Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa - Laboratório Associado FCT EVALUATION OF R&D UNITS APPLICATION SUBMITTED BY INSTITUTO DE CIÊNCIAS SOCIAIS UNIVERSIDADE DE LISBOA FINAL VERSION . DECEMBER 2013 APPLICATION FCT EVALUATION OF R&D UNITS 1. Identification of the R&D Unit 1.0. Reference: 50013 1.1. Name of the R&D Unit: Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa 1.2. Acronym: ICS-ULisboa 1.3. Coordinator: Jorge Manuel Vala Salvador 1.4. Multidisciplinary/interdisciplinary R&D Unit – No Scientific Areas Sociology (Main Scientific Area) Anthropology Political Science History 1.5. Profile of the R&D Unit – 100% Basic Research 1.6. Keywords: Changing Societies Citizenship Inclusion Sustainability 1.7. Link to the R&D Unit’s page on the Internet: www.ics.ul.pt 1.8. Unit registration options: Keep 1 2. Institutions and their roles 2.1. Main Host Institution: Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa 2.2. Other Host Institution: N/A 2.3. Participation Institution: N/A 2.4. Institutional Commitment ICS is a research unit of the University of Lisbon with permanent members assuring its current functioning: 83 researchers (26 with tenure), 22 technical staff. ICS offers appropriate institutional conditions for research development. The following aspects are highlighted in terms of the quality and adequacy of the research environment at ICS: Workplace. The premises are located in a modern 5-storey building, opened in 2003, specially designed to meet the needs of research and graduate teaching activities. Located on the ULisbon campus, the building has 3 meeting rooms (6 seats each), 3 classrooms used for seminars or research meetings (25 seats), a large room for seminars and conferences (80 seats), an auditorium (120 seats), a room for PhD students (16 seats), a computer room used by students and research assistants (10 seats), a cafeteria and comfortable relaxation areas, especially on the 5th floor, with a terrace for conference events. At the ground level, there is a display and sales point for books published by Imprensa de Ciências Sociais and an area used for small exhibitions. Each researcher's workplace is equipped with a spacious desk, a table for meetings with 1 or 2 visitors, storage space, a telephone, and internet access in offices for individual use or shared by two or three researchers (total number of offices: 48). Research assistants and collaborators share larger rooms (7 rooms with 8 workplaces). Visiting scholars are welcomed in a room with 5 workplaces. Library and electronic resources. The ICS has a library with 40,000 books and access to about 25,000 periodicals. The Library also houses the Social History Archive. The library has a main reading room with 28 seats and a study area with 6 seats for consulting journals. All the documentation is on open-shelf access. The electronic resources include subscriptions to the main disciplinary journals and scientific search engines and databases such as J-Store, Elsevier, SAGE, Springer, Taylor & Francis, Web of Knowledge, Érudit, b-ON, and more. Team of project officers. The ICS has a skilled team of 5 officers, who provide both administrative and technical support to its researchers and to the ongoing projects for which they are responsible, including support for financial management. Currently, these officers are responsible for the management of 100 projects with national and international funding (ERANETs, FP 7, among others); Internet access. The ICS is equipped with wi-fi and LAN internet connections. The researchers have personal e-mails and access to electronic resources both in-house and via the VPN network. Printing, photocopying, scanning. On each floor of the building, multifunction printers are available to researchers through code verification. The technical office also has medium format scanners that can be used on request. 2 PART A 3. R&D Unit Description and Achievements 3.1. Description of the R&D Unit History and Mission The history of ICS began in 1962 with the creation of GIS-Gabinete de Investigações Sociais, the first Portuguese Research Centre in Social Sciences. In 1963, GIS began to publish Análise Social, the academic journal that paved the way for studying the dynamics of Portuguese society in a comparative context. In 1982, GIS became part of the University of Lisbon, and was renamed the Institute of Social Sciences (ICSUL). In 2002, ICS became an Associate Laboratory. Our mission is to study contemporary societies with a special emphasis on Portugal and the societies and cultures with which it has a historical relationship. This Mission has been accomplished through: a) Innovative research into contemporary societies in the form of books and articles published in nationally and internationally renowned journals; b) Graduate teaching, mainly PhD programmes, directly linked to the research undertaken at ICS; c) Outreach activities, mainly the transfer and dissemination of knowledge to the wider community, through Observatories of Portuguese Society. These activities result from the collaboration between the different disciplinary areas at ICS: Social and Cultural Anthropology, Economics, History, Human Geography, Political Science, Social Psychology, and Sociology. ICS has always been rated as an Institution of Excellence (the highest rating) by international FCT panels (1996, 1999, 2005 and 2008). These evaluations have provided a stimulus for innovative and interdisciplinary research, for high-quality teaching and for enhancing the social relevance of knowledge produced by ICS. Over fifty years, the driving force behind ICS has been the combination of researchers and the ideas they investigate with a scientific culture characterised by methodological and theoretical diversity. Objectives for 2008-12 The objectives and activities of the ICS Strategic Plan during the period 2008-2012 had three main vectors: research into contemporary societies, graduate teaching and outreach services. Five core themes were defined: 1) The study of public regulation and agency-driven mechanisms underpinning the dynamics of families, schools and life styles; 2) The relationship between modern risk society, environmental issues and technoscientific culture; 3) Human mobility and its relationship with such issues as consumption and work, person and identity, religion, social categories and prejudice, transnationalism and cultural globalisation; 4) Macro, meso and micro aspects of democracy and citizenship, with special emphasis on political regimes and institutions, political parties and social movements, social and political attitudes and behaviours; 5) The relevance of historical processes for analysing the long-term social, economic, political and institutional mechanisms that have shaped the 3 contemporary world. This research agenda arose from an interdisciplinary, comparative and longitudinal approach, promoting the diversification of methodological and theoretical approaches. Linked with this research agenda, ICS planned to: 1) increase intra-institutional methodological and theoretical exchanges about research topics and disciplines, mainly through the creation of the Biennial ICS Research General Meeting; 2) extend the number of international publications, while simultaneously raising publication standards; and 3) improve the number of international networks, not only in Europe but also with Brazilian and Latin-American scholars. In order to train young researchers, ICS decided to focus on Doctoral Programmes designed to progressively build a Doctoral School of Social Sciences. This project will be implemented in collaboration with other departments of the University of Lisbon and other national or foreign universities. The integration of students into ICS research projects and international networks, as well as close involvement with students’ work, have been defined as key features for the training of PHD students. In view of the high demand, Summer Schools were also planned in the area of advanced methods in social sciences. The ICS Observatories of Portuguese Society focusing on families, young people, ageing, environment, and the quality of democracy are crucial for ICS scientific research with non-academic constituencies. Accordingly, the Observatories and their programmes of activities were restructured, leading to an increase in the number and frequency of reports and briefings for non-specialist audiences and the media. Similarly, encouragement was given to initiatives aimed at public organisations and stakeholders and to the monitoring of public policies. The following objectives were also part of the 2008-12 Strategic Plan: 1) to continue with the internationalisation of Análise Social, and to support Imprensa de Ciências Sociais, currently the main Portuguese publisher in social sciences; 2) to contribute to the integration of Portugal into the European knowledge infrastructures ESS (European Social Survey) and CESSDA (Council of European Social Science Data Archives); 3) to increase the number of visiting students and researchers in order to consolidate the international recognition of ICS. Organisational Structure and staff ICS is an organic unit of the University of Lisbon dedicated to innovative research and graduate teaching. Its basic organisational structure conforms to the laws regulating Portuguese Universities. To pursue its aims and to meet the demand for excellent research: - ICS research activities were organised into 5 Research Lines (RL) directly linked to the five main research topics previously mentioned; - Appointed by the Director, the RL coordinators largely contributed to the Annual Reports submitted to FCT; - An Internal Scientific Council (SC) and an External Advisory Committee (EAC) supervised the achievement of the ICS scientific objectives; - Institutional performance was evaluated by the ICS Assembly and by the EAC; - Researchers submitted an Activities Report annually to the SC; - A Graduate Studies Commission coordinated training activities and promoted quality in combination with research projects. - In order to facilitate the achievement of the Observatories’ objectives, a Council of Observatories was planned. 4 In 2012, the Institute had 83 researchers (26 with tenure), 22 technical staff, 125 PhD students and 51 research assistants, and was engaged in 81 research projects (a total of 149 during the period under evaluation, representing €12,440,937.33). In 2007, the ICS state budget amounted to roughly 40% of total funding. The remainder came from competitive projects awarded by public and private national and international institutions, including FCT. In view of the current uncertainty and the reduction of national funding for science, ICS established as its objective, for the period 2008-2012, to diversify funding sources, mainly through competitive tenders submitted to the 7th EU FP, ERC and ESF. 3.2. Major Achievements Research and main publications The total number of articles authored or co-authored by ICS members published in peer-reviewed journals throughout the period 2008-2012 is 233. This figure corresponds to the sum of 227 of articles listed in SCIMAGO Search (SJR) plus 6 articles only listed in ISI Search (JCR). The list of ICS 233 articles is available at http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf. It should be noted that the list of articles uploaded through the platform ORCID is 180, the difference to SCIMAGO + ISI being explained by: a) inconsistency in data collection and missing records already reported by ICS to SCOPUS that wait for clarification; and b) slight differences between team membership through 2008-2012 and registered members in the current application. The ten publications presented in the section of Key Publications below reflect the main research topics developed at ICS and their international impact. All papers were published in top ten international journals. Books were published by renowned companies. Some papers and books selected received significant awards or were widely cited (GScholar Cit). Despite the diversity of topics addressed, these publications do not show the full publication record and the research carried out by the 5 Research Lines that have organised ICS activities in the last 5 years: Citizenship and Democratic Institutions (DEMOLINE) The Making of the Contemporary World (MACO) Identity, Migrations and Religion (PERMOB) Families, Lifestyles and Education (SOLINC) Sustainability: Environment, Risk and Spaces (SUSTAIN) In all these areas, ICS has regularly been invited to be an institutional partner for networking and research projects, both nationally and internationally. The awards made to 14 ICS researchers in the last 5 years underline the merit of the research carried out at ICS. Internationalisation According to the bibliometric study of the FCT/Univ. of Leiden ICS was the Research Centre (RC) with most ISI publications between 2007 and 2010 with the exception of 3 Economics RC. This trend was maintained in 2011 and 2012. Similarly ICS was the best RC in the Social Sciences as far as Q1 (61) and TOP TEN (39) ISI/SCIMAGO journals are concerned. 5 The number of books or chapters published by international publishers rose significantly from 45 in 2008 to 81 in 2012 (see Table 5 and comments), as did co-authored national (36 in 2008 to 59 in 2012, N= 256) and international (14 in 2008 to 46 in 2012, N=176) publications. Membership of academic networks also grew – mainly in Europe (50, 6%), Brazil (17, 2%) and the USA (5, 7%). ICS researchers are members of the boards of national and international journals and scientific associations, and most of them have already been visiting professors in foreign universities. ICS is also a host institution for foreign scholars. Annually, an average of 32 foreign researchers (20 in 2003-7) visited ICS (for periods ranging from a few weeks up to a year); foreign students represent 33% of PhDs (22% in 2008), while 40% of Postdocs and 22% of ICS senior researchers are also foreign. Graduate teaching ICS expanded its PhD Programmes: 3 PhDs Programmes exclusively coordinated by ICS (Anthropology, Comparative Politics, and Sociology), 3 PhDs organised in partnership with other units of the ULisbon (Migration Studies, Social Psychology and Nursing), and 2 PhDs in inter-university partnerships: Climate Change and Sustainable Development Policies and History, the latter being a FCT PhD Programme under the coordination of ICS. ICS is also a partner of another FCT PhD Programme: Philosophy of Science and Society. PhD programmes have increased the number of registered students (60 in 2008, 125 in 2012), 70% of whom were awarded competitive grants. During this period, ICS researchers successfully supervised 83 PhD theses (an impressive achievement, since only 26 ICS researchers are qualified to be principal supervisors and trained 209 research assistants. Since 2010, ICS has organised 13 Summer Schools on advanced research methods, involving 583 graduate students. Outreach Knowledge transfer and outreach activities increased mainly through the Observatories of Portuguese Society, which cover the following areas: Family Policies (OFAP), Youth (OPJ), Ageing (IE), Environment (OBSERVA), and Quality of Democracy (BQD). The number of reports and briefs, seminars involving stakeholders, and posts on the OPS sites increased. Participation in actions to promote scientific culture among young students also expresses the ICS involvement with society. ICS researchers also served on national and international boards for science and the definition of public policies. Finally we would highlight the contracts with Portuguese industry. The long list of references in the press (about 3,000 in the last 5 years) and participation in TV broadcasts (see the ICS website) show the public impact of ICS research. The ICS website was visited by academics and non-academics (circa 700,000 views in the last 5 years) from Portugal and other European countries, Brazil and the USA. University Commitment During 2008-2012 members of ICS faculty participated actively in governance bodies of the University of Lisbon (the Conselho Geral and the Rector’s Team), namely in functions regarding Quality Assurance and Scientific Management. ICS scholars have also served in important capacities within the recent process of merging and restructuring that resulted in the present ULisbon. 6 Research infrastructures The creation of research infrastructures for the larger community of the social sciences is also part of the ICS mission. The journal Análise Social was recently indexed on Scielo CI/WoK (in 2012, there were 49,534 downloads - Scielo) and Imprensa de Ciências Sociais published 92 books during 2008/12. Our library is the most important Portuguese library in Social Sciences (roughly 18,000 visitors and an increase of 25% in its collections), with important digital collections complemented by the Archive of Social History (now with 31 collections). ICS also contributed to Portugal becoming a founding member of the ESS-ESFRI, an European infrastructure largely used by Portuguese scientists and students (1,048, including 234 PhD students) and non-scientists (227). Through the ICS/APIS-Social Sciences Archive, with more than 10,000 visits, Portugal is now an associate member of CESSDA. Implications for the future As can be deduced from our track record, ICS has the scientific and institutional conditions to achieve its new Strategic Programme designed to respond to the major social challenges in coming years. The next 6 years will be crucial for ICS, both in its quest to consolidate its process of internationalisation, and to set a contained but solid foundation for its leadership role in shaping research and graduate teaching in the social sciences within the ULisbon, promoting interdisciplinarity and social relevance. Key Publications Aboim, S. (2009). Men between worlds: changing asculinities in urban Maputo. Men and Masculinities, 12, 201-224. Cit 13 Aguiar-Conraria, L., Magalhães, P. C.& Soares, M. J. (2012). Cycles in Politics: Wavelet analysis of political time series. American J. of Political Science. 