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复旦大学“社会科学暑期高级讲习班”招生启事
作者:未知 文章来源:本站原创 点击数:2322 更新时间:2010-3-24 19:21:23

复旦大学“社会科学暑期高级讲习班”招生启事

 

   为了提高中国青年学者把握国际社会科学发展动态、理论范式和研究方法的能力,拓展跨学科的研究视角,强化中国化的问题意识,推动青年学者从事具有理论深度的学术研究,复旦大学社会科学高等研究院(以下简称“高研院”)于20097月举办了第一届“社会科学暑期高级讲习班”。高研院拟将该讲习班作为品牌活动予以建设,并努力将其打造成一个高水准、高层次、综合性的社会科学优秀人才的高级培训基地。

   经高研院学术委员会讨论,决定将20107月举办的第二届“社会科学暑期高级讲习班”的主题确定为:“政治学与中国社会科学发展”。现发布招生启事。

    一、课程目标

    培训并团结社会科学青年学者,并引领他们把握国际社会科学学术前沿发展动态、理论、 学派、范式和方法,加强对中国本身的深度理论研究,从跨学科的研究视角来阐释全球化时代中国改革和发展的重要经验,进而培养一批致力于政治学和其他社会科学理论研究、学术创新、有世界视野又有中国关怀的杰出学术人才。

    二、授课导师

   讲习班将聘请6名国内或华裔著名社会科学学者作为授课导师:

Bin Wang(王国斌) ——美国加利福尼亚大学洛杉矶分校教授,亚洲研究所主任,高研院特聘讲座教授;

张旭东——美国纽约大学比较文学系和东亚研究系教授,东亚系主任,高研院学术委员会创始委员;

纳日碧力戈——复旦大学特聘教授、高研院专职研究人员;

  肃——复旦大学教授、高研院专职研究人员;

童世骏——上海社科院党委副书记、哲学研究所所长、华东师范大学哲学系教授;

邓正来——复旦大学特聘教授、高研院院长、复旦大学当代中国研究中心主任。

同时,将邀请国际知名学者Daniel A. Bell(贝淡宁)、Edward FriedmanJoseph Fewsmith(傅士卓)、Jack Donnelly Peter Moody (穆磐石)Philippe C. SchmitterChu Yan-Han(朱云汉)围绕“政治学与中国社会科学发展”举办系列讲座。

 

    三、授课时间、地点与方式

1201075(周一)—716(周五)(73-4日高研院将主办“正当性与治理理论”国际学术论坛;欢迎学员提前旁听或参与讨论);

2.每日上午900-1130,下午1430-1700

3.授课地点:复旦大学光华楼东主楼高研院“通业大讲堂”(2801室);

4.讲习班上午由主讲老师集中就某一论题做系统讲解,下午将由全体学员同主讲老师一起展开主题性研讨;

5.外籍学者上午用英文讲座(不提供同声传译),但当天下午讨论时,高研院将提供同声传译。

四、结业方式

讲习班将以“复旦大学社会科学高等研究院”的名义授予结业证书。

五、费用事宜

1.讲习班不收取报名费和任何其他费用;

2.高研院将免费提供课程材料,并为学员一次性提供讨论用书补贴300元;

3.高研院将为学员举行欢迎宴会,并组织全体学员郊游;

4.学员的差旅费和食宿费自理,高研院可为学员代为办理入住复旦大学招待所的住宿手续(复旦招待所住宿标准:四人间,50-80元,如需要高研院代办,请明确告知)。

六、报名与录取

“高级讲习班”面向全国(包括台港澳地区)高校及科研机构的文科博士研究生和青年教师招生:

1.基于学术规范和学术平等的原则,我们将组织专门的学术委员会按照纯粹的学术标准择优录取30位学员(若报名者依据严格的学术标准不足30人,我们将坚持宁缺毋滥的原则);

2.报名者须提交代表性学术论文1篇和关于社会科学方面的读书报告1篇(长短不论、发表与未发表不计、中英文均可),但是报名者不得透露任何有关该论文和读书报告所发刊物的出处信息,也无需提供任何有关自己学术成果数量和获奖的信息;

3.报名者须提供所学专业的信息,但不能够透露所在学校和导师的信息;

4.为了听懂外籍教师的讲授,学员必须具有较强的英语听力能力;

5.请把相关材料用电子版直接发送高研院,不接受纸面来稿。

6. 具体录取名单将于2010610以后在高研院主页(http://www.ias.fudan.edu.cn)公布,并将以电邮的方式通知录取者,请随时留意网页通知。

 

七、报名期间与联系方式

1、即日起至2010520

2、联系人:沈老师

3Email:shenyinghan@126.com

附:部分外籍教授简介

 

 

Daniel A. Bell (贝淡宁) is professor of ethics and political philosophy at Tsinghua University (Beijing). He was born in Montreal, educated at McGill and Oxford, has taught in Singapore and Hong Kong, and has held research fellowships at Princeton and Stanford. He is the author of China's New Confucianism: Politics and Everyday Life in a Changing Society (Princeton University Press, 2008), Beyond Liberal Democracy: Political Thinking for an East Asian Context (Princeton University Press, 2006; Chinese translation published in 2009 by Shanghai Sanlian Chubanshe), East Meets West: Human Rights and Democracy in East Asia (Princeton University Press, 2000), and Communitarianism and Its Critics (Oxford University Press, 1993). He is the editor of Confucian Political Ethics (Princeton University Press, 2007) and the coeditor of six books. He writes on Chinese politics and philosophy for Du Shu, Dissent, Newsweek, and the Guardian's Comment Is Free blog, he has published comments in the New York Times, Huanxiu Shibao, the International Herald Tribune, and the Toronto Globe and Mail, and he has been interviewed on CCTV, NPR, BBC, and CBC.  His articles and books have been translated in Chinese and twelve other languages.

