pilgrimage, festivals and religious travels, as well as exploring the notion of religious heritage in the political, legal or cultural domains.

We invite paper proposals related to this topic to be submitted no later than September, 30th 2015. Proposals should use the online form

For more details, please see Guidelines for Presenters
http://www.isa-sociology.org/forum-2016/deadlines-and-rules-for-presenters.htm

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CFP: Co-IRIS Workshop and Panel

We would like to invite you to participate in our Co-IRIS workshop at EISA’s EWIS and Co-IRIS panel at IPSA.
The call for papers for the Co-IRIS workshop entitled “Worlding beyond the Clash of Civilizations: An Agenda for an International Relations-Islam Discourse” is available at http://www.coiris.org/co-iris-workshop-at-the-3rd-european-workshops-in-international-studies-ewis/
The call for papers for the Co-IRIS panel entitled “Khaldunian Civilizational Analysis in International Relations” is available at http://www.coiris.org/call-for-papers-co-iris-panel-at-the-24th-ipsa-in-istanbul/

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CFP: Islam on the Prairies

CALL FOR PAPERS “Islam on the Prairies”

University of Saskatchewan and the Frances Morrison Public Library in
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, May 13-14, 2016.

The Islamic Studies Research Group at the University of Saskatchewan, in
collaboration with St. Thomas More College invites paper proposals for
its first conference “Islam on the Prairies.”

Keynote speakers are:

Dr. Ingrid Mattson (London and Windsor Community Chair in Islamic
Studies at Huron University College, Western University)

Zarqa Nawaz (Creator of Little Mosque on the Prairies; author of
Laughing All the Way to the Mosque)

The second day of the conference will also include a public discussion
of the roles of religious communities in modern society, an interfaith
dialogue panel from representatives around the city, and presentations
by The Star Phoenix, CBC Saskatchewan, Saskatoon City Police, and
Saskatoon NGOs.

Islam has a long history on Canadian soil, with the first mosque built
on the prairies in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1938. Statistics Canada (2001)
counted nearly 600,000 Muslims, making Islam the fastest growing
religion in the country. As Muslims are still in the dialogic process of
negotiating how their belief and identities fit in the Canadian
environments, the need to understand their everyday lives and how they
make sense of their position in Canadian society cannot be exaggerated.

For the past ten years, along with other prairies provinces,
Saskatchewan has seen an overwhelming increase of different cultures,
ethnicities and religions migrating into the province. With the change
of Saskatchewan demographics, its identity is also changing, and many
questions about this process have risen from the community. Our
conference aims to explore the growing presence of Islam on the prairies
and in other Canadian provinces, implications of this process, and to
provide a dynamic space for the presentations and discussions on issues
related to Muslims in Canada. We also aim to facilitate collaboration
among scholars and researchers across disciplines, and to disseminate
the latest research findings in the form of an edited volume exclusively
focused on Islam on the prairies and elsewhere in Canada.

We welcome scholars from a wide range of social science and humanities
disciplines to submit their 350-words abstract that fall within the
following topics:

  1. Islam, Pluralism, and Diversity in the Canadian context;
  2. Islamic law, rituals, and ethics in everyday life of Muslim
    Canadians;

  3. Mosques and Muslim Canadian institutions;

  4. Off-line and on-line public spheres for Muslim Canadians;

  5. Prairie/Canadian identity and Islam;

  6. Religious accommodation in the work place;

  7. Gender issues among Muslim Canadians;

  8. New Canadian Legislation (Bill C-24, Bill C-51) and its
    implications for Muslims.

The deadline for the submission of abstracts for 20-minute presentations
is 30 October 2015 (submitted electronically to islam.prairies@usask.ca
). Your abstract should contain your name, email, and institutional
affiliation directly after the title of your presentation. Notice of
acceptance will be sent within two weeks from the abstract deadline
submission date.

Authors interested in publication of their papers in the conference
proceedings should submit their final papers by January 15th
electronically to islam.prairies@usask.ca. The papers should be in MS
Word format, and no more than 7,000 words in length. Paper acceptance in
the proceedings will be announced by January 30th, 2016.

Registration fee is C$110 for the presenter and academic participants,
(including conference proceedings), C$30 for students, and C$10 for
community participants (valid only on the second day). Students and
other participants may purchase conference proceedings on site for C$10.
Registration fees should be sent by personal check issued to Department
of Linguistics and Religious Studies, University of Saskatchewan. Please
send your registration fees (personal check) accompanied by a note with
your presentation title, your name, e-mail address, and institutional
affiliation, in an envelope, by post. Please address the envelope with
your check and an accompanying note to:

Fachrizal Halim
Department of Linguistics and Religious Studies
Arts Building, 910-9 Campus Drive,
University of Saskatchewan
Saskatoon, SK, S7N5A5.

If you have any questions about the conference, please e-mail
islam.prairies@usask.ca

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Call for Abstracts: Religion, Gender, and the Internet

Call for abstracts – 3rd ISA Forum of Sociology in Vienna –  RC22 panel 

Religion, Gender, and the Internet

Session Organizer(s)
Emma TOMALIN, University of Leeds, United Kingdom, e.tomalin@leeds.ac.uk
Caroline STARKEY, University of Leeds, United Kingdom, trs6cf@leeds.ac.uk

Anna HALAFOFF, Deakin University, Australia, anna.halafoff@deakin.edu.au

There is an emerging literature on women, religion and the Internet investigating a wide range of virtual interactions in different contexts. The internet is a gendered social space where the inequalities and prejudices within religions in the offline world can be both reinforced and challenged. To what extent does “digital religion” offer a “third space” where traditional authority structures can be challenged in ways that might not be possible in the offline environment (Hoover and Echchaibi, 2012)? Or does the fact of the digital divide mean that access to the Internet is skewed in favour of literate women in economically privileged positions with access to modern technologies?
We will explore, and encourage submissions on, case studies about religious and/or spiritual womens’ digital networks, practices and activism. Is there something new or distinctive about online feminist religious and/or spiritual engagement? How is the Internet being used in radicalisation of women and also in deradicalisation strategies? And what methods and theories are applicable for researching women and “digital religion”?

For further information on the RC22 panels go to  http://www.isa-sociology.org/forum-2016/rc/rc.php?n=RC22

The deadline is September 30th 2015. If you have any queries please contact Emma Tomalin <e.tomalin@leeds.ac.uk>

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