56, 500–518; Cit 11 Bina, O. & La Camera, F. (2011). Promise and shortcomings of a green turn in recent policy responses to the ´double crises`. Ecological Economics 70, 2308-2316; Cit 8 Cardoso, J. L. & Lains, P. (eds.) (2010). Paying for the Liberal State: the rise of public finance in nineteenthcentury Europe. N.Y.: Cambridge Univ. Press; Cit 54 Lewis-Beck, M. S., Lobo, M. C., & Bellucci, P. (eds.) (2012). Economic crisis and elections: the European periphery. Electoral Studies, 31; Cit 55 Pereira, C., Vala, J. & Leyens, J. (2009). From infra-humanization to discrimination: The mediation of symbolic threat needs egalitarian norms. J. of Experimental Social Psychology 45, 336-344; Cit 40 Ramos, R., Sousa, B. & Monteiro, N. (2009). História de Portugal. Lisboa: Esfera dos Livros; Cit 23; D. Diniz Award Silva, F. C. da (2008). Mead and Modernity. Lanham: Lexington Books; Cit 4; American Sociological Association Award; Truninger, M. (2011). Cooking with Bimby in a moment of recruitment: exploring conventions and practice perspectives. J. of Consumer Culture 11, 37-59; Cit 14 West, H. G. & Domingos, N. (2012). Gourmandizing poverty food: the Serpa Cheese Slow Food presidium. J. of Agrarian Change 12, 120–143; Cit 2 7 3.3. External Advisory Committee Reports 3.4. Composition of the External Advisory Committee Albert Carreras, Former Dean, School of Economics and Business, Universitat Pompeu Fabra; Secretary of Economy and Finances, Generalitat de Catalunya, Spain Catherine Lutz, Former Chair, Department of Anthropology, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University, USA Glynis Breakwell, Vice-Chancellor, The University of Bath, UK Jean Kellerhals, Former Vice-Chancellor l’Université de Genève, Switzerland Yves Mény, Former President, European University Institute, Italy 3.5. Brief description of the output indicators 2008/2012 of the research team of the new unit that support the vision and objectives of the strategic program (N/A) ICS keeps the activity developed during the period 2008-2012. ICS is NOT a new R&D Unit and therefore the activities and the main achievements of its members who will support the vision and objectives of the strategic programme for 2015-2020 have been described in the previous sections of this form (3.1 and 3.2) 8 4 . Funding 2008/2012 Description 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Total (∑) 1.285.750 1.380.500 1.380.500 1.380.500 1.130.500 6.557.750 FCT-funded projects 740.917 729.667 1.238.504 1.221.285 2.494.137 6.424.510 European projects 386.176 488.351 342.979 237.432 894.345 2.349.283 Other international projects 28.140 40.225 29.013 13.298 12.048 122.724 Other national projects 738.034 439.888 493.730 445.672 409.180 2.526.504 National industry projects 180.638 24.699 0 14.400 77.400 297.137 International industry projects 0 0 0 0 0 0 Total (€) 3.359.655 3.103.330 3.484.726 3.312.587 5.017.610 18.277.908 Pluriannual project Programme/Strategic Commission-funded 9 5. General Indicators 2008-2012 5.1 General Indicators 2008-2012 Description 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Total (∑) No. of researchers 100 100 128 138 135 601 No. of integrated researchers 63 78 83 85 83 392 31 30 29 23 22 135 PhD theses under the supervision of integrated members 12 17 12 20 22 83 Publications in international peer reviewed journals 36 52 41 48 56 233 Books and chapters of international distribution 45 43 58 78 80 304 Models 0 0 0 0 0 0 Patents 0 0 0 0 0 0 Prototypes 0 0 0 0 0 0 Industry research contracts 4 0 0 1 2 7 Research contracts with national or international bodies 58 14 30 21 19 142 Other indexed academic articles 20 25 14 19 19 97 Other non indexed articles 18 19 41 23 21 122 National books and books chapters 120 82 100 92 92 486 Journal's special issues 5 5 10 7 9 36 Reports and Working Papers 25 31 27 17 28 128 Oral presentations meetings 352 408 506 436 492 2.194 61 71 85 69 66 352 No. of technicians administrative staff in and academic Academic meetings organized by ICS 10 5.2. Overall description of indicators and research outputs/Highlights The improvement of the ICS performance in terms of both funding applications and research output is shown in Tables 4 and 5. Funding 2008/12 Due to the financial crisis, funding for science (institutional funding, funding for research projects and for the recruitment of researchers) declined significantly over the last three years. Requests for academic consulting have also decreased. Despite this, ICS improved the number of projects financed by FCT (from 24 in 2008 to 45 in 2012), and also increased the total amount of funding involved (from €740k to €2,5m; total of FCT projects during 2008/2012= €6,5m). ICS also significantly increased the amount of EU funding from €386k in 2008 to €900k in 2012, including the first payment of a Hera project (total funding of this project €1,0m). Already in 2013 one of ICS researchers was awarded with an ERC Consolidator Grant. The increase in both national and international projects was achieved irrespective of the decrease in FCT funding, which prevented the replacement of researchers who had finished their short-term contracts (69% of ICS researchers do not have tenure), causing a significant brain drain in 2011. In order to guarantee and enhance the quality of its research, ICS needs stable institutional funding, accompanied by regular, predefined and independent evaluations. Research contracts and projects indicated in table 5.1 refer to ongoing contracts and projects in the initial year of 2008 and to newly submitted contracts and projects in the following years. Publications ICS maintained the number of publications in Portuguese outlets while significantly increasing the number of international publications. Of 233 articles published between 2008 and 2012 in international outlets, 61 articles were published in ISI/Scimago Q1 journals and 39 in TOP TEN journals in their respective domains including: American J. of Political Science, Public Choice, Ecological Economics, J. of Experimental Social Psychology, J. of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Explorations in Economic History, J. of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Public Understanding of Science, J. of Consumer Culture, J. of Agrarian Change, J. of Social Issues, etc. Other articles published in academic journals not covered in SCIMAGO/ISI – especially due to linguistic constraints - are also an important part of ICS scientific performance. Throughout the period 2008-2012 a total of 97 articles have been indexed in other databases, namely: Brazilian CAPES, European Science Foundation Humanities list. A distinctive feature of social science outputs is their publication in book format. In terms of the total research outcomes published by ICS members in books and book chapters, 486 were published by Portuguese publishers, mainly by the Social Sciences Press, and 304 by non-Portuguese publishers. Most of these books and chapters were published by renowned international publishers, including: Ashgate; Brill; Cambridge UP, Columbia UP; Lexington; L'Harmattan; Oxford UP; Palgrave MacMillan; Polity Press, Routledge; Stanford UP; Univ. of California Press. The quality of the research published in top journals and by top publishers was acknowledged by the scientific community and funding institutions. Fourteen awards were made during 2008/2012 to ICS researchers. Some of the awards distinguished articles in peer reviewed journals: four winners of the "Gulbenkian Prize for the Internationalisation of Social Sciences in Portugal"; one award by the Brazilian 11 Association of Political Science. In the case of books, ICS researchers won awards from the American Sociological Association, the Royal Anthropological Institute, Fundação Casa de Mateus (D. Diniz Prize, 2009), and the annual Prize of the Portuguese Museology Association. Career awards were also made to ICS researchers: “Jean-Paul Codol Award 2010” (European Association of Social Psychology); Sociological Intervention Prize (International Sociological Association); and the Quercus Award 2010, which recognises work on environmental issues. ICS itself distinguished 39 researchers with the ERICS Prize financed by the CGD Bank, which fosters internationalisation in social sciences. Graduate Teaching The increased number of PhD students between 2008 and 2012, as well as the award of the FCT quality label to one of the PhD programmes coordinated by ICS (History), show that important steps have been taken to consolidate the ICS capacity to contribute to the development of a Doctoral School in Social Sciences. ICS 2008-2012: Facts and Figures - Awarded researchers: 14 - Q1 articles in peer reviewed journals SCIMAGO/ISI: 61 - Co-authored international publications: 176 - Articles in SCIMAGO/ISI databases: 233 - Books Author: 90 - Indexed journals that have ICS researchers on the editorial boards: 17 - National/international Scientific Associations that have ICS members on Boards: 25 - Ongoing projects: 149 - International networking projects: 30 - Enrolled PhD students: 233 - Foreign students enrolled PhD courses: 32% - FCT PhD grants: 96 - Visiting PhD students: 96 - Participants in Summer Schools: 583 - PhD thesis concluded: 83 - Visiting researchers: 64 - ICS researchers as visiting professors in foreign Universities: 40 - Total amount of competitive & non-competitive projects: 12,440,937 € - ICS website visits: circa 700,000 - ICS Observatories’ website visits: 125,176 - ICS & researchers press references: 3,000 12 - Exhibitions & cultural events: 15 - Library Visitors: circa 18,000 Future aims Over the next five years, we intend to further expand both the scientific impact and the social relevance research. The outputs of research carried out over the past five years have largely contributed to ICS being ranked, along with some other RC in Economics, as the most important RC in social sciences in Portugal. But our aim is to compare ourselves with European centres of excellence and to implement an organisational agenda to attain this objective. 13 PART B 6. Scientific Component – Strategic Programme 2015/2020 6.1 Abstract in Portuguese for publication O programa estratégico do ICS para 2015/2020 intitula-se Sociedades em Mudança: Legados e Desafios. Propõe uma agenda de pesquisa que procura dar continuidade à investigação desenvolvida pelo ICS ao longo dos seus 50 anos de existência, com abertura para uma nova etapa institucional, enquanto unidade de investigação que integra a Universidade de Lisboa (ULisboa). O programa estratégico visa a produção de conhecimento inovador sobre problemas e desafios societais do mundo contemporâneo, discutindo os seus fundamentos históricos e tendências futuras. Organiza-se em torno de cinco objectivos fundamentais: O primeiro e principal objectivo refere-se ao desenvolvimento de projectos de investigação de excelência, com o intuito de reforçar a internacionalização do ICS e a centralidade das ciências sociais na articulação dos variados interesses científicos da ULisboa. A investigação privilegiará três grandes áreas temáticas inclusão, cidadania e sustentabilidade - e dela decorrerão publicações em revistas e livros de âmbito internacional, na revista e na editora do ICS - Análise Social e Imprensa de Ciências Sociais – bem como noutros suportes nacionais. Estas áreas temáticas servem de enquadramento global da pesquisa a desenvolver pelos 7 Grupos de Investigação em que os membros do ICS se inserem. O tema INCLUSÃO diz respeito ao estudo: 1) das múltiplas formas de desigualdade e sua expressão económica, social, demográfica ou territorial; 2) dos problemas do bem-estar e formas de participação na sociedade civil; e 3) dos processos de integração de indivíduos e instituições em redes globais, nos planos material e simbólico. O tema CIDADANIA congrega dois objectivos e perspectivas de pesquisa: 1) ao nível micro, o estudo das atitudes socio-políticas, valores e comportamentos, incluindo os que se referem a questões de identidade e participação social e política; 2) ao nível macro, o estudo dos regimes e instituições políticas, incluindo os factores que determinam a estabilidade e a mudança de regime, assim como o papel dos partidos políticos e eleições. O tema SUSTENTABILIDADE procura discutir e compreender: 1) as dinâmicas socio-económicas, tecno-científicas e de governance que afectam a transição para sociedades mais sustentáveis; e 2) as práticas sociais, os mecanismos de governance e as políticas públicas que facilitam ou impedem processos de transição de indivíduos, grupos e instituições para patamares superiores de adaptação, resiliência e bem-estar. O segundo objectivo consiste na promoção da internacionalização do conhecimento em ciências sociais produzido em Portugal, afirmando o ICS como unidade de I&D reconhecida internacionalmente. O acréscimo da produção e disseminação de resultados de pesquisa a nível internacional, o alargamento da esfera de abrangência dos programas de pós-graduação, a busca crescente de oportunidades de financiamento internacional, são orientações estratégicas a privilegiar. Neste sentido, merece destaque a aposta prioritária de se dotar o ICS das condições que permitam valorizar o seu estatuto de Centro de Estudos Avançados em Ciências Sociais, designadamente através de iniciativas do seguinte tipo: acolhimento de investigadores nacionais e estrangeiros para permanências de curta e média duração; promoção de parcerias com unidades de I&D estrangeiras, visando a construção de consórcios para concursos a projectos internacionais; incentivos e estímulo aos investigadores do ICS para concursos 14 individuais ou de equipas a programas de financiamento europeu (ERC, ESF, Acções Marie Curie e COST); desenvolvimento de programas de pós-graduação através de parcerias europeias e internacionais; e acolhimento de conferências de associações científicas internacionais. O terceiro objectivo é a intensificação dos programas de formação pós-graduada, em estreita articulação com o programa estratégico centrado no estudo das Sociedades em Mudança. Em termos concretos, o ICS procurará alargar o âmbito internacional e reforçar a qualidade e atractividade dos seus programas de doutoramento, participando em candidaturas Erasmus Mundus e Marie Curie. Esta aposta visa afirmar as potencialidades do ICS para servir a ULisboa com ensino qualificado de pós-graduação, com expressão efectiva no estabelecimento e liderança de uma Escola Doutoral em Ciências Sociais. A concretização deste objectivo pressupõe a disponibilidade do ICS para: apresentar novas candidaturas aos Programas de Doutoramento FCT, através de parcerias com outras escolas da ULisboa e de outras universidades portuguesas; garantir a participação dos seus investigadores em actividades de ensino pós-graduado de outras escolas da ULisboa; melhorar e diversificar as iniciativas de formação avançada (escolas de verão e cursos de especialização) que reforcem os atributos do ICS ao nível do ensino altamente qualificado em ciências sociais. O quarto objectivo refere-se à transmissão e disseminação pública do conhecimento científico produzido pelo ICS. Demonstrar a relevância social da ciência, apostar na valorização da relação ciência-sociedade e empenhar-se na utilização do conhecimento científico como factor determinante de escolhas e decisões em matérias relativas a políticas públicas, são elementos constitutivos do programa estratégico do ICS. Por isso, será dada atenção especial à publicação anual de um Relatório Social e à publicação regular de Textos de Consultoria para um auditório amplo e diversificado de destinatários interessados em colher produção científica actualizada relacionada com o programa Sociedades em Mudança: Legados e Desafios e as áreas temáticas que lhe estão associadas. O quinto e último objectivo reveste um sentido instrumental e consiste na melhoria de infraestruturas e recursos técnicos qualificados, no que se refere ao apoio bibliográfico (biblioteca digital), ao suporte bibliométrico (indicadores de produção) e ao apoio a candidaturas e gestão de projectos internacionais. 6.2 Abstract in English for evaluation The ICS strategic research programme for 2015/2020 is entitled Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges – proposing a research agenda that seeks to build on the Institute’s fifty years of excellence and paves the way for a new era as a research unit within the newly-merged University of Lisbon (ULisbon). This strategy seeks to promote fresh knowledge on critical societal issues, addressing not only their historical background, but also their contemporary and likely future trends. The programme has five main objectives. The first and foremost objective is to develop high quality research projects in the social sciences, securing the internationalisation of ICS and defining a major role for the social sciences as a binding unit of many diverse interests in the ULisbon. Research activities will focus on three themes – inclusion, citizenship and sustainability, leading to publications in international peer-reviewed journals and with academic publishers. ICS has its own journal – Análise Social – and its academic press – Imprensa de Ciências Sociais, which will also play a significant role in the production and dissemination of research in each of these three thematic axes. The three themes provide the framework within which seven newly-structured Research Groups will develop their activities. INCLUSION accounts for: 1) economic inequalities and other disparities, whether social, cultural, demographic or territorial; 2) welfare regimes and participation in civil society; and 3) integration in global networks of material and symbolic circulation at micro and macro levels. CITIZENSHIP brings together two sets of research goals looking at citizenship from a micro and macro perspective, respectively: 1) the study of socio-political attitudes, values and behaviours, including those 15 related to social and political identity and political membership; and 2) the study of regimes and political institutions, including the factors determining regime change and stability, namely the role of political parties and electoral institutions. SUSTAINABILITY aims: 1) to understand the socio-economic, technoscientific and governance dynamics that affect the transition to more sustainable societies; and 2) to study social practices, governance mechanisms and public policies that facilitate (or impede) the transition of individuals, social groups and institutions towards greater adaptation, resilience and well-being. The second objective is to contribute further to the internationalisation of Portuguese social sciences. ICS aims to consolidate its role as a major international research centre. This strategy involves: 1) the production and transfer of knowledge; 2) graduate teaching; and 3) exploring international funding opportunities. Strengthening its position as a Centre for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences is instrumental for developing this strategy. To achieve this, ICS seeks: to host an increasing number of international and national scholars, promoting partnerships with other European centres and R&D units with successful track records in international competitive funding; to provide its researchers with competitive conditions, allowing them to apply, individually or in partnership, for funding in schemes such as the ERC, ESF, MarieCurie and COST Actions; to establish graduate teaching networks, involving both European and nonEuropean institutions; and, finally, to host meetings of the major professional associations, including ISA, IPSA, ECPR, EASA and ESA. The third objective is to foster graduate training, which is to be developed in close association with the research programme on Changing Societies. In concrete terms, ICS involvement in the organisation of Marie-Curie and Erasmus Mundus doctoral programmes with recognised international universities will reinforce the high-quality, international profile of the teaching component of the ICS research programme. At the national level, ICS proposes to contribute to the effective launch and development of a Doctoral School in Social Sciences within the ULisbon context. This involves submitting applications to new calls for FCT Doctoral Programmes, in partnership with other ULisbon unit members or through wider networking with other universities; participation of ICS researchers in graduate courses promoted by other ULisbon schools; and the improvement of ICS capacities to attract new audiences for training activities offered through the organisation of Summer Schools and specialised lifelong learning programmes. The fourth objective is to disseminate social-scientific knowledge. Bridging the gap between science, society and policymaking is an important aim of the ICS strategic plan. Our observatories already produce policy-oriented technical and scientific knowledge directed at central and local public administration. In the future, we propose to reinforce this dimension of our activities by: publishing an annual Social Report on the topic Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges aimed at a wider audience; producing specialised papers offering advice on ICS research topics relevant to further engagement with public expectations and needs; broadening the scope of the External Advisory Committee and the Council for Institutional Development, which will help ICS to engage more actively with civil society; and, finally, promoting regular meetings between researchers and members of civil society, the business world and the media, in order to become more sensitive to public issues that are relevant for producing better social science. The fifth and final objective is to improve the ICS infrastructure and technical resources. The main aims here include the creation of a digital library in social sciences, the training of qualified technical support staff (mainly for research funding applications and project management), and the delivery of data on research outcomes, productivity indicators and bibliometric measuring. 