  

Edward Friedman is Professor at Department of Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison. His teaching and research interests include democratization, Chinese politics, international political economy, revolution, and the comparative study of transitions in Leninist States. His most recent books are Chinese Village, Socialist State (1991), The Politics of Democratization: Generalizing the East Asian Experience (1994), National Identity and Democratic Prospects in Socialist China(1995), and What if China doesn't democratize? Implications for war and peace (2001).

 

 

Jospeh Fewsmith (BA, Northwestern University; MA, PhD, University of Chicago) is Director of East Asian Studies Program and Professor of International Relations and Political Science, Boston University. He specializes in Comparative Politics, Chinese Domestic and International Politics. He is the author of four books: China Since Tiananmen: The Politics of Transition (2001), Elite Politics in Contemporary China (2001), The Dilemmas of Reform in China: Political Conflict and Economic Debate (1994), and Party, State, and Local Elites in Republican China: Merchant Organizations and Politics in Shanghai, 1980-1930(1985). He is very active in the China field, traveling to China frequently and presenting papers at professional conferences such as the Association for Asian Studies and the American Political Science Association. His articles have appeared in such journals as Asian Survey, Comparative Studies in Society and History, The China Journal, The China Quarterly, Current History, The Journal of Contemporary China, Problems of Communism, and Modern China. He is also a research associate of the John King Fairbank Center for East Asian Studies at Harvard University.

         

        Jack Donnelly is Andrew Mellon Professor, Graduate School of International Relations, University of Denver. He received his PhD in Political Science from the University of California at Berkeley in 1982. Most of his writings have been in the broad, multidisciplinary field of human rights.  They include three books -- The Concept of Human Rights, Universal Human Rights in Theory and Practice (second edition, 2003), and International Human Rights (third edition, 2006) -- and over fifty articles and book chapters, which have been translated into nine languages. He is perhaps best known for a series of articles on human rights and cultural relativism, which advance a strong argument for a relatively universalistic approach to implementing internationally recognized human rights. He has also written on the theory of human rights, the development and functioning of international human rights regimes, human rights and development, group rights, humanitarian intervention, and democracy and human rights.  His current human rights work focuses on a book-length project comparing conceptions of human dignity, with extended case studies of the West and China from "ancient" to "modern" eras.

        Peter Moody (穆磐石) is Professor of Political Science at The University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. Moody specializes in Chinese politics. His more recent books include Conservative Thought in Contemporary China (2007), Tradition and Modernization in China and Japan (1994), Political Change in Taiwan (1991) and Political Opposition in Post-Confucian Society (1988). He is editor of China Documents Annual and book review editor of The Review of Politics. He has written on Chinese politics, Asian international affairs, Chinese political thought, international relations theory, and theory of political parties.

        Philippe C. Schmitter is a Visiting Fellow of Center for Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law at Stanford University, and a Professor Emeritus of the Department of Political and Social Sciences at the European University Institute. He was Professor of Political Science at the European University Institute in Florence, Department of Political and Social Sciences until September 2004. He was then nominated Professorial Fellow at the same Institution. Born in 1936, he was a graduate of the Graduate Institute for International Studies of the University of Geneva, and took his doctorate at the University of California at Berkeley. Since 1967 he has been successively assistant professor, associate professor and professor in the Politics Department of the University of Chicago, then at the European University Institute (1982-86) and at Stanford (1986-96). He has been visiting professor at the Universities of Paris-I, Geneva, Mannheim and Zürich, and Fellow of the Humboldt Foundation, Guggenheim Foundation and the Palo Alto Centre for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences. He has published books and articles on comparative politics, on regional integration in Western Europe and Latin America, on the transition from authoritarian rule in Southern Europe and Latin America, and on the intermediation of class, sectoral and professional interests. His current work is on the political characteristics of the emerging Euro-polity, on the consolidation of democracy in Southern and Eastern countries, and on the possibility of post-liberal democracy in Western Europe and North America.

       

        Yun-han Chu(朱云汉)是美国明尼苏达大学政治学博士(1987),曾任美国哥伦比亚大学政治系客座副教授,现任(台湾)中央研究院政治学所特聘研究员、台湾大学政治系教授。主要研究领域为国际政治经济学、东亚政治经济、民主化与社会科学方法论,曾三次获得台湾科学委员会研究杰出奖,以及担任(台北)中国政治学会理事长、蒋经国国际学术交流基金会的执行长。目前还担任  Journal of Democracy,International Studies Quarterly, Pacific Affairs,China Review,Journal of Contemporary China,Journal of East Asian Studies等重要国际学术期刊的编辑委员会,以及“亚洲民主动态调查”国际学术合作项目的负责人。

                                                                                                                        

                                                                                                                                                           

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