The 21st SCANCOR PhD course
Between August 25th and 29th, the 21st SCANCOR PhD course was held at the Department of Government.
Hovedinnhold
From August 25th to 29th, the Department of Government at the University of Bergen hosted the 21st SCANCOR PhD course on institutional analysis. The course brought together PhD candidates and internationally recognized scholars from a range of universities to engage in in-depth discussions on recent and ongoing research, theoretical developments and methodological approaches in institutional theory.
This year's course gathered 22 PhD candidates affiliated with universities in 9 different countries, creating a truly international academical environment. Over the course of five intensive days, participants explored how institutions emerge, evolve, and change over time, drawing on a variety of theoretical lenses, including temporal dynamics, power, world society theory and social movement theory. Particular attentionwas given to how institutional theory can help us better understand contemporary social, political and economic challanges, as well as the theoretical challenges of explaining institutional change.
PhD candidates had the oppurtunity to discuss their individual projects and to develop a stronger understanding of how to align conseptual questions with research methods. The course aims to provide participants with new insights, tools, and a solid foundation for pursuing research within the institutional tradition.
The daily program was structured in two parts: public morning lectures and closed afternoon sessions. During the morning lectures, both local and international faculty presented and discussed state-of-the-art research in institutional theory. These lectures were open to the public and attracted a broad academic audience. The afternoon sessions were reserved for enrolled PhD candidates and focused on in-depth discussions of both classical and contemporary institutional scholarship.
Here is a list over all the public lectures:
Renate E. Meyer, from WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
Title: ‘One frame to bind them all?’ A multimodal analysis of anti-vaccination framing on social media
Martina Vukasovic, from University of Bergen
Title: Defending democracy through large scale institutional work – from an illustration to a research agenda
Woody Powell, from Stanford University
Title: Institutional persistence and change: How an arbitrary classification became entangled in economic, political and cultural forces and endures to this day
Gro Kvåle, from Univerity of Agder
Title: Social evaluation and the implications of engaging with “the wrong people”
Bruce G. Carruthers, from Northwestern University
Title: Long-term decisions in historical perspective: Seeds, stone arches, trees, wealth, and hot waste
Roxana Baltaru, from Unviersity of Bergen
Title: Norms, culture and commitments in universities
Sarah A. Soule, from Stanford University
Title: The head or the heart? Exploring the psychological underpinnings of social movement mobilization
Simon Neby, from Unviersity of Bergen
Title: Everything, everywhere, all at once: the temporal complexities, mismatches and asymmetries embedded in climate governance
Patricia Bromley, from Stanford University
Title: Education reform and the postliberal era
Gili S. Drori, from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Title: Academic publicness: on the global organization of university-society relations
Previous editions of the SCANCOR PhD course have been hosted by institutions such as Stanford University, the University of Oslo, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Stockholm School of Economics, and WU Vienna. This year, the Department of Government was proud to serve as host, reflecting the deprtment's strong academic environment and commitment to institutional research.