16 6.3 Strategy and vision of the unit and future management Over the next six years, ICS will be contributing to Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges – a research agenda that seeks to build on the Institute’s fifty years of excellence, paving the way for a new era as a research unit within the newly-merged University of Lisbon (ULisbon). This strategy is shaped by the need to respond to emerging societal trends and social issues in a changing and unstable world, taking into account both its structural underpinnings and short-term dynamics. The choice of its overarching theme is the outcome of four distinctive traits that make the ICS unique within the national academic landscape: Its capacity to improve collaboration on scientific projects that link the social sciences to life and health, engineering and the environmental sciences, thus building a potential for interdisciplinary inquiry that is imperative when addressing contemporary societal challenges, and that will contribute to shaping the new role of ICS within ULisbon; Its ability to work with a wide range of social science disciplines in which it has developed a history of excellence and leadership, firstly within Portugal, and then internationally; Its search for interpretation and meanings that link the past, present and future, with a view to creating an in-depth multidimensional understanding of contemporary Changing Societies and their grand societal challenges (social and cultural identities and historical legacies, inequalities, migrations and minority groups, family and kinship structures, individual and collective agency, youth and ageing groups, political regimes and institutions and the quality of democracy, urban structures, environmental policies and climate change); and Its capacity to bring the perspective and diversity of non-European countries to Europe’s research and policy agendas, enriching the debate around Changing Societies by linking different histories, places and research contexts. Acknowledging the institution’s internationalisation over the last decade, ULisbon has granted ICS autonomy and specificity as a member unit devoted to research and advanced teaching in the social sciences. Thus, ICS will play a key role in contributing to the University’s ambition of significantly enhancing Portugal’s research performance. To achieve this, ICS envisages three main tasks. Firstly, having set itself the goal of strengthening its position of leadership in the social sciences, ICS will reinforce its attributes as an international Centre for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences, seizing the opportunity to build new alliances at ULisbon and internationally (From Lisbon to the World, is ULisbon’s new motto), creating strong and lasting ties with the city of Lisbon and contributing to Lisbon’s Regional Strategy. Thus, the main aim is to improve scholarship in the ICS research agenda and to increase the quality of theoretical analysis and research methods. An increase is planned in the number of visiting scholars from other national and international universities, with guest researchers from faculty departments of ULisbon also being incorporated for short periods. Secondly, ICS will help to create and lead a Doctoral School in Social Sciences within ULisbon, providing a qualified framework for PhD students enrolled in existing or forthcoming doctoral programmes. Thirdly, ICS will develop the practice of producing social reports and advice papers, in order to bridge the gap between science, society and policymakers and raise the profile of ULisbon nationally and internationally. This task will benefit from the data collected by observatories and other infrastructures created through international research networking. By setting Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges as its broad theme, ICS reveals its interest in the conditions that explain the shaping of contemporary societies and their processes of change, resulting from both short-term external shocks and longstanding inner dynamics. Indeed, there is a clear awareness of the relevance of historical, cultural, institutional, economic and social variables explaining complex phenomena that have traditionally been seen as pertaining to a single scientific enterprise. Given the complex nature of 17 societal challenges, the European research agenda assigns a special role to the social sciences in order to frame problems and solutions in ways that reach beyond disciplinary (and, at times, reductionist) interpretations. The strategy proposed by ICS endorses the responsibility to contribute to understanding and addressing key issues involving Changing Societies, namely those related with Inclusion, Citizenship and Sustainability. These issues call for the continued development of a consistent research agenda within single disciplines, but also – and chiefly – for a combination of research approaches and methods resulting from interdisciplinary, and increasingly transdisciplinary, inquiries. ICS has a unique position at ULisbon regarding the new scientific convergences emerging from the wider collaboration between different scientific domains, from the life and health sciences to the arts and humanities. Its institutional track record offers evidence of disciplinary diversity and convergence, both in the choice of themes, theoretical approaches and methods and in the advancement of graduate teaching activities. Thanks to the plurality of social sciences developed within its research groups, ICS has substantial experience with such issues as historical changes and cultural identity, the performance of political institutions, the quality of democracy, citizens’ behaviour in a risk context, and the well-being and effectiveness of welfare systems, or new family structures – to name just a few. Similarly, ICS is currently responding to global challenges related to people’s lives (fertility, ageing and health), living in modern cities (energy and transport) and ensuring resilient societies (green resources and climate change), which requires a collaboration between social sciences and life and health, engineering and environmental sciences. Finally, in addition to its overarching theme, the ICS strategy includes another important attribute. Its internationalisation has always included dialogue and collaboration with the Portuguese-speaking community of social scientists. Being in the company of scholars from Brazil and other Portuguese-speaking countries and communities will continue to give ICS the possibility of engaging in research networking on a worldwide scale, thus reinforcing the pivotal position of Portuguese R&D units – and ICS in particular – in the European research arena. ICS members, considered individually and in the framework of research groups, have proven their capacity and potential to respond to innovative challenges and are therefore fundamental in putting forward this global strategy for research development. 6.4 Laboratory intensity level of the unit and Laboratory intensity level Justification Most of the research carried out at ICS is based on the development and analysis of large databases. Moreover the ICS research programme is based on the principle that the sharing of data through common use of knowledge infrastructures is fundamental for research. On this premise, the following activities explain and justify the qualification of research at ICS as medium level laboratorial intensity. DATA COLLECTION. IASP is an inter-institutional infrastructure financed by FCT and located at ICS. ICS is the National Coordinator of the most acknowledged international social and political attitudes surveys (ESSERIC, ISSP, EVS,CSES, CNEP). Data collection (CATI techniques) follows rigorous standards and involves computer programmes for verification of data quality and its format according to the demands of data archive. IASP also provide data analysis and training in advanced quantitative methods using tools like STATA, AMOS, Mplus, HLM etc, stimulating research in a comparative and longitudinal perspective. DATA ARCHIVE. APIS, www.apis.ics.ul.pt/ is the single digital archive that stores and provides the open access to academic survey data about Portugal. APIS, an inter-institutional infrastructure financed by FCT and located at ICS, uses standardized methods for data processing and for metadata construction and 18 verification. Appropriate technological tools ensure the safe use of data archived in research or in higher education. APIS is now an observer member CESSDA. DATA DISSEMINATION. POP (Public Opinion Portal) www.pop.pt/ is an open access digital archive relating to trends in public opinion and covering a wide range of issues in society (project coordinated by ICS in partnership with Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos). LIBRARY. ICS has the best equipped Portuguese Library specialising in the social sciences, with 40,000 books and access to about 25,000 periodicals. The Library and its electronic resources are used by a wide academic community of PhD students and researchers from ULisbon and other Portuguese universities. SOCIAL HISTORY ARCHIVE. ICS is also home to the Social History Archive, with important collections for the study of working-class and corporatist organisations throughout the 20th century, as well as student revolts and nationalist African movements (late 1960s and early 1970s). The Archive provides invaluable electronic and non-electronic sources for innovative research on Portuguese social history. EXPERIMENTAL LAB for the study of human behaviour. ICS seeks to contribute to the creation of a social science experimental laboratory, counting on the collaboration of other ULisbon units that have a similar purpose. This will help to promote collaboration between scholars in economics, social psychology, political science, anthropology, sociology and health sciences. The lab will provide a large pool of respondents and electronic systems of collecting experimental data individually and in group. 6.5 General objectives The importance of social sciences as a critical element in the fabric and understanding of contemporary societies is at the core of ICS programme since its foundation. The vision and strategy outlined in the previous section will be supported by five main objectives. The strategic programme will be implemented through the activity of research groups (RGs – see section 9), addressing a common research agenda. Objective 1: To enhance scholarly excellence and innovation This overriding and primary objective relates to the development of the research agenda entitled Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges, which takes into account processes of change in contemporary societies occurring at two levels. Legacies relates to the analysis of long-term structural problems, through a perspective that gives special emphasis to the elements of continuity, permanence and persistence in social phenomena. What is the role of underlying conditions, such as cultural identity, historical processes, institutional resilience or path dependency in the shaping of contemporary societies? Challenges focuses on the impact of the present (financial, economic, environmental, cultural and political) crisis on contemporary societies. What solutions can be found to the emerging social and political problems, such as fast-growing unemployment, instability of the social welfare system, the efficiency and/or lack of public services, the effectiveness and quality of political institutions, etc.? What transition pathways will lead to more sustainable societies? To answer these questions, research conducted at ICS will privilege three analytical dimensions – Inclusion, Citizenship and Sustainability. A brief outline of each research axis follows: A) Inclusion: uses the concepts of social inclusion and exclusion as a principle for reflecting upon and explaining the stratification of societies. ICS follows an interdisciplinary notion of inclusion, encompassing both institutional and cultural aspects, which considers three dimensions of research: 1) economic inequalities and other disparities, whether social, cultural, demographic or territorial; 2) welfare regimes and participation in civil society; 3) integration in global networks of material and symbolic circulation at micro and macro levels. 19 B) Citizenship: brings together two sets of research goals, looking at citizenship, from a micro and macro perspective, respectively: 1) the study of socio-political attitudes, values and behaviours, including those related to social and political identity and political membership; and 2) the study of regimes and political institutions, including the factors determining regime change and stability and the role of political parties and electoral institutions. C) Sustainability: addresses issues aiming: 1) to understand the socio-economic, techno-scientific, and governance dynamics that affect the transition to more sustainable societies; and 2) to study social practices, governance mechanisms and public policies that facilitate (or impede) the transition of individuals, social groups and institutions towards greater adaptation, resilience and well-being. Areas of inquiry include: socio-technological transitions, spatial governance, urbanisation and territorial changes, consumption societies (food and energy) and education. Objective 2: To promote the international relevance and visibility of Portuguese research and the interaction with international scholars ICS seeks to become an internationally recognised centre for excellence in social sciences. The enhancement of its activity as a centre for advanced studies is instrumental for attaining this objective. Thus, the research agenda has been designed to align its traditional areas of inquiry, the Institute’s belief in the value of diversity and individual initiative, with the research and funding opportunities outlined within the European Research Area. The following societal challenges launched by Horizon 2020 are directly relevant to ongoing and planned research by the 7 RGs, under the new Changing Societies agenda: climate change, food security and sustainable agriculture, efficient energy consumption, social inequality, health and well-being, inclusion and institutional resilience, governance models, and identity and cultural dynamics. Objective 3: To provide a dynamic and inspiring environment for teaching and learning in the newly established ULisbon ICS intends to significantly strengthen its role as a centre for graduate teaching within ULisbon, contributing actively to the launch of a doctoral school in social sciences. It will promote collaboration with departments across the university, with an eye to encouraging increasingly interdisciplinary programmes, such as those already existing on History, Sociology and Climate Change and Sustainable Development. In terms of funding, ICS seeks to build on the recent success of the interuniversity PhD in History, which has obtained funding from the FCT Doctoral Programmes, and will present new programmes for funding. It also plans to build collaborations through Erasmus Mundus and the Marie Curie programmes. Finally, ICS will build on its recent success in promoting summer schools focusing on advanced methods for social sciences, as well as short PhD specialisation courses. Objective 4: To promote the social and political relevance of scientific knowledge ICS will continue to enhance its capacity for the dissemination of knowledge, and for bridging the gap between science, society and policymaking, with the aim of raising the profile of ULisbon around the agenda of Changing Societies. The techno-scientific dimension of modernity implies a close relationship between science and society that can only be developed by the social sciences. Three targets are envisaged: a) the consolidation of ICS Observatories and their contribution to social innovation and improved governance in the public and private sectors; b) the production of yearly social reports and policy advice statements that effectively translate scientific results for policymakers; and c) the production of publications, bringing scholarship to a wider public and contributing to debates on relevant societal issues. 20 Objective 5: To enhance the quality and efficiency of infrastructures supporting research and learning ICS needs to upgrade the quality of its systems and infrastructure in order to implement its vision and strategy. Target areas include: a) increasing the Library’s digital collections and improving public access; b) creating new platforms for data collection, aimed at extending the current capacity for international collaboration with ESS, ISS-ERIC and CESSDA-ESFRI, and for the public dissemination of ICS activities; and c) increasing qualified support for international funding applications and for the subsequent project management; 6.6 Implementation The implementation of the strategic programme has two main components: the restructuring of seven RGs that previously formed part of the thematic lines (TLs) described in the sections relating to the period 20082012, which will contribute to the ICS global scientific programme; and the definition of different types of action for the implementation of the five general objectives presented in the previous section. Both actions and objectives are defined in keeping with the assumption that the current situation in terms of human resources and funding will remain at least constant. The objectives and structure of each RG is described in the relevant sections, while here we introduce the global framework and the rationale for their configuration. Each of the seven RGs draws upon past experience and seeks to define a research agenda that is systematically oriented towards the ICS strategic programme: Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges. Together, the RG themes help to underline the identity of ICS as an R&D unit within the national and European system of science and technology. Each RG will contribute towards understanding the emerging societal trends and social issues in a changing world by focusing on three analytical dimensions – Inclusion, Citizenship and Sustainability – and by addressing the problems of Legacies and Challenges differently. The following table provides a summary overview of the contributions of each RG to ICS’ strategic programme: http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf Furthermore, the research agenda of each RG is not confined to Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges. In line with the Institute’s traditions of diversity, autonomy and scientific curiosity, each RG is invited to develop additional research goals, by either thinking critically from the margins of our main research theme or by proposing other topics considered relevant, thought-provoking and innovative for understanding contemporary societies. In fact, the opportunities offered by the diversity of researchers at ICS and international calls for research grants and projects will also influence the RGs’ agendas. The RGs include scholars who share common research interests and have a proven capacity for producing quality contributions relevant to the group’s core themes. ICS team members can serve the institutional strategic programme in distinct ways and may therefore belong to one or two groups. RGs are mainly interdisciplinary, combining at least two different scientific areas. The size of RGs will differ in terms of membership, depending on the nature of their core themes. Each RG will prepare an annual plan of activities, as well as an annual report. These documents explain how each group contributes to the ICS global scientific programme, as well as how each group develops the following common tasks: - regular and interdisciplinary seminars with the contributions of group members, as well as external researchers that work on similar or converging areas of research; 21 - incentives to publish in peer-reviewed journals and with international academic publishers; - inclusion of PhD students and postdoctoral researchers in projects developed in the context of the RG; - organisation of graduate courses and other training activities (namely summer schools and intensive workshops), as well as participation in ICS PhD programmes; - application to national and international calls for research projects (FCT, ERC, ESF and others); - public dissemination of research outcomes. Beginning in spring 2014, an internal meeting will be organised every two years to discuss and monitor the scientific outcomes of RGs, and to assess their contribution to the ICS strategic programme. The activities of RGs will contribute towards developing the following five action types that will be instrumental in implementing the general objectives and vision of ICS: 1) Excellent and innovative research In order to enhance research quality and innovation, ICS will continue to promote a friendly environment for investigation, balancing participation in RGs with individual scientific diversity. RGs and researchers are encouraged to increase publication in peer-reviewed journals with a strong impact, as well as in books produced by prestigious academic publishers, publish more co-authored works, engage with an ICS series of working papers, participate in networks leading to international calls for research funding, and pursue participation in, and the organisation of, international scientific conferences. Peer evaluation is central for enhancing its status as a Centre for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences. Over the last few years, ICS has been involved in defining assessment criteria for publishing in peer-reviewed journals (see http://www.ics.ul.pt/classifics/ ) and it will continue to provide other incentives for excellent and innovative research: - incentives for curricular improvement by granting prizes (ERICS and other) to articles and books published in high impact journals and by top publishers; - preparation of individual and RG research databases and portfolios, aiming at a permanent assessment of both individual and collective performance; - instruments of institutional benchmarking, with a critical analysis of the position of ICS in relation to other national and international institutions in the same areas of research. 2) Internationalisation In order to continue to raise its level of internationalisation, ICS will implement the following activities: - creation of a working group assigned to follow up and circulate announcements, calls and other initiatives related to the funding of international projects and to participation in international networks; - promotion of contacts and connections with European centres and R&D units with successful track records and regular experience in international competitive funding; - incentives for the presentation of ICS applications, individually or in partnership, to ERC, ESF, Marie-Curie, COST Actions and others; - incentives to visit and to welcome researchers participating in internationally funded projects, namely those related with the integration of ICS into European infrastructure networks (such as ESS and CESSDA); - incentives for the establishment of networks of graduate teaching, involving both European and nonEuropean partnerships; - support for the organisation of international scientific conferences. 22 3) Graduate teaching The recently merged ULisbon provides an inspiring environment for graduate teaching. ICS will develop several initiatives contributing to the effective launch and advancement of a doctoral school in social sciences within the ULisbon context : - widening of the participation of international partners in ICS doctoral programmes, and preparation of initiatives in order to involve ICS in Erasmus Mundus doctoral programmes; - applications submitted to new calls for FCT Doctoral Programmes, in partnership with other unit members of ULisbon (namely on topics such as Development Studies, Migrations, and Well-Being, or other subjects related with the ICS scientific programme); - participation of ICS researchers in master’s degree courses and other specialised training courses promoted by other ULisbon schools; - applications submitted to new calls for FCT Doctoral Programmes in wider partnerships with other universities (in areas such as Anthropology, Brazilian Studies, Political Science, Social Psychology, Sociology); - improvement of ICS capacities for attracting new audiences for training activities offered through the organisation of Summer Schools and specialised lifelong learning programmes. 4) Social and political relevance of knowledge Bridging the gap between science, society and policymaking is an important objective of the ICS strategic plan. ICS Observatories already produce technical and scientific knowledge that is useful to policymakers in central and local public administration, as well as to researchers in other scientific areas. Other efforts are being developed to make sure that the outputs of the scientific research produced at ICS will reach wider audiences and increase its social impact, also through collaboration with media partners: - ICS will produce an annual Social Report on the subject of Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges, aimed at a wider audience. This report will include statistical and qualitative data relevant to knowledge of Portuguese and European societies; - specialised advice papers will be produced on topics from the ICS research agenda relevant to further engagement with public expectations and needs; - ICS will promote regular meetings between researchers, members of civil society and the business world, making them more sensitive to public issues that are important for producing better social science; - ICS will promote incentives for publications aimed at a wider public, as well as for contributions to debates on relevant societal issues; - the External Advisory Committee and the Council for the Institutional Development of ICS will help ICS to engage in more active ways with other constituencies of civil society (national and international). 5) Qualification of infrastructures and technical resources ICS infrastructures and technical resources are known for their reliability and their ability to respond to the challenges faced by researchers and the institutional setting. In order to pursue the new objectives of the strategic programme, ICS will invest above all in three domains: a digital library in social sciences that includes new platforms for gathering data, and new collections of journals and books, with the aim of providing ICS researchers with immediate access to a global science environment; - delivery of updated data on research outcomes, productivity indicators and bibliometric measuring; 23 qualified technical support for research applications, project management and follow-up, and international networking. 6.7 Contributions for the regional strategy Europe 2020 is designed to promote intelligent, sustainable and inclusive growth. ICS has scientific expertise that may make an important contribution both to those specific aims and to an integrated overview in the context of major themes related to current societal challenges. The Lisbon’s Regional Action Plan for 2014-2020, which defines the RIS3 strategy for the Lisbon area, has not yet been approved (December 2013). However, the Regional Innovation Scoreboard (2012) considered the Lisbon area to be an innovation leader within European regions, which means it has relevant regional innovation ecosystems in well-defined domains. On the other hand, this region includes the country’s capital and is Portugal’s main metropolitan area. Therefore, it is home to the majority of the government departments and a vast number of innovative enterprises and important non-governmental organisations. Finally, the region’s geographical setting explains its long history of sea-based activities and its strong potential for the development of the maritime cluster. The regional context therefore favours the development of research and innovation strategies geared towards specialisation, based on the involvement of qualified stakeholders, aimed at the creation of synergies, and designed to improve governance procedures for innovation in its different components (technological, organisational and social innovation). Drawing on its outreach experience, ICS will contribute to the dissemination and absorption of knowledge by business firms, national and local authorities, civil society organisations and citizens in general in the Lisbon Region and in the neighbouring regions, in such fields as climate change, active ageing, sustainable consumption, cultural industries, clean technologies, energy efficiency, blue economy or the health cluster. Through the creation of up-to-date, independent and reliable information, as well as global knowledge sensitive to the region’s priorities, the ICS Strategic Programme will promote research strategies that can establish an enduring bridge between the European scientific agenda (Horizon 2020) and the RIS3 strategies adopted in the Lisbon Region and surrounding regions. Just as it has done throughout its history, ICS will develop new concepts and approaches that allow for private and public decision-makers and citizens to explore new opportunities and to profit from emerging tendencies, based on the Region’s competitive advantages and aiming at building a new regional prosperity cycle based upon more intelligent, sustainable and inclusive growth models. In the light of ULisbon strategic concerns, the research agenda of ICS will give particular attention to issues related to the maritime and health clusters. 6.8 Opportunities for advanced training ICS provides a platform for institutional and intellectual exchange, with the effective involvement of an extended community of faculty and research members from different national and international backgrounds in the various fields of the social sciences. Having begun its first doctoral courses in 2000, ICS 24 has since organised several PhD programmes in different fields of the social sciences. In the present academic year, the following programmes are running: - 3 PhD programmes organised exclusively by ICS, but with the collaboration of scholars from other universities: Anthropology, Comparative Politics and Sociology; - 4 PhD programmes jointly organised with other Portuguese universities: History – Change and Continuity in a Global World, Migrations, Social Psychology and Climate Change and Sustainable Development Policies. - 1 PhD programme in which ICS researchers actively collaborate: Nursing. The PhD Programme in History has been approved by FCT Programmes and will grant 16 scholarships up to 2016. ICS will submit joint applications with other university partners to the forthcoming FCT calls to support excellence in the training of PhD students, and will promote the integration of scholarships awarded by national and international private firms and foundations. The participation of ICS members in international research networks allows for optimistic expectations about future collaborations with European partners in applications to Erasmus Mundus programmes. Attracting students from non-Portuguese speaking countries and contributing to the development of an academic environment without language barriers is therefore an important objective. Guest lectures and thematic seminars are often given in English, and students are allowed to write their dissertations in other languages. ICS presently hosts 125 PhD students preparing theses, with an annual turnover of 30 newly-enrolled students. ICS has accumulated expertise in graduate education in the different social sciences, with the interdisciplinary nature of its programmes, its strict entry requirements and its rigorous monitoring and supervision of students, all ensuring attractive conditions for the further development of a doctoral school in social sciences. Other opportunities to develop advanced training activities stem from the experience gained through the organisation of summer schools on advanced methods applied to social sciences, which are expected to be further developed in the form of specialised graduate programmes awarding a diploma. The aim is to attract non-academic participants interested in knowledge improvement and career development in social sciences. Finally, the regular visits made by PhD students – especially from Brazil, but also from EU – and other young scholars integrated into research projects allow for wider participation in doctoral seminars and training workshops, thus contributing to the project to establish a Doctoral School in Social Sciences. 6.9 Internationalization ICS is one of the most internationally oriented Portuguese research institutions in the field of the social sciences. Our aim is to expand this institutional orientation to make ICS one of Europe’s leading centres for the production and dissemination of social-scientific knowledge. The ICS internationalisation strategy involves: 1) the production and transfer of knowledge; 2) graduate teaching; and 3) funding opportunities at an international level. The internationalisation of the production of social-scientific knowledge involves four main strategic orientations. Firstly, the production of scientific articles and monographs by ICS members is increasingly aimed at international peer-review journals and academic publishers. Secondly, the ICS journal, Análise Social (now accepted for coverage by the Scielo Citation Index) has been increasingly publishing scientific articles in English in the last few years and will continue to do so in the foreseeable future. Thirdly, the ICS 25 press, Imprensa de Ciências Sociais, will likewise continue to publish works aimed at an international audience, especially in Portuguese-speaking countries. Fourthly, other important components of this strategy of disseminating results across the globe include participating in, and/or coordinating, international research networks and international conferences. As for the transfer of knowledge, ICS draws on its vast experience as the national partner of international agencies that monitor social and political attitudes, such as the European Social Survey or the International Social Survey Programme. Future aims in this regard include consolidating and expanding the distribution of this knowledge and ensuring its availability for future users. As far as graduate teaching is concerned, the goal is to increase the international profile of the current supply by internationalising curricula, increasing the intake of international scholars and students at ICS, and promoting their participation in research programmes, as well as in current ICS PhD programmes. It also involves organising research and graduate teaching consortia with research and higher education institutions from European and non-European countries. These consortia can be of different types, namely franchising, twinning arrangements and programmes including research traineeships in foreign institutions. Finally, ICS saw a marked increase in the number and success rate of its international applications for funding over the period 2008-2012, and seeks to continue to improve this record. The award of an ERC Consolidator Grant in 2013 should be emphasised. Concrete opportunities to expand fundraising include Horizon 2020, the Social Sciences Research Council, the ERC, as well as non-European funding agencies. The regular publication of a newsletter with information on funding opportunities is one of the instruments available for ICS members. 6.10 Knowledge transfer Knowledge transfer should be considered here as the different processes by which research institutions interact with non-academic institutions, and with citizens, enabling the use of knowledge and expertise to promote technological, institutional and social innovation. ICS has so far developed a programme for knowledge transfer that has four Observatories of Portuguese society; open access to knowledge infrastructures; consultancy and applied expertise; contacts with the media. It is expected that Institutional Development, composed of renowned Portuguese personalities, will improvement of these activities. main dimensions: projects involving the Committee of contribute to the Contemporary societies are characterised by growing complexity, being spaces where political and technical decision-makers, private agents and companies, other organisations and citizens in general interact. All these agents require rigorous indicators on which to base their decisions. ICS hosts five Observatories focusing on environment, culture, democracy, family, and youth and ageing. Throughout the next five years, a process of restructuring will be implemented in conjunction with the new research plan, giving special emphasis to the publication of a Social Report on Portugal (triennial) and advice papers on relevant societal issues. As far as open access facilities are concerned, ICS has created two infrastructures open to the academic community, decision-makers and society at large: the Infrastructure of Portuguese Social and Political Attitudes (IASP) and the Portuguese Social Information Archive (APIS). The first of these, IASP, conducts several surveys, but its core survey is the ESS-ERIC. The databases of ESS are largely disseminated among scholars, public policymakers and private decision-makers. The IASP will maintain its important role in the design of ESS data collection procedures and questionnaires. Online dissemination of data will be promoted, and the collaboration with FFMS on the Portal da Opinião Pública will be continued. The second 26 infrastructure, APIS, is a multi-institutional digital archive of survey questionnaires, created in 2006, coordinated by ICS. APIS is already a member of CESSDA-AS, and we will now take steps to integrate APIS into CESSDA-ERIC. As far as consultancy and expertise projects are concerned, ICS enjoys regular collaboration with National Councils and public organisations, producing research outcomes that can be used in the design of public policies, and developing projects commissioned by national and international organisations, both public and private, in the different domains of its expertise. It seems feasible to assume that these activities will increase their contribution to 15% of ICS funding. Finally, the impact of ICS research through the media is already one of its institutional features that will be further enhanced in the future, in order to show the social relevance of scientific research outcomes. 6.11 Ethical issues The main issues that raise ethical implications in the research undertaken by ICS scholars are linked to methodological approaches and data collection, including the way we recruit participants, the rules set for working with children or potentially vulnerable adults, the need to define information sheets and consent forms, the need to define and communicate confidentiality rules regarding the information obtained, the way policy recommendations are defined on the basis of the data collected, and issues regarding intellectual property rights. As a rule, ICS ensures that researchers understand that ethical approval should not be considered as a bureaucratic obstacle, but rather as a fundamental part of their design and method. Whenever appropriate, scholars are required to apply the most stringent guidance and regulations available for each of the above aspects of ICS research, including the guidance notes made available through CORDIS (http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ethics_en.html). Thus, the research topics of ICS projects and advanced training programmes are subject to rigorous scrutiny that seeks to ensure the safety, rights, dignity and well-being of both the participant and the researcher, and to prevent ethical incompatibility. The protection of confidentiality and secrecy is a crucial part of all methodological procedures that involve data collection or the administration of surveys and practices by all scientific research teams in areas in which these issues are relevant (particularly sociology and political science). Particular attention is given to the experimental scope of the work undertaken by ICS (including social psychology and economics) and the many projects involving fieldwork of an ethnographic nature (especially in the case of social and cultural anthropology), which are framed by ethical precautions that protect the fundamental rights of the people involved as the subject of study. Finally, a significant part of ICS research receives funding from national and international agencies, and often entails a policy-applied dimension. The use of research outcomes involving the development of recommendations for public policies is also governed by ethical principles that safeguard intellectual property and freedom of thought in relation to the donors of these studies. In order to acknowledge the relevance of ethical issues in scientific research, ICS will present a proposal for the constitution of a Commission of Ethics in the ULisbon. 27 7. Expected Indicators of the Strategic Programme 2015/2020 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Total Publications in peer-review international journals 50 55 60 60 65 65 355 Patents and performing patents 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 80 80 80 80 80 80 480 22 24 26 26 28 30 156 Conference proceedings 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 New materials, devices, products and processes, software, computer codes and algorithms 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Books, including single-authored works (including scholarly editions of oral or written texts and translations with introduction and commentary) 20 20 20 20 25 25 130 Edited special issues of journals, with substantial research input on the part of the researcher 5 5 5 5 5 5 30 Chapters in books, including contributions to conference proceedings, essays in collections 70 70 70 65 65 65 405 Creative writing (to the extent that it embodies research) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dictionary entries investigation) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Encyclopedia entries (to the extent that they embody research) 8 8 8 8 8 8 48 Audio/visual and electronic/digital materials 2 2 2 2 2 2 12 Other categories, including web-based resources; video and audio recordings (to the extent that they embody research) 7 7 7 7 7 7 42 Performances and exhibitions to the extent that they embody research 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Industrial research contracts 2 2 4 4 4 4 20 10 10 10 10 10 10 60 Books and distribution chapters PhD theses under integrated members Research contracts international bodies of the international supervision (forming with part national of of or 28 8. Proposed Research Team 8.1 Criteria adopted by the R&D unit for the definition of integrated member, if different from FCT’s reference table We adopted the criteria established by the FCT concerning both the constitution of the research team and the indicators of scientific production associated with the members integrated within the ICS. All the researchers hold the academic degree of either PhD or Habilitation and have either a permanent or temporary contractual link with a Portuguese institution. The criteria established by the FCT concerning the productivity indicators associated to researchers were also met: for the researchers with a PhD obtained after 31/12/2009 at least 2 indicators of scientific production were presented, while for researchers with a PhD obtained before 31/12/2009 4 indicators were presented. With regard to scientific production, we have given priority to articles published in peerreviewed journals. It should also be pointed out that beyond meeting the formal requirements indicated by FCT concerning scientific production, other elements were also considered from a substantial point of view: a) the link between the selected outputs and the thematic interests of the researchers as well as their relevance to and consistency with the objectives of the research groups to which they belong and with the strategic programme submitted; b) the selection of other publications representing the global diversity of outputs produced by ICS researchers, namely books and books chapters of either international or national scope. 8.2List of Integrated Members / 10 nuclear CVs Jorge Vala António Costa Pinto Cristiana Bastos Jaime Reis João Ferrão José Luís Cardoso José Machado Pais Karin Wall Pedro Lains Pedro Magalhães 29 Name Nuclear CV ORCID iD Jorge Manuel Vala Salvador (Coordinator) √ 0000-0003-1265-4936 Alice Oliveira Ramos 0000-0001-9512-0571 Amilcar Manuel Reis Moreira 0000-0003-2489-7775 Ana Cristina Rodrigues Espírito Santo 0000-0002-4059-8129 Ana Isabel Oliveira Delicado 0000-0001-9657-396X Ana Margarida de Seabra Nunes de Almeida 0000-0003-3174-3870 Ana Maria Nabais dos Santos Evans de Carvalho 0000-0002-8475-9609 Ana Maria do Rosário Rei Silva Horta 0000-0002-2921-039X Andrés Malamud 0000-0001-8838-1650 Ângela Maria Barreto Xavier 0000-0002-4367-6647 AnnaRita Gori 0000-0002-8703-8700 Anne Cova 0000-0002-1257-2167 Antonio Maria Braga de Macedo de Castro Henriques 0000-0003-2796-374X Antonio Munoz Sanchez 0000-0003-4904-2685 António Jorge Pais Costa Pinto √ 0000-0002-3478-1795 Bruno César Santos Cardoso Reis 0000-0002-2544-6696 Cláudia Maria Guerra Madeira 0000-0003-2346-6885 Cristiana Lage David Bastos √ 0000-0001-5387-4770 Cícero Roberto Pereira 0000-0003-3406-3985 Denis Michel Sindic 0000-0002-3986-5349 Erin Brooke Taylor 0000-0002-7636-7330 Filipa Alves Raimundo 0000-0001-8736-9617 Filipa Maria Lowndes Marques de Araújo Vicente 0000-0002-3334-3064 Filipe Miguel Carreira da Silva 0000-0003-2459-0802 Francesco Vacchiano 0000-0002-2445-7422 Henry Robert Outten 0000-0002-5249-6904 Isabel Maria Rocha Pinto 0000-0001-5788-4140 Jaime Brown Garcia Reis √ 0000-0003-4990-2905 João Ferrão √ 0000-0001-7729-1908 João Manuel Monteiro de Castro Vasconcelos 0000-0002-7125-2163 João Paulo dos Santos de Pina Cabral 0000-0001-7729-1908 José Conceição Mendes Marques 0000-0003-3429-0774 José Luis de Oliveira Garcia 0000-0002-9387-9047 José Manuel Rodrigues Ferreira Sobral 0000-0003-3098-3434 José Pedro Zúquete 0000-0001-6209-6931 30 José António Afonso Santana Pereira Santucci 0000-0002-1713-3710 José António Machado Silva Pais √ 0000-0003-2229-3345 José Luís Cardoso √ 0000-0001-8432-1052 José Manuel Taborda Barreto José Pedro Cidade Lains e Silva 0000-0001-7160-5750 √ 0000-0003-1810-1734 João Francisco Charrua Guerra 0000-0003-1918-2273 João Morais Mourato 0000-0003-0891-4897 Karin Elizabeth Wall Gago √ 0000-0002-6452-8352 Lucia Coppolaro 0000-0003-2562-6926 Luís Filipe Salgado de Matos 0000-0002-4652-709X Manuel Villaverde Cabral 0000-0003-4679-5569 Maria Dulce Alves Freire 0000-0003-2969-4440 Maria Elsa Marques Peralta da Silva 0000-0003-1366-3797 Maria Isabel Carvalho Corrêa da Silva 0000-0001-7854-0902 Maria Luísa da Rocha Vasconcelos Quaresma 0000-0001-5292-2603 Maria Luísa de Carvalho de Albuquerque Schmidt 0000-0002-7449-8636 Maria Manuel Baptista Vieira da Fonseca 0000-0002-2544-9694 Maria Teresa Duarte Martinho 0000-0003-1463-4197 Maria da Coneicao Couto de Andrade Martins 0000-0001-8697-0195 Mariana Coimbra Ferreira de Almeida 0000-0002-0235-4676 Marina Castelo Branco da Costa Lobo Lains 0000-0002-7329-0972 Marta Pedro Varanda 0000-0002-9762-2724 Marta Rodrigues Vilar Rosales 0000-0001-6576-2039 Marzia Grassi 0000-0003-0808-7879 Matteo António Albanese 0000-0002-4305-4629 Miguel Bandeira de Carvalho Jerónimo 0000-0002-8829-4909 Mónica Truninger de Albuquerque de Medeiros Sousa 0000-0002-4251-2261 Nina Clara Tiesler 0000-0002-3712-5929 Nuno Goncalo Pimenta Freitas Monteiro 0000-0003-3956-8026 Nuno Miguel Rodrigues Domingos 0000-0003-1616-6710 Olivia Claudia Bina 0000-0001-9183-7508 Patrícia Carla Valente Ferraz de Matos 0000-0001-7322-3756 Paulo Jorge Granjo Simoes 0000-0003-1567-5839 Pedro Maria da Cunha Moura Ferreira 0000-0003-4349-3709 Pedro Miguel Dias Costa Coutinho Magalhães √ 0000-0001-8934-4552 Pedro Miguel de Jesus Alcântara da Silva 0000-0002-2036-1888 Riccardo Marchi 0000-0003-2037-7027 31 Rita Maria Cristovam Cipriano Almeida de Carvalho 0000-0002-6808-5720 Ricardo Nuno Afonso Roque 0000-0002-9304-4103 Rui Alberto Morais Costa Silva Lopes 0000-0002-1509-6397 Rui Manuel Monteiro Lopes Ramos 0000-0002-9358-2374 Ruy Jesús de Llera Blanes 0000-0001-7547-8920 Sanda Dominique Samitca 0000-0002-6573-9565 Simone Frangella 0000-0003-3021-4096 Simone Tulumello 0000-0002-6660-3432 Sofia Cristina Pappámikail da Costa Marinho 0000-0002-0307-2072 Sofia Isabel da Costa d´Aboim Inglez 0000-0002-6605-8614 Susana Dores de Matos Viegas 0000-0001-5975-9327 Susana Isabel Atalaia Ferreira 0000-0002-7271-6062 Sónia Cristina Nunes Alves 0000-0003-1231-8588 Vanessa Sofia Gomes da Cunha 0000-0003-2576-3111 Vitor Sérgio Coelho Ferreira 0000-0001-8080-9288 32 9. Proposed Research Groups (RG-50013-76) Power, Society and Globalization 9.1. Identification of the Research Group 9.1.1 Reference of the research group: RG-50013-76 9.1.2 Name of the Research Group in portuguese: 9.1.3 Name of the Research Group in English: Power, Society and Globalization 9.1.4Keyword(s): 1. World and transnational history 2. Political and institutional change 3. Social and cultural movements 4. Globalization and development 9.1.5 Existed in 2008/2012 - Yes 9.1.6 Participating Institution(s) to which the Research Group belongs: N/A 9.2. Researchers in the Group 9.2.1 List of Integrated Members / 3 nuclear CVs Name Principal Investigator Nuclear CV José Pedro Cidade Lains e Silva √ √ José Luís Cardoso √ Anne Cova √ AnnaRita Gori Antonio Maria Braga de Macedo de Castro Henriques Antonio Munoz Sanchez Bruno César Santos Cardoso Reis Filipa Maria Lowndes Marques de Araújo Vicente Jaime Brown Garcia Reis José Pedro Zúquete Lucia Coppolaro Luís Filipe Salgado de Matos 33 Maria da Conceição Couto de Andrade Martins Maria Dulce Alves Freire Maria Isabel Carvalho Corrêa da Silva Matteo Antonio Albanese Miguel Bandeira de Carvalho Jerónimo Nuno Gonçalo Pimenta Freitas Monteiro Riccardo Marchi Rita Maria Cristovam Cipriano Almeida de Carvalho Rui Manuel Monteiro Lopes Ramos 9.2.2 List of current PhD students Name André Luís Marques Costa Carlos Manuel dos Santos Alves Ferreira Faísca Catarina Antunes Costa Isabel Maria Baptista Bolas José Manuel Guedes de Sousa Pedro Miguel Martins Mendonça 9.2.3 List of other researchers of the Research Group Name Ana Margarida de Almeida Casimiro Rodrigues Isabel Cristina dos Guimarães Sanches e Sá João Gonçalo Ramalho Fialho Mafalda de Sousa Machado Soares da Cunha Maria Leonor Freire Costa Paulo Miguel Paixão dos Santos Silva Pedro António Almeida Cardim 9.3. Research Group Description and Achievements for 2008/2012 9.3.1 Description of the Research Group The research group on Power, Society and Globalization is dedicated to the historical study of social, economic, political and institutional changes in today’s world, following the research carried out at ICS-UL by the former research group entitled MACO. The research starts out from the analysis of the case of Portugal and develops further by integrating the study of the former Portuguese Empire, and that of the 34 close relationship between Portugal and other countries and globalization. The main objective is to look at issues that are related to World History with lenses built on the Portuguese historical tradition. Due to the fact that Portugal is well entrenched in World History, that perspective has proven highly enlightening. The research group brings together historians from different areas, namely, social, economic, political and cultural historians, who have close contact with researchers in International Relations, Economics and Anthropology. Some of the members of the group are proficient in other national entities, and this has enriched its overall activity. The group will thus adopt an interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of longterm processes of change and continuity that reveal the importance of economic, social, political, cultural and institutional factors, casting light not only on historical changes, but also on the contemporary world. The broad ambitions and objectives of the research group can be assessed specifically by looking at the topics it has covered in the past five years. Research topics can be traced to publications output because of the close connection between research activities and publications. The group has worked on the following main areas and topics (date of start of research in brackets): Economic History: “Prices, wages and rents in Portugal, 1500-1900” (2008); “Institutional Barriers and Economic Growth in Portugal before 1914” (2008); “Paying for the Liberal State. The Rise of Public Finances in Nineteenth Century Europe” (2008); “Corporatism: Economics and Politics in the Interwar Period” (2008); “Modernizing ambitions. Proposals to transform the Portuguese agriculture in the second half of the 20th century” (2008); “Economic growth and wage inequality during Portugal’s Estado Novo, 19451974” (2008); “Regional GDP in Portugal, 1900-2000” (2008); “Ownership, Concentration of Power and Governance in the Portuguese Corporate Sector (1850-1914)” (2009); “Corporatism Political Institutions and Economic Performance: Studies in Contemporary European History” (2010); Political History: “Political Communication in the Portuguese Monarchy (1580-1808)” (2010); “Portugal, Brazil and Napoleonic Europe” (2008); “The Parliament during the Crisis of Portuguese Liberalism (18901926)” (2008); “Mouzinho de Albuquerque: A Knight from Other Times” (2009); “Dictionary of the History of the Republic and Republicanism” (2009); “Political Elites, Single Parties and Decision in the Age of Fascisms: Portugal, Spain, Italy and Germany” (2011); “Portugal and the End of European Colonial Empires: The New State and the Diplomacy of Colonialism (1945-1975)” (2009); “The End of the Portuguese Colonial Empire in a Comparative Perspective” (2010); “The Semi-Presidential State: State of the Art and World Presence” (2008); “Women and Associativism: Brazil, France, Italy and Portugal (1888-1939)” (2009); “State, Society and Modernization of Agriculture in the Iberian Peninsula (19th and 20th Centuries)” (2008). Social and Cultural History: “Sacred Letters, Clergy, Books and Written Culture in Portugal and its Empire (1540-1750)” (2008); “The Government of the Other. Political Imaginary in the Portuguese Empire (14961961)” (2009); “Contributions to the History of Science and Economic Ideas” (2008); “Knowledge and Vision: Photography Archive and Museum in Colonial Portuguese (1850-1950)” (2011); “Goa on Display: Exhibitions, Histories and Identities (1850-1950)” (2009). 9.3.2. Main achievements Publications: Researchers in this group published a significant number of books and book chapters, namely: in 2008, 9 books (5 as authors and 4 as editors) and 34 book chapters; in 2009, 8 books (3 as authors and 5 as editors) and 26 book chapters; in 2010, 16 books (11 as authors and 5 as editors) and 34 book chapters; in 2011, 9 books (4 as authors and 5 as editors) and 22 book chapters; in 2012, 12 books (7 as authors and 5 as editors) and 40 book chapters. Reflecting the high degree of internationalization, a large number of these books have been published by well-known international publishers, namely, Ashgate, Cambridge University Press, Columbia University Press, Cornell University Press, École Normale 35 Supérieure Éditions, Palgrave-Macmillan, Peter Lang, Routledge and Stanford University Press. Reviews of the books appeared in the leading journals in History: American Historical Review, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, Economic History Review, French History, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Journal of Modern History, Scandinavian Economic History Review, Social History. The quality and high degree of internationalization of the group’s work can also be assessed in the number of publications in peer review journals, namely Explorations in Economic History, Historical Research, History of Political Economy, The Leadership Quarterly, Scandinavian Economic History Review. The total number of publications in peer review journals is 17 in 2008; 13 in 2009 (9 in international peer-reviewed journals); 8 in 2010; 9 in 2011; 16 in 2012. In 2011, four of the group’s researchers received the ERICS awards for Promotion and Recognition of the Internationalization of the Social Sciences. Funding: The group has diversified its funding with national and international private and public institutions (BPI; Caixa Geral de Depósitos; European Union; Routledge). In the period 2008-2012, the total amount of funding awarded to current ongoing projects is €895,000. Financed by the FCT, the RG has managed several projects, just to mention two examples: “Corporatism, Political institutions and Economic Performance: Advances in Contemporary European History” and “Prices, Wages and Rents in Portugal, 1500-1900”. Graduate training: An important achievement of the group is the creation of the first inter-university PhD in History in Portugal, founded in 2008 in co-partnership with other institutions. Currently, the director of this PhD programme is core CV of the group. Between 2008 and 2012, 25 doctoral dissertations were concluded, and there are close to 37 ongoing dissertations. Conferences, seminars and workshops: The research group has also hosted a total of 30 lectures between 2009 and 2010, given by distinguished professors from international universities such as Cambridge, Columbia, European University Institute and Oxford, and national universities. In 2008, researchers presented 49 papers; in 2009, 52; in 2010, 46; in 2011, 58 and in 2012, 73. Organizing international conferences at the ICS with scholars coming from different institutions and countries has also been a priority. Other: Members of the group have been on the editorial boards of The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, The European Review of Economic History and Women’s History Review; and have been involved in international graduate teaching programmes, as invited professors or in the context of Marie-Curie fellowships. Developing international networking has been also a priority: for example the “Women and social movements International Advisory Board” included 30 countries and scholars from Harvard University, Max Planck Institute Berlin and Central European University. Another aim of the group is to try to reach a non-academic public: the publication of the History of Portugal, which is now in its sixth edition, sold more than 20,000 copies. 9.4. Research Group Output 2008/2012 9.4.1 Publications in peer reviewed journals and/or other publications Lains, P. (2008). The Portuguese economy in the Irish mirror, 1960-2002. Open Economies Review, 19 (5), 667-683. (IF JCR 2012: 0.404, SJR 2012: 0,398, n.º of citations: 9). 36 Esteves, R. P., Reis, J. & Ferramosca, F. (2009). Market Integration in the Golden Periphery. The Lisbon/London Exchange, 1854-1891. Explorations in Economic History. 46, 324-345. (IF JCR 2012: 0.686, SJR 2012: 1,175, n.º of citations: 16). Cardoso, J. L. (2009). Free trade, political economy and the birth of a new economic nation: Brazil 18081810. Revista de Historia Económica – Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History. 27 (2), 183204. (IF JCR 2012: 0.545, SJR 2012: 0,339, n.º of citations: 4). Cardoso, J. L., & Cunha, A. M. (2012). Enlightened reforms and economic discourse in the PortugueseBrazilian Empire (1750–1808). History of Political Economy. 44 (4), 619-641. (IF JCR 2012: 0.227, SJR 2012: 0,252, n.º of citations: 0). Cova, A. (2010). International feminisms in historical comparative perspective: France, Italy and Portugal, 1880s-1930s. Women's history review. 19 (4), 595-612. (A&HCI, SJR 2012: 0,149, n.º of citations: 2). Reis, B. C. & Oliveira, P. A. (2012). Cutting heads or winning hearts: late colonial portuguese counterinsurgency and the Wiriyamu massacre of 1972. Civil Wars. 14 (1), 80-103. (SJR 2012: 0,380, n.º of citations: 0). Freire, D. (2011). Produzir mais e melhor: Estado, agricultura y consumo alimentario en Portugal (19261974). Ayer. 83(3), 101-126. (SSCI/A&HCI, SJR, n.º of citations: 0). Coppolaro, L. (2011). US Policy on European Integration during the GATT Kennedy Round Negotiations (1963–67): the last Hurrah of America's Europeanists. The International History Review. 33(3), 409-429. (A&HCI, SJR 2012: 0,102, n.º of citations: 0). Muñoz Sanchez, A. (2012). Una introducción a la historia de la emigración española en la República Federal de Alemania (1960-1980). Iberoamericana. XII (46), 23-42. (n.º of citations: 0). Vicente, F. L. (2012). The thousand and one nights of Paris: An indian traveler at the 1867 universal exhibition. Quaderns d’Història de l’Enginyeria. 13, 133-151. (n.º of citations: 0). 9.4.2 Completed PhD theses Francisco Bernal Garcia, “La Transición del sindicalismo vertical al sindicalismo democrático en España 1936-1976. Una interpretación a través del caso de Andalucía”, supervised by Jaime Reis. Thesis completed in 2008, Instituto Universitário Europeu (Florença, Itália). Francisco Parejo Moruno, “El negocio de exportación corchera en España y Portugal durante el siglo XX: cambios e intervención pública”, supervised by Pedro Lains. Thesis completed in 2009, Universidad de Extremadura (Espanha). Antonio Muñoz Sanchez, “La política del SPD hacia el PSOE desde la dictadura à la democracia (1962-1977) de la solidaridad à La Real politik”, supervised by Jaime Reis. Thesis completed in 2010, Instituto Universitário Europeu (Florença, Itália). Maria Cristina Joanaz de Melo, “Contra cheias e tempestades: consciência do território, debate parlamentar e políticas de águas e de florestas em Portugal, 1852-1886”, supervised by Jaime Reis. Thesis completed in 2010, Instituto Universitário Europeu (Florença, Itália). Ramon Muñoz, “Globalisation and the International Markets for the Mediterranean Export Commodities: the Case of Olive Oil, 1850-1938”, supervised by Jaime Reis. Thesis completed in 2010, Instituto Universitário Europeu (Florença, Itália). Nelson Mendes Cantarino, “A razão e a ordem: o Bispo José Joaquim da Cunha de Azeredo Coutinho e a defesa ilustrada do antigo regime português (1742-1821)”, supervised by José Luís Cardoso. Thesis completed in 2012, Universidade de São Paulo, Brasil. 37 Manuela Tavares, “Feminismos em Portugal (1927-2007)”, co-supervised by por Anne Cova. Thesis completed in 2008, Universidade Aberta. Teresa Pinto, “A formação profissional das mulheres no ensino industrial público (1884-1910). Realidades e representações”, co-supervised by Anne Cova. Thesis completed in 2008, Universidade Aberta. Ana Rias, “A universidade no contexto da reforma Veiga Simão : 1971”, supervised by Rui Ramos. Thesis completed in 2010, Universidade Católica Portuguesa. Maria Isabel Correia da Silva, “O espelho fraterno: o Brasil no discurso do republicanismo português (c.1889-c.1914)”, supervised by Rui Ramos. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais Universidade de Lisboa. 9.4.4 Books and book chapters of international circulation Lains, P. & Pinilla, V. (Eds) (2009). Agriculture and Economic Development in Europe since 1870. London: Routledge. ISBN: 978-0-415-42487-5 Battilossi, S. & Reis, J. (2010). State and financial systems in Europe and the USA : historical perspectives on regulation and supervision in the Nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Surrey: Ashgate. ISBN: 978-0-75466594-6 Cardoso, J. L. & Lains, P. (Eds) (2010). Paying for the Liberal State: the rise of public finance in nineteenthcentury Europe. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN: 978-0-521-51852-9 Houpt, S., Lains, P. & Schön, L. (2010). Sectoral developments, 1945-2000. In Broadberry, Stephen & O'Rourke, Kevin H. (Eds), The Cambridge economic history of modern Europe (vol. 2, pp. 333-359). Cambridge: University Press. ISBN: 9780521128247 Cardoso, J. L. (2012). Economics in an age of crisis: lessons from the past and present. In N. Salvadori, C. Gehrke, I. Steedman, R. Sturn (Eds), Classical political economy and modern theory: essays in honour of Heinz Kurz (pp. 313-329). London and New York: Routledge/ Taylor and Francis. ISBN: 978-0415679817 Ramos, R. (2008). A revolução de 1808 e as origens do liberalismo em Portugal: um debate e uma reinterpretação. In Alfredo Ávila & Pedro Pérez Herrero (Orgs), Las Experiencias de 1808 en Iberoamérica. México: Universidad de Alcalá y Universidad Autónoma de México. ISBN: 978-970-32-5106-3 Cova, A. (Dir.) (2009). Histoire comparée des femmes: nouvelles approches. Lyon: ENS éditions. ISBN: 9782-84788-142-4 Monteiro, N. G. (2009). Pombal's Government: Between Seventeenth-Century Valido and Enlightened Models. In Gabriel Paquette (Ed.), Enlightened Reform in Southern Europe and its Atlantic colonies, c. 1750-1830 (pp.321-338). England/USA: Ashgate. ISBN: 978-0-7546-6425-3 Cova, A. & Dumons, B. (Dir.) (2010). Destins de femmes: religion, culture et société (France, XIXe-Xxe siècles). Paris: Letouzey et Ané. ISBN: 978-2-7063-0275-6 Coppolaro, L. (2012). The establishment of the EEC as an international actor: the development of the common commercial policy in the GATT negotiations of the Kennedy Round (1962-1967). In F. Guirao, F. M. B. Lynch & S. M. R. Pérez (Eds), Alan S. Milward and a Century of European Change (pp. 459-480). London, New York: Routledge. ISBN: 978-0-415-87853-1 9.4.5 Conference proceedings Cova, A. (2009). O conselho nacional das mulheres portuguesas (1914-1947): o caso português numa perspectiva comparada. In Second feminist conference (CD-ROM Edition). Lisbon: Gulbenkian Foundation. 38 9.4.8 Books, including single-authored works (including scholarly editions of oral or written texts and translations with introduction and commentary) Reis, J. (2011). Uma elite financeira: os corpos sociais do Banco de Portugal 1846-1914. Lisboa: Banco de Portugal. Lains, P. (2011). História da Caixa Geral de Depósitos 1974-2010: política nacional, banca pública e integração europeia. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Costa, L. F., Lains, P. & Miranda, S. M. (2011). História Económica de Portugal, 1143-2010. Libsoa: Esfera dos Livros. Freire, D., Rovisco, E. & Fonseca, I. (Coord.) (2009). Contrabando na Fronteira Luso-Espanhola: práticas, memórias e patrimónios. Lisboa: Edições Nelson de Matos. Monteiro, N. (2008). D. José. Na sombra de Pombal (2ª ed. revista e ampliada). Lisboa: Temas e Debates Ramos, R. (Coord.), Sousa, B. V. & Monteiro, N. G. (2009). História de Portugal. Lisboa: Esfera dos Livros. Cardoso, J. L., Monteiro, N. G. & Serrão, J. V. (Eds) (2010). Portugal, Brasil e a Europa Napoleónica. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Vicente, F. L. (2012). A arte sem história: mulheres e cultura artística (séculos XVI-XX). Lisboa: Athena (Babel). Jerónimo, M. B. (Org.). (2012). O Império colonial em questão (sécs. XIX-XX): poderes, saberes e instituições. (História & sociedade). Lisboa: Edições 70. Lains, P. (Org.) (2009). Sem Fronteiras. Os Novos Horizontes da Economia Portuguesa. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 9.4.9 Edited special issues of journals, with substantial research input on the part of the researcher Allen, A. T., Cova, A. & Purvis, J. (2010). International feminisms. Women's history review. 19 (4). Monteiro, N. (Coord.) (2010). A idade Moderna. In Mattoso, José (Dir). História da vida privada em Portugal, 2º v. Lisboa: Círculo de Leitores / Temas e debates. Freire, D. & Pereira, V. (Org.). (2012). Dossier. Interdisciplinaridade em acção. Experiências de pesquisa em contexto rural. Ler História, 62, 125-167. 9.4.10 Chapters in books, including contributions to conference proceedings, essays in collections Martins, C. A. (2008). A «era de progresso» da viticultura nacional. In Manuel Villaverde Cabral, Karin Wall, Sofia Aboim & Filipe Carreira da Silva (Org.), Itinerários. A investigação nos 25 anos do ICS (pp. 69-87). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Lains, P. (2008). The Portuguese economy, 1979-2002. In Francesco Franco (Ed.), Challenges Ahead for the Portuguese Economy (pp. 85-105). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Lains, P. (2009). História e crítica da tese da dependência. In Serrão, J. V., Pinheiro, M. A. & Ferreira, M. F. S. M. (Orgs), Desenvolvimento Económico e Mudança Social – Portugal nos Últimos dois Séculos – Homenagem a Miriam Halpern Pereira (pp. 37-48). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 39 Cardoso, J. L. (2010). Bloqueio Continental e desbloqueio marítimo: o Brasil no contexto global das Guerras Napoleónicas. In Cardoso, J.L., Monteiro, N.G. & Serrão, J.V. (Eds), Portugal, Brasil e a Europa Napoleónica (pp. 39-60). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Cova, A. (2009). O associativismo das mulheres. Uma abordagem comparativa: França e Portugal (19001918). In Serrão, J. V., Pinheiro, M. A. & Ferreira, M. F. S. M. (Orgs), Desenvolvimento Económico e Mudança Social – Portugal nos Últimos dois Séculos – Homenagem a Miriam Halpern Pereira (pp. 333-348). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Freire, D. (2009). As vinhas da ira. Interesses locais e poder central durante o Estado Novo (anos 30 e 40). In Godinho, P., Bastos, S. B. & Fonseca, I. (Coord.), Jorge Crespo. Estudos em Homenagem (pp. 481-499). Loulé: Ed. 100Luz. Monteiro, N. G. (2009). Alcance e limites do reformismo em Portugal (meados do século XVIII a 1810). In Serrão, J. V., Pinheiro, M. A. & Ferreira, M. F. S. M. (Orgs), Desenvolvimento Económico e Mudança Social – Portugal nos Últimos dois Séculos – Homenagem a Miriam Halpern Pereira (pp. 449-468). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Reis, J. (2009). Migração, estatura e consumo: o nível de vida em Lisboa, 1890-1910. In Serrão, J. V., Pinheiro, M. A. & Ferreira, M. F. S. M. (Orgs), Desenvolvimento Económico e Mudança Social – Portugal nos Últimos dois Séculos – Homenagem a Miriam Halpern Pereira (pp. 263-279). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Ramos, R. (2011). Aparências e realidades: os republicanos perante a Aliança Inglesa até à Primeira Guerra Mundial. In Meneses, Filipe Ribeiro & Oliveira, Pedro Aires (Coord.), A Primeira República Portuguesa: diplomacia, guerra e império (pp. 81-109). Lisboa: Tinta da China. Freire, D. (2012). Estado corporativo em acção: Sociedade rural e construção na rede de Casas do Povo. In F. Rosas & A. Garrido (Coord.), Corporativismo, fascismos, Estado Novo (pp. 273-301). Coimbra: Almedina. 9.4.17 Organisation of scientific dissemination activities Workshop “Institutions and economic growth in historical perspective”, 2009, organized by Jaime Reis and Pedro Lains “Portuguese Economic History Workshop”, 2011, organized by José Luís Cardoso and Pedro Lains Workshop “Economics translations into and from European Languages”, 2012, organized by José Luís Cardoso “Conference International Feminisms in Historical Comparative Perspective, 19th-20th centuries”, 2008, organized by Anne Cova Conference “Fifty Years of European Integration. From the Treaty of Rome to the Treaty of Lisbon (19572007)”, 2008, organized by Lucia Coppolaro and Pedro Lains Workshop “Fast Track Workshop in Economic History II”, 2010, organized by Jaime Reis “42nd Annual Conference of the Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies”, 2010, organized by António Costa Pinto and Nuno Gonçalo Monteiro Workshop “Indoors: spaces, families and communities (16th-18th centuries)/De portas adentro: espaços, famílias e comunidades (séculos XVI-XVIII)”, 2011, organized by Nuno Gonçalo Monteiro Seminar “Debating the Cultural Turn in International History”, 2012, organized by Bruno Cardoso Reis “I Encontro HOPER: História Oral Portuguesa Em Rede”, 2012, organized by Dulce Freire, Mónica Truninger and Susana Durão 40 9.4.18 Research contracts with national or international entities “História da família e da empresa José Maria da Fonseca/Soares Franco”, coord. by Conceição Andrade Martins. José Maria da Fonseca. “Núcleo de Estudos de História Empresarial”, coord. by Jaime Reis. BPI. 2Empregabilidade e Ensino Superior em Portugal”, coord. by José Luís Cardoso. Agência de Avaliação e Acreditação do Ensino Superior. “Editorial Management of the 'European Journal of the History of Economic Thougth'”, coord. by José Luís Cardoso. Routledge. “História da Caixa Geral de Depósitos, 1974-… - 3ª parte”, coord. by Pedro Lains. CGD. 9.4.19 Projects funded in national and international competitive calls “Prices, Wages and Rents, Portugal, 1500-1900”, coord. by Jaime Reis. FCT. “Prices, Wages and Rents in Portugal: 14th-20th centuries”, coord. by Jaime Reis. FCT. “Corporatism, political institutions and economic performance: advances in conteporary European History”, coord. by José Luís Cardoso. FCT. “EE-T project, Economics e-Translations into and from European Languages”, coord. by José Luís Cardoso. European Comission, Lifelong Learning Programme. “Agriculture in Portugal: Food, Development and Sustainability (1870-2010)”, coord. by Dulce Freire. FCT. 9.5. Organisational Structure and Objectives of the Research Group 2015/2020 9.5.1 Structure of the Research Group The research group on Power, Society and Globalization will be coordinated by Pedro Lains, José Luís Cardoso and Anne Cova, and will have a governing board composed of the three names mentioned plus Dulce Freire and Bruno Cardoso Reis. This five-member board represents the main areas of historical research within the group. The main driver of the group’s activities will be research projects undertaken both at the individual and team levels and funded by national and international agencies, which will be integrated in an intra- and interdisciplinary way. The group will pay attention to programmes that request the contribution of History for a better understanding of contemporary issues. Integration will be the direct outcome of a number of activities which the board will promote through the following measures: 1) Continuation of the already well-established ICS-UL monthly research seminar on History; 2) Organization of two seminars under topics to be chosen by group members and which will bring together researchers from the group and from other related groups at the ICS-UL; 3) Organization of regular research workshops by members of the group, where topics of ongoing research and publication strategies will be discussed; 41 4) Applications to national and international organizations for scholarships and research grants; 5) Visiting fellowships for external researchers to the ICS-UL and internal researchers at other institutions; 6) Organization of activities to disseminate knowledge to a wider public, responding to an increasing demand for historical explanations of current social phenomena. The group also benefits from the institutional relations of its members, who belong to international research teams, and frequently attend and organize international conferences and workshops, abroad or at ICS-UL. The research group is also well connected with the Inter-university Doctoral Programme in History (PIUDHIST), of which the ICS-UL is the lead institution. 9.5.2. Objectives of the Research Group This research group is concerned with long-term dynamics in social, cultural, political, and economic change at the transnational level. Globalization is one of the most central aspects of contemporary societies. The concept may be contested in its origins in time or shape, but the secular intensification of relations between the different parts of the world, with increasing exchanges of people, ideas, goods and capital, is a major transformation of the world. Moreover, the implications of globalization for the distribution of power and traditional forms of institutional organization of national and local societies have been huge. Globalization has also contributed to multiple crises and posed major challenges to social actors from churches to multinational corporations, from international organizations to states and governments. In this group we focus on key aspects related to the changes in the distribution of power at the global level, on how different forms of power, different types of institutions, and major global debates and conflicts arose around new and often competing political models and norms. Building upon ICS’s commitment to the study of long-term continuities and discontinuities in the contemporary world, as well as the legacies that help to understand current affairs, this group goes beyond methodological and theoretical divides that traditionally limit the study of the historical process of globalization. The group aims to achieve a combination of different approaches capable of providing complex insights into the historical dynamics and crises that have shaped world history. There is a strong need for a more interdisciplinary understanding of the variety of long-term phenomena that result from globalization over time. That debate may also contribute to a better understanding of the current global crisis. The main research topics are: The making and representation of political power – What are the origins of contemporary political power? Why were parliamentary regimes replaced by dictatorships? How were political parties formed? How are political regimes connected to the social, cultural, economic and geographical environment? How were economic and social policies enacted in contemporary democracies? These questions will be addressed from the perspectives of Portuguese and international political history since the early modern period; nineteenth- century political culture and representation in Portugal and Brazil; and political, cultural and religious aspects of authoritarian regimes in southern Europe. Changing societies, social movements and civil rights – What are the main issues explaining the dynamics, obstacles and asymmetries in global circulation? What is the relevance of the processes of production and circulation of knowledge, namely regarding the cultural and scientific transfers between various countries in different contexts, for a better understanding of topics like citizenship, fascism, feminism, development, internationalism and transnationalism? 42 Transnational institutions and global economic integration – What are the roots of transnational institutions and how did they contribute to globalization? What is internationalism and how does it relate to the colonial heritage? Is there an internationalization of politics? How do transnational institutions deal with global ideological and violent conflicts? How did economic globalization evolve across time and changed national landscapes? What are the political and institutional roots of economic convergence? This set of questions will be addressed by looking at the evolution of the Portuguese and European economies in the long run; the impact of the European imperial legacy, decolonization and the two world wars on the international order; the intellectual roots of European political economy; and the interconnected developments of national and European political, economic and financial institutions since 1945. See also http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf 43 (RG-50013-1591) Empires, Colonialism, and Post-Colonial Societies 9.1. Identification of the Research Group 9.1.1 Reference of the research group: RG-50013-1591 9.1.2 Name of the Research Group in portuguese: Impérios, Colonialismo e Sociedades Pós-coloniais 9.1.3 Name of the Research Group in English: Empires, Colonialism, and Post-Colonial Societies 9.1.4Keyword(s): 1. Portuguese Empire 2. Colonialism/Postcolonialism 3. Decolonization 4. Indigenous agency 9.1.5 Existed in 2008/2012 - Yes 9.1.6 Participating Institution(s) to which the Research Group belongs: N/A 9.2. Researchers in the Group 9.2.1 List of Integrated Members / 3 nuclear CVs Name Principal Investigator Nuclear CV Ricardo Nuno Afonso Roque √ √ Nuno Gonçalo Pimenta Freitas Monteiro √ Ângela Maria Barreto Xavier √ Filipa Maria Lowndes Marques de Araújo Vicente João Manuel Monteiro de Castro Vasconcelos Maria Elsa Marques Peralta da Silva Miguel Bandeira de Carvalho Jerónimo Nuno Miguel Rodrigues Domingos Patrícia Carla Valente Ferraz de Matos Sofia Isabel da Costa d´Aboim Inglez Susana Dores de Matos Viegas 9.2.2 List of current PhD students Name Ana Rita de Almeida Amaral Federica Toldo Gonçalo Filipe Lourenço Calvário Antunes 44 Hugo Filipe Gonçalves Dores Inês Neto Galvão José Eudes Arrais Barroso Gomes José Pedro Pinto Monteiro Maria do Carmo Farias Daun e Lorena Santos Maria do Mar de Mello Gago da Silva Nuno Gomes Martins Pedro David Gomes Marcelo Vieira Magalhães 9.2.3 List of other researchers of the Research Group Name Inês Vieira Gomes Tiago Figueiredo Saraiva 9.3. Research Group Description and Achievements for 2008/2012 9.3.1 Description of the Research Group This research group brings together historians, anthropologists, and sociologists from ICS-UL, who previously worked on two former thematic lines, MACO and PERMOB. It has developed over the past five years from a solid collective body of work, research projects, publications, and intellectual exchange in regular seminars. Research on empires and colonialism is central to the understanding of the conditions under which contemporary societies have developed and changed historically. Empires are complex political entities that tend to survive for long periods; they come to an end, frequently being replaced by other imperial formations in the geopolitical scenario. Colonialism has been one critical marker of Europe’s – and Portugal’s – way of relating to non-European societies. Colonialism and empires are thus not a mere matter of the past: their new forms, legacies, and resiliencies actively inform the making of “post-colonial” societies and nations. Based on these premises, the research group Empires, Colonialism and Post-Colonial Societies studies the historical dynamics and contemporary manifestations of the Portuguese imperial experience. It explores the rich and manifold cultural, social, political, and economic imprints of Portuguese imperial formations and colonial encounters, in the past and in the present, across time and space, with a privileged, though not exclusive, focus on the Portuguese-speaking world: Portugal, Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, Goa, Macau, Timor, S. Tomé e Príncipe, Cape Verde, and Guinea Bissau. It thus seeks to understand transits, shifts, and connections between colonial and post-colonial, imperial and post-imperial, processes in different historical periods and geographical settings. It places the Portuguese case within a broader global setting both historically and historiographically, while seeking inclusive anthropological perspectives that articulate both European and Non-European agencies, cultures and historicities. 45 In the period 2008-2012, this agenda has been pursued in relation to the following topics: Colonial knowledge: colonial anthropology (Timor, 1850-1975); Catholic orientalism (16 -18 cent.); orientalism, India and Italy; theory of colonial archives Visual and popular culture: sports; exhibitions and photography in Portuguese colonial contexts (1850-1950) Political communication: communication and information networks, Brazil and Portugal (15801808) Politics of difference: colonialism and mimesis in Lusophone Asia and Africa; political imagination of the Portuguese empire (1496-1961) Iberian empires: comparative study of Iberian monarchies Decolonization: international relations and Portuguese decolonization policies (1945-1975) th th The study of these topics has resulted in the development (and conclusion) of collective research projects funded by external agencies (FCT) after competitive calls; international collaborative projects and networks; several research projects funded by ICS-LA. Group members participated either as PIs or integrated researchers. PhD students, external researchers and consultants were also involved. Having the research projects as meeting-place and core intellectual ground, the group’s activities were organized into five areas: (1) reading group on imperial and post-colonial studies with researchers and post-graduate students from ICS (2) research seminar series: organization of seminar series on imperial and post-colonial studies; conference cycles on the Ibero-American Atlantic; history and anthropology in Timor; Portugal and the end of empire (3) conferences and workshops: organization of more than 20 international and national scientific meetings (4) post-graduate training: collaboration with ICS-UL doctoral programmes (PIUDH-History and PhD in Anthropology) and MA in Social and Cultural Anthropology: supervision of theses and lecturing of teaching units (5) outreach: design and launch of project websites; collaboration with media. 9.3.2. Main achievements A defining feature of this research group has been its collective commitment to innovative thinking on empires, colonialism and post-colonialism, alongside the internationalization of projects, networks and outputs. As a result, team members have been at the head of a series of international projects funded by external agencies and have produced a significant number of peer-reviewed publications. Relevant achievements have also included the organization of scientific meetings (the majority international in scope), the creation of web resources, and the teaching, training and mentoring of post-graduate students and research assistants. These results are summarized below. Research projects and international networks: research has been mainly supported by competitive funding: 6 research project grants from FCT (totalizing over €500,000) have been awarded to group members as chief investigators after competitive calls; 2 international network projects have been developed after grants awarded by external agencies (DAAD/CRUP and Casa Vélazquez). Group 46 members were also involved as researchers in 5 other research projects on imperial history, funded by FCT. Publications: group members invested significantly in the international impact of their research. They have authored 18 peer-reviewed articles in international journals; 3 international books (2 monographs, 1 edited volume); 28 book chapters of international scope. National publications in Portuguese have also been an important concern. Accordingly, 10 books (8 monographs, 2 edited volumes), 5 journal articles, 34 book chapters of national scope were produced. Presentation of papers in scientific meetings has accompanied our publication activities. More than 130 papers were presented, of which circa 70 were international and 60 national. Additionally, book reviews of relevant publications in the field have been published in international journals. Organization of scientific meetings: we have organized a significant number of scientific meetings – symposia, conference panels, workshops, and research seminars – in connection with group activities and ongoing projects. These meetings were for the most part international in scope. Thus international meetings have included 14 symposia or conferences, 4 conference panels, 2 workshops, 1 conference cycle; while national meetings have included 5 symposia and 3 research seminar cycles. In addition we have held regular reading group seminars that have contributed strongly to theoretical and methodological development. Post-graduate training: training and mentoring support to graduate research assistants and postgraduate students has been an important concern. Through our FCT-funded projects 7 junior research assistants (holding MA degrees) were recruited; most went on to pursue doctoral studies at ICS-UL on one or more of the group topics. Concomitantly, group members have been actively involved in the lecturing of teaching units and the supervision of MA and PhD theses as part of ICS-UL doctoral programmes in Anthropology and History. Currently 10 PhD theses in either History or Anthropology are in progress in association with the group and under the supervision of group members. Web resources: web resources (open-access) have been central to our outreach strategy. The creation and development of web material with a view to wider diffusion of our research to international audiences beyond academia has resulted in 3 project websites offering a diversity of online resources, from publications to databases. English is the language of communication. 9.4. Research Group Output 2008/2012 9.4.1 Publications in peer reviewed journals and/or other publications Aboim, S. (2009). Men between worlds: changing masculinities in urban Maputo. Men and Masculinities. 12 (2), 201-224. (IF JCR 2012: 0.547, SJR 2012: 0,539, n.º of citations: 13). Domingos, N. (2011). Urban football narratives and the colonial process in Lourenço Marques. The International Journal of the History of Sport. 28 (15), 2159-2175. (IF JCR 2012: 0.376, SJR 2012: 0,256, n.º of citations: 1). Monteiro, N. G. (2009). A circulação das elites no império dos Bragança (1640-1808): algumas notas. Tempo. n.º27, 65-81. (A&HCI, SJR, n.º of citations: 4). Roque, R. (2011). Stories, skulls, and colonial collections. Configurations. 19(1), 1-23. (A&HCI, SJR 2012: 0,111, n.º of citations: 1) 47 Roque, R. (2012), A voz dos bandos: colectivos de justiça e ritos da palavra portuguesa em Timor Leste colonial. Mana: estudos de Antropologia Social. 18(3), 563-594. (IF JCR 2012: 0.056, SJR 2012: 0,215, n.º of citations: 0). Roque, R. (2012). Mountains and black races: anthropology’s heterotopias in colonial East Timor. The Journal of Pacific History. 47(3), 263-282. (SJR 2012: 0,199, n.º of citations: 2). Vasconcelos, J. (2012). Africanos e afrodescendentes no Portugal contemporâneo: Redefinindo práticas, projetos e identidades. Cadernos de Estudos Africanos. 24, 15-23. (n.º of citations: 0). Vicente, F. L. (2012). A photograph of four orientalists (Bombay, 1885): Knowledge production, religious identities, and the negotiation of invisible conflicts. Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 55 (2/3), 603-636. (IF JCR 2012: 0.213, SJR 2012: 0,177, n.º of citations: 0). Xavier, Â. B. (2011). O lustre do seu sangue : bramanismo e tópicas de distinção no contexto português. Tempo. nº 30, 71-99. (A&HCI, SJR, n.º of citations: 0) Xavier, Â. B. (2011). Conversos and Novamente Convertidos: Law, Religion, and Identity in the Portuguese Kingdom and Empire. Journal of Early Modern History 15(3), 255-287. (SJR 2012: 0,100, n.º of citations: 0) 9.4.4 Books and book chapters of international circulation Aboim, S. (2012). Masculinities at the margins, rethinking subjection and power: Men between Maputo and Lisbon. In J. Hearn & A. Biricik (Eds), Gendered Sexualed Transnationalisations, Deconstructing the Dominant: Transforming men,“centres” and knowledge/policy/practice (pp. 87-101). Linköping: LiUTryck/Linköping University. ISBN: 978-91-7668-879-3 Alexandre, V. (2011). The colonial empire. In Pinto, António Costa (Ed.), Contemporary Portugal: politics, society and culture (pp. 73-94). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN: 978-0-88033-947-6 Jerónimo, M. B. (2012). The 'Civilisation Guild': Race and labour in the third Portuguese empire, c. 18701930. In F. Betthencourt & A. Pearce (Eds), Racism and ethnic relations in the portuguese-speaking world (pp. 173-199). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0-19-726524-6 Monteiro, N. G. (2010). Les élites urbaines au Portugal et au Brésil (1640-1820). In Laurent Coste (Dir.), Lara Rosenberg (textes reúnis), Liens de Sang, liens de pouvoir: les élites dirigeantes urbaines en Europe occidentale et dans les colonies européennes (fin XVe-fin XIXe siècle) (pp. 73-94). Rennes: Presses Universitaires. ISBN: 978-2-7535-1043-2 Cunha, M. S. & Monteiro, N. G. (2012). El gobierno del império portugués: Reclutamiento y jerarquía social de os goberniantes (1580-1808). In P. Cardim & J. L. Palos (Eds), El mundo de los virreyes en las monarquías de España y Portugal (pp. 247-285). Madrid: Iberoamericana - Vervuert. ISBN: 978-84-8489-664-7 Peralta, E. (2011). Fictions of a creole nation: (re) presenting Portugal's imperial past. In Bonavita, H. V. (Ed.), Negotiating identities: constructed selves and others (pp. 193-217). Amsterdam / New York: Rodopi. ISBN: 978-9042034006 Roque, R. (2010). Headhunting and colonialism: anthropology and the circulation of human skulls in the portuguese empire, 1870-1930. Hampshire: Palgrave MacMillan (Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies Series). ISBN: 978-0-230-22205-2 Roque, R. & Wagner, K. A. (Eds) (2012). Engaging colonial knowledge: reading european archives in world history. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN: 9780230241985 Vicente, F. L. (2012). Other orientalisms: India between Florence and Bombay 1860-1900 (Stewart LloydJones, trad.). New Delhi: Orient Blackswan. ISBN: 978-81-250-4758-2 48 Xavier, Â. B. (2012). Purity of Blood and Caste. Identity Narratives among Early Modern Goan Elites. In M. S. H. Torres, M. E. Martínez & D. Nirenberg (Eds), Race and Blood in the Iberian World (pp. 125-150). Münster: Lit Verlag. ISBN: 978-3-643-90259-7 Aboim, S. (2012). Masculinities at the margins, rethinking subjection and power: Men between Maputo and Lisbon. In J. Hearn & A. Biricik (Eds), Gendered Sexualed Transnationalisations, Deconstructing the Dominant: Transforming men,“centres” and knowledge/policy/practice (pp. 87-101). Linköping: LiUTryck/Linköping University. ISBN: 978-91-7668-879-3 Alexandre, V. (2011). The colonial empire. In Pinto, António Costa (Ed.), Contemporary Portugal: politics, society and culture (pp. 73-94). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN: 978-0-88033-947-6 Jerónimo, M. B. (2012). The 'Civilisation Guild': Race and labour in the third Portuguese empire, c. 18701930. In F. Betthencourt & A. Pearce (Eds), Racism and ethnic relations in the portuguese-speaking world (pp. 173-199). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0-19-726524-6 Monteiro, N. G. (2010). Les élites urbaines au Portugal et au Brésil (1640-1820). In Laurent Coste (Dir.), Lara Rosenberg (textes reúnis), Liens de Sang, liens de pouvoir: les élites dirigeantes urbaines en Europe occidentale et dans les colonies européennes (fin XVe-fin XIXe siècle) (pp. 73-94). Rennes: Presses Universitaires. ISBN: 978-2-7535-1043-2 Cunha, M. S. & Monteiro, N. G. (2012). El gobierno del império portugués: Reclutamiento y jerarquía social de os goberniantes (1580-1808). In P. Cardim & J. L. Palos (Eds), El mundo de los virreyes en las monarquías de España y Portugal (pp. 247-285). Madrid: Iberoamericana - Vervuert. ISBN: 978-84-8489-664-7 Peralta, E. (2011). Fictions of a creole nation: (re) presenting Portugal's imperial past. In Bonavita, H. V. (Ed.), Negotiating identities: constructed selves and others (pp. 193-217). Amsterdam / New York: Rodopi. ISBN: 978-9042034006 Roque, R. (2010). Headhunting and colonialism: anthropology and the circulation of human skulls in the portuguese empire, 1870-1930. Hampshire: Palgrave MacMillan (Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies Series). ISBN: 978-0-230-22205-2 Roque, R. & Wagner, K. A. (Eds) (2012). Engaging colonial knowledge: reading european archives in world history. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN: 9780230241985 Vicente, F. L. (2012). Other orientalisms: India between Florence and Bombay 1860-1900 (Stewart LloydJones, trad.). New Delhi: Orient Blackswan. ISBN: 978-81-250-4758-2 Xavier, Â. B. (2012). Purity of Blood and Caste. Identity Narratives among Early Modern Goan Elites. In M. S. H. Torres, M. E. Martínez & D. Nirenberg (Eds), Race and Blood in the Iberian World (pp. 125-150). Münster: Lit Verlag. ISBN: 978-3-643-90259-7 9.4.5 Conference proceedings Aboim, S. (2011). Reconstructing masculinity through otherness: transnational domination from a postcolonial perspective. paper presented at the American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Caesar's Palace, Las Vegas. Retrived from http://citation.allacademic.com/meta/p_mla_apa_research_citation/5/0/4/6/2/p504626_index.html. Alexandre, V. (2008). A real companhia velha no primeiro quartel do século XIX: o contexto internacional. In Fernando de Sousa (Coord.). A Companhia e as Relações Económicas de Porutgal com o Brasil, a Inglaterra e a Rússia (pp.139-149). Porto: CEPESE e Edições Afrontamento. 49 Alexandre, V. (2010). Hintze Ribeiro e a sua Época. In Actas do Colóquio Hintze Ribeiro (1848-1907) da Regeneração ao Crepúsculo da Monarquia (pp. 281-290). Angra do Heroismo: Presidência do Governo Regional dos Açores. Matos, P. F. de (2010). A História e os Mitos: Manifestações da ideologia colonial na construção do Portugal dos Pequenitos em Coimbra. In 7º Congresso Ibérico de Estudos Africanos, 9, Lisboa, 2010 - 50 anos das independências africanas: desafios para a modernidade. Available at http://hdl.handle.net/10071/2194. Roque, R. (2011). José Celestino da Silva e o relatório sobre os usos e os costumes de Timor. In Marques, V. R., Roque, A. C. & Roque, R. (Eds), Atas do Colóquio ‘Timor: Missões Científicas e Antropologia Colonial’ (Edição digital/Electronic edition, published online at http://www.historyanthropologytimor.org). Lisboa: IICT. Schmidt, L., Barata, A. M., Ramos, M. J., Valagão, M. M., Truninger, M. & Roque, R. (2011). Semente e civilização - Debate 2. In Sementes valor capital (pp. 62-101). Lisboa: Câmara Municipal de Lisboa / MUDE. 9.4.8 Books, including single-authored works (including scholarly editions of oral or written texts and translations with introduction and commentary) Alexandre, V. (2008). A Questão Colonial no Parlamento - volume I, 1821-1910. Lisboa: Assembleia da República e Publicações Dom Quixote. 207 pp. Xavier, Â. B. & Cardim, P. (2008). D. Afonso VI. Lisboa: Temas & Debates. Domingos, N. (2012). Futebol e colonialismo: corpo e cultura popular em Moçambique. Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Jerónimo, M. B. (2010). Livros brancos, almas negras : a missão civilizadora do colonialismo português (c. 1870-1930). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Jerónimo, M. B. (2012). A Diplomacia do Império: Política e religião na partilha de África. Lisboa: Edições 70. Matos, P. F. de (2012). As “Côres” do Império: Representações Raciais no “Império Colonial Português”. 2.ª ed, Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Nunes, J. A. & Roque, R. (Orgs) (2008). Objectos Impuros: Experiências em Estudos Sobre a Ciência. Porto: Edições Afrontamento. Vasconcelos, J. (2012). Histórias do Racionalismo Cristão em São Vicente, de 1911 a 1940 (2ª ed. revista). São Vicente: Comissão Organizadora da Comemoração do 1º centenário do Racionalismo Cristão em Cabo Verde. Vicente, F. L. (2009). Outros Orientalismos: a Índia entre Florença e Bombaim (1860-1900). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Xavier, Â. B. (2008). A Invenção de Goa. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 9.4.9 Edited special issues of journals, with substantial research input on the part of the researcher Xavier, Â. B. (2010). “Goa 1510-2010”, Dossier especial da revista Ler História, nº 58. 50 9.4.10 Chapters in books, including contributions to conference proceedings, essays in collections Domingos, N. (2011). O desporto e o Império Português. In J. Neves & N. Domingos (Coord.), Uma história do desporto em Portugal, Vol II - Nação, Império e globalização (pp. 51-108). Vila do Conde: Quidnovi. Jerónimo, M. B., Domingos, N. & Dias, N. (2010). Indígenas, imigrantes e outros povos. In José Neves (Coord.), Como se faz um povo: : ensaios em história contemporânea de Portugal (pp. 153-165). Lisboa: Tinta-da-China. Jerónimo, M. B. & Monteiro, J. P. (2012). Das «dificuldades de levar os indígenas a trabalhar»: O «sistema» de trabalho nativo no império colonial português. In M. B. Jerónimo (Org.), O Império colonial em questão (sécs. XIX-XX): poderes, saberes e instituições (pp. 159-196). (História & sociedade). Lisboa: Edições 70. Matos, P. F. de (2011). A vida e a obra do Professor Mendes Correia: Articulações entre antropologia, nacionalismo e colonialismo em Portugal. In Ana Cristina Martins (Coord.), Mendes Corrêa (1888-1960): entre a ciência, a docência e a política (pp. 9-36). Lisboa: ACD Editores. Monteiro, N. G. (2012). O "espaço público" e a opinião política na monarquia portuguesa em finais do Antigo Regime: Notas para uma revisão das revisões historiográficas. In J. D. Rodrigues (Coord.), O Atlântico revolucionário: Circulação de ideias e de elites no final do Antigo Regime (pp. 17-29). Lisboa: CHAM. Roque, R. (2011). Etnografias coloniais, tecnologias miméticas: a administração colonial e os usos e costumes em Timor-Leste no final do século XIX. In K. Silva & L. Sousa (Orgs), Ita Maun Alin… O livro do irmão mais novo: Afinidades antropológicas em torno de Timor-Leste ( pp. 155-168). Lisboa: Edições Colibri/IEL-Instituto de Estudos de Literatura Tradicional. Vasconcelos, J. (2012). Espiritismo e republicanismo em Cabo Verde: a conversão do Cónego António Manuel da Costa Teixeira. In F. T. Pimenta (Coord.), República e colonialismo na África Portuguesa: elementos para uma reflexão (pp. 103-130). Porto: Edições Afrontamento. Vicente, F. L. (2012). Fotografia e colonialismo: para lá do visível. In M. B. Jerónimo (Org.), O Império colonial em questão (sécs. XIX-XX): poderes, saberes e instituições. (pp. 423-453). (História & sociedade). Lisboa: Edições 70. Xavier, Â. B. (2008). Dissolver a Diferença. Conversão e Mestiçagem no Império Português. In Manuel Villaverde, Wall, Karin, Aboim, Sofia & Silva, Filipe Carreira da (Org.). Itinerários: A Investigação nos 25 Anos do ICS (pp.709-727). Lisboa:Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Xavier, Â. B. (2011). Entre a curiosidade e a melancolia. Deambulações pela Goa de D. Garcia. In Rui Loureiro (Ed.), A embaixada à Pérsia e os «Comentários de D. Garcia da Silva y Figueroa» (pp.207-243). Lisboa: CHAM. 9.4.13 Audio/visual and electronic/digital materials Marques, V. R., Roque, A. C. & Roque, R. (Eds) (2011.). Atas do Colóquio ‘Timor: Missões Científicas e Antropologia Colonial’ (Edição digital/Electronic edition, published online at http://www.historyanthropologytimor.org). Lisboa: IICT/ICS-UL. 9.4.14 Other categories, including web-based resources; video and audio recordings (to the extent that they embody research) História - Antropologia, Timor Leste - www.historyanthropologytimor.org (coord. by Ricardo Roque) Colonial mimesis in the Portuguese empire - www.colonialmimesis.hypotheses.org (coord. by Ricardo Roque) 51 O Governo dos Outros - www.governodosoutros.wordpress.com (coord. by Ângela Barreto Xavier) 9.4.16 Other research outputs Alexandre, V. (2008). [Review of Timor na 2.ª Guerra Mundial - O Diário do Tenete Pires, by António Monteiro Cardoso], Análise Social, n.º 186, 197-201. Matos, P. F. de (2008). [Review of Uma História de Regressos, Império, Guerra Colonial e Pós-Colonialismo, by Margarida Calafate Ribeiro], Análise Social, 43 (186): 202-208. Roque, R. (2011). [Review of Difficult Folk? A Political History of Social Anthropology, by David Mills], Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines, 24: 238-241. Tomás, L. M. V., Roque, R. & Ferreira, E. (2008). Caracterização dos públicos e dos consumos culturais na Região Autónoma dos Açores. Parte II. Consumos culturais. Bibliotecas, Museus e Associativismo Local. Ponta Delgada: CES-UA, 189 pp., policopiado. Vicente, F. L. (2012). [Review of Insurgent sepoys: Europe views the revolt of 1857, by Shaswati Mazumdar (ed.)], e-Journal of Portuguese History, 10 (1): 83-89. Xavier, Â. B. (2008). [Review of A Arquitectura Religiosa Cristã de Velha Goa. Segunda Metade do Século XVI – Primeiras Décadas do Século XVII, by António Nunes Pereira], Lusitânia Sacra, 2ª série, XIX-XX: 564568. Xavier, Â. B. (2009). Relatório Final sobre a participação portuguesa no European Doctorate in Social History of Europe and the Mediterranean "Building on the Past". Lisboa: Marie Curie Program for Early Stage Training. Xavier, Â. B. (2011). [Review of Baluartes da Fé e da Disciplina. O enlace entre a Inquisição e os Bispos em Portugal (1536-1750), by José Pedro Paiva], Ler História, 61, 189-193. 9.4.17 Organisation of scientific dissemination activities Conference "The Late Colonial State in European Colonial Empires", 2012, organized by Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo and António Costa Pinto Conference "Timor-Leste: História e Memórias da Antropologia", 2012 organized by Ricardo Roque Conference "Configurações Imperiais Ibéricas. Administrações e Burocracias Imperiais (sécs. XV-XX)", 2012, organized by Ângela Barreto Xavier Seminar "Cidadania e Império (sécs. XVI-XX)", 2012, organized by Ângela Barreto Xavier Conference "The End of Empires? Cold War Diplomacies, Trajectories of Development and the Formation of the “Third World”", 2011, organized by Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo Conference "Timor: Missões Científicas e Antropologia Colonial ", 2011, organized by Ricardo Roque Seminar "Mimetismos coloniais no império português", 2011, organized by Ricardo Roque Workshop "Colonialism and theories of imitation", 2011, organized by Ricardo Roque Conference "Things and Spirits: New Approaches to Materiality and Immateriality", 2010, organized by Ricardo Roque and João Vasconcelos Conference "L'imagination du territoire. Culture intellectuelle des élites coloniales, Journée d'Études", 2009, organized by Ângela Barreto Xavier 52 9.4.19 Projects funded in national and international competitive calls "Colonial crisis and mimetic encounters in historical and anthropological perspective", coord. by Ricardo Roque. FUP/CRUP. "Knowledge and Vision: Photography within the Portuguese Colonial Archive and Museum (1850-1940)", coord. by Filipa L. Vicente. FCT. "Colonial mimesis in lusophone Asia and Africa", coord. by Ricardo Roque. FCT. "The sciences of antropological classification in Portuguese Timor (1894-1975)", coord. by Ricardo Roque. FCT. "The Government of Difference: political imagination in the Portuguese Empire", coord. by Ângela Barreto Xavier. FCT. "The political communication in the pluricontinental Portuguese monarchy: kingdom, Atlantic, and Brazil (1580-1808)", coord. by Nuno Gonçalo Monteiro. FCT. "Dissimulated Machiavelli. Reception and Reinvention of Machiavelli in the Portuguese world (16th-20th centuries)", coord. by Ângela Barreto Xavier. Casa Velazquez (Madrid). "Comunicação política no Império", coord. by Nuno Gonçalo Monteiro. FCT/GRICES. 9.5. Organisational Structure and Objectives of the Research Group 2015/2020 9.5.1 Structure of the Research Group The functioning of the research group Empires, Colonialism and Post-colonial Societies will be based on the engaged participation of its integrated researchers and post-graduate students, grounded on the respect for scientific autonomy and creative freedom which are a hallmark of ICS-UL. Ricardo Roque (PI) will coordinate the group’s activities. Every year the coordinator will appoint an executive team of two members made up of one core CV researcher (Ângela Barreto Xavier/Nuno Gonçalo Monteiro) and one integrated researcher. This team will provide executive support to group coordination. The coordinator will promote the group’s research priorities and guarantee their contribution to the ICS strategic programme. It will be the coordinator’s responsibility to report on the group’s activities and submit to ICS an annual working plan. The coordinator will encourage researchers to publish at the highest international level, and, when appropriate, he will support junior researchers in publication and career planning. Given that this research group crosses anthropology and history, collaborative activities (e.g. organization of conferences) with other thematically and disciplinarily closer research groups at ICS-UL will be encouraged. It is also a responsibility of the coordinator, aided by the appointed executive team, to guarantee: a) a monthly research seminar as well as the organization of other scientific meetings relevant to the research group; b) the creation of international research networks on the group’s topics; c) the existence of a website and the promotion of other knowledge dissemination initiatives; d) the development of synergies between research and post-graduate teaching at ICS-UL; e) the submission of applications for competitive individual grants and research funding calls, either international (ERC, Marie Curie) or national (Investigador FCT); 53 f) adequate support to coordination and supervision of post-doctoral researchers, research assistants, and visiting fellows affiliated to the group. 9.5.2 Objectives of the Research Group In the coming years we intend to consolidate our research agenda and interdisciplinary orientation, having anthropology and history as core scientific areas. A central objective will be to promote cutting edge research, fully integrated in contemporary international debates on the topics related to our core themes (see below). By focusing on the colonial and post-colonial aspects of changing societies, the group will contribute to the thematic axes of ICS-UL’s strategic programme, whilst promoting productive dialogues with other ICS research groups. The understanding of the imperial genealogies of citizenship, the historical agency of indigenous societies, the colonial exploitation of natural resources, and the assessment of imperialism and colonialism’s contribution to inequality and exclusion are some of the wider issues that we will address and promote as key guidelines for research. The purpose is to open up new ways of understanding Portuguese society with regard to its colonial and post-colonial changes, legacies and configurations, but also to develop new approaches to the interpretation of those societies in Africa, Asia, and America that have been involved with the Portuguese presence over the last 500 years. Two combined orientations, conceptual and empirical, will continue to guide the group’s commitment to produce new ideas and cutting-edge research. First, to explore and reassess theories, categories and conceptual frameworks associated with the imperial, colonial, and post-colonial experiences. Secondly, to develop empirically grounded studies, using different methodologies and forms of evidence (material, visual, textual), that will consider imperial, colonial and post-colonial processes in the comparative context of the Portuguese-speaking world and beyond. Portuguese imperial histories will thus be approached both in relation to other national colonial/post-colonial contexts and to broader international social theory and historiography. This double approach will enable the group to explore the full spectrum of its central thematic areas. The debate on existing methodologies and the rehearsal of new ones – using different types of enquiry and sources – will be an important goal. In this context, the research group will favour the study of 5 core themes: Government and power: Forms of political and economic rule and the transfer and/or creation of institutions of government; elites; urban governance; space and land rights; violence and conflict; critique of and resistance to colonial power; Knowledge, science, and belief: Production, institutionalization, circulation of forms of knowledge (colonial, indigenous, scientific); archives, exhibitions and museums; cultural encounters and epistemic exchanges; religious conversion; appropriations of Christianity; Identity, difference and inclusion: Dynamics of identity and difference; gender; law, justice and citizenship; racism and inequality in colonial/post-colonial contexts; Labour and exchanges: labour and slavery; diasporas and returnees; movements of capital and labour; markets and exchange; nature, wealth and exploitation of environmental resources; Memory and legacies: expressions of remembering and forgetting colonial experiences and imperial phenomena; colonial memory in contemporary societies; indigenous historicities. In exploring these topics in concrete research projects, the group will be committed to enhancing ICS’s institutional goals in three main directions: 54 interdisciplinary research to high international standards: publication of international peer-reviewed books and articles; creation of an international network on Portuguese imperial studies based at ICS; applications for major international research grants post-graduate teaching: involvement in History and Anthropology Doctoral Programmes at ICS-UL; organization of a thematic Summer School outreach initiatives: research group website for diffusion of results; conferences and seminar series See also http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf 55 (RG-50013-1592) Regimes and Political Institutions 9.1. Identification of the Research Group 9.1.1 Reference of the research group: RG-50013-1592 9.1.2 Name of the Research Group in portuguese: Regimes e Instituições Políticas 9.1.3 Name of the Research Group in English: Regime and Political Institutions 9.1.4Keyword(s): 1. Political institutions 2. Democracy and authoritarianism 3. Elites 4. Stability and political change 9.1.5 Existed in 2008/2012 - Yes 9.1.6 Participating Institution(s) to which the Research Group belongs: N/A 9.2. Researchers in the Group 9.2.1 List of Integrated Members / 3 nuclear CVs Name Principal Investigator Nuclear CV António Jorge Pais Costa Pinto √ √ Andrés Malamud √ José Pedro Zúquete √ Ana Cristina Rodrigues Espírito Santo Ana Maria Nabais dos Santos Evans de Carvalho AnnaRita Gori Antonio Munoz Sanchez Bruno César Santos Cardoso Reis Filipa Alves Raimundo Filipe Miguel Carreira da Silva Lucia Coppolaro Luís Filipe Salgado de Matos Marina Castelo Branco da Costa Lobo Lains 56 Matteo Antonio Albanese Riccardo Marchi Rita Maria Cristovam Cipriano Almeida de Carvalho Rui Manuel Monteiro Lopes Ramos 9.2.2 List of current PhD students Name Canberk Koçak Diogo Manuel Caetano Moreira DMITRI FELIX DO NASCIMENTO Ekaterina GORBUNOVA Isabel Cristina Correia Alcario Maria Sara Folhadela Figueiredo Pina Pedro Nuno Alves Vidal de Seabra Pietro Tessadori Rufino Carlos Gujamo Susana Isabel Duarte Coroado 9.2.3 List of other researchers of the Research Group Name Cláudia Generoso de Almeida Frederico Dias Ferreira da Silva Luís Manuel Macedo Pinto de Sousa 9.3. Research Group Description and Achievements for 2008/2012 9.3.1 Description of the Research Group In the period 2008-2012, the activities undertaken by the research group on Regimes and Political Institutions were developed within the framework of the thematic lines DEMOLINE (Citizenship and democratic institutions) and MACO (The making of contemporary world). This research group studies the institutions, located at different levels of government that regulate a political community, organize the political system and shape the interplay between elites and mass publics. It deals with both long-term legacies and contemporary challenges to national and international regimes, 57 focusing on two main areas: the historical trajectories that framed the modern nation-state and the dynamics and challenges of contemporary democracies. It pays particular attention to the specificity of the Portuguese case, i.e. the late adoption of both a liberal-democratic state and a modern conception of citizenship rights. Institutional analysis and theory building are based on methodological pluralism and draw on empirical evidence and historical and international comparison, especially regarding Southern Europe and Latin America. The research agenda is organized around the following issues: 1. Processes of regime change (e.g. democratization) and the legacies of authoritarianism in new democracies. 2. The transformation of representative democracy caused by the changing linkages between parties, civil society, and the state. 3. The constitutional diffusion of political regimes (i.e. presidentialism, semi-presidentialism and parliamentary democracy) and the way in which institutions influence political processes. 4. The development of multi-level systems of governance, above and below the nation-state, and their impact on democratic accountability and representation. 5. The obstacles that low state capacities and undeveloped rule of law pose to effective governance. 6. The institutional and political conditions that contribute to sustainable social, economic and environmental development, policy effectiveness and public accountability. 7. The impact of social movements on institutional politics: the demand for more comprehensive control over policies and political elites by citizens. 8. The persistence, reproduction and change of political elites, including patterns of cabinet recruitment and the consequences for representation, policies, and performance. This group brings together researchers trained in disciplines such as political science, sociology and history. It has a strong international orientation in terms of national origin and training of the research team, its comparative research goals, membership of international networks (including funding), and publication record. Research carried out within this RG has produced path-breaking publications on political elites in Southern Europe, semi-presidentialism in the Lusophone world, parties and government in European and Latin American countries, the relationship between Portugal and European integration, democratic transitions and transitional justice in Portugal and abroad, the role of emerging powers in regional governance, the impact of social movements on institutional politics, and comparative regional integration. 9.3.2. Main Achievements Currently, the RG has a team of eleven researchers either on an exclusive basis or as first choice, plus six with primary participation in other RGs and several research assistants. It has won 19 research projects with external funding, mostly from the FCT and various EU programmes, for a total amount of €2 million. Research carried out in this RG is reflected in the number of items published between 2008 and 2012. Counting its exclusive researchers only, it amounts to 10 books, 57 chapters, 43 articles (14 of which in journals indexed in the Thomson Reuters - ISI), 5 special issues of journals and 12 collective volumes. The quality of these publications has been recognized through the ERICS Awards for the Promotion and Recognition of the Internationalization of the Social Sciences, financed by the Caixa Geral de Depósitos (19 awards between 2010 and 2012), and the Gulbenkian Award for the Internationalization of the Social Sciences. 58 Researchers in this RG are active members of international research teams and networks including the ECPR-European Consortium for Political Research; REDGOB: Euro-Latin-American Network on Governance for Development; ANCORAGE-NET - Research Network of Anti-Corruption Agencies; ECPR Extremism & Democracy Standing Group; ECPR Latin American Politics Standing Group; EUROLARG; REPLA - European Network on Latin American Politics; RIPLE; Ministers and Career Patterns in Latin America; Transparency International; GT-ANPEPP; PT-SSN Portuguese Security Studies Network; Research Group on Small Wars and Insurgencies - British International Studies Association; CESSDA - Council of European Social Science Data Archives and SEDEPE. In 2011, the ICS launched a PhD programme in Political Science with two specializations: Comparative Politics and International Relations. The duration of the programme is four years, i.e. eight semesters, corresponding to 240 ECTS; the number of vacancies is 20. The director of the programme is the coordinator of this RG, and the two core CVs are professors in it. The ICS has become a reference institution for political analysis and journalistic consulting: the researchers of this RG appear on a regular basis in the written press, broadcast media and blogs, contributing their expertise to civic debates and providing input to both governmental and non-governmental institutions. Furthermore, a number of reports were prepared in support of public policy decision-making, including a series of reports prepared in the framework of the Barometer of the Quality of Democracy project, for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, the Luso-American Foundation, as well as for dissemination to a wider public. Members of the RG have co-organized the European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) Summer Schools on Latin American Politics at ICS-UL in 2012 and at GIGA-Hamburg in 2013, and they will coorganize the 2014 edition at the University of Oxford. Most importantly, members of this RG submitted their application to organize the 2009 ECPR Joint Sessions of Workshops in Lisbon; the bid was won, and the ICS co-organized and co-hosted the Joint Sessions, arguably the most prestigious political science rendez-vous in Europe. Group researchers serve on the editorial boards of a number of international journals including the European Journal of Political Research, South European Society and Politics, Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional, Revista Uruguaya de Ciencia Política and Portuguese Studies Review. Several group members have also been involved, together with members of other research groups at ICS, in the Barometer of the Quality of Democracy (www.bqd.ics.ul.pt/), a project that audits the quality of democracy in Portugal by conducting representative surveys of political elites and citizens. Several conferences and publications (including a recent collective volume) have already emanated from this project, which represents an important instrument for disseminating our research. 9.4. Research Group Output 2008/2012 9.4.1 Publications in peer reviewed journals and/or other publications Pinto, A. C. (2008). Political Purges and State Crisis in Portugal's Transition to Democracy, 1975-76. Journal of Contemporary History. 43(2), 305-332. (IF JCR 2012: 0.296, SJR 2012: 0,151, nº de citações: 12). Silva, F. C. da & Vieira, M. B. (2009). Plural Modernity. Changing Modern Institutional Forms: Disciplines and Nation-states. Social Analysis. The International Journal of Cultural and Social Practice. 53 (2), 60-79. (nº de citações: 2). 59 De Sousa, L. & Freitas, R. (2012). Lost in transaction: Ensuring the deliverables in development aid. Crime, Law and Social Change. 58, 483-494. (IF JCR 2012: 0.320, SJR 2012: 0,296, nº de citações: 4). Pinto, A. C. (2010). The Authoritarian Past and South European Democracies: an introduction. South European Society and Politics. 15(3), 339-358. (IF JCR 2012: 0.406, SJR 2012: 0,564, nº de citações: 8). Vink, M. & van Vliet, O. (2009). Not quite crisp, not yet fuzzy? Assessing the potentials and pitfalls of multivalue QCA. Field Methods. 21(3), 265-289. (IF JCR 2012: 0.551, SJR 2012: 0,343, nº de citações: 24). Malamud, A. (2011). A Leader Without Followers? The Growing Divergence Between the Regional and Global Performance of Brazilian Foreign Policy. Latin American Politics & Society. 53(3), 1-24. (IF JCR 2012: 0.327, SJR 2012: 0,335, nº de citações: 46). Baum, M. & Espírito-Santo, A. (2012). Portugal's quota-parity law: An analysis of its adoption. West European Politics. 35(2), 319-342. (IF JCR 2012: 1.368, SJR 2012: 1,130, nº de citações: 6). Zúquete, J. P. (2011). The Flight of the Eagle: The Charismatic Leadership of Sá Carneiro in Portugal’s Transition to Democracy. The Leadership Quarterly. 22(2), 295-306. (IF JCR 2012: 2.711, SJR 2012: 2,155, nº de citações: 1). Reis, B. C. (2011). The myth of British minimum force in counterinsurgency campaigns during decolonisation (1945-1970). Journal of Strategic Studies. 34(2), 245-279. (IF JCR 2012: 0.817, SJR 2012: 0,665, nº de citações: 6). Neto, O. A. & Lobo, M. C. (2009). Portugal’s semi-presidentialism (re)considered: An assessment of the president’s role in the policy process, 1976–2006. European Journal of Political Research. 48, 234–255. (IF JCR 2012: 1.382, SJR 2012: 1,579, nº de citações: 20). 9.4.2 Completed PhD theses Filipe Miguel Ramos de Abreu Nunes, "Elites Administrativas e Mudança Política em Portugal: 1999-2009", supervised by António Costa Pinto. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. António Manuel de Figueiredo da Costa Figueira, "A invenção das minorias? A convenção-quadro para a protecção das minorias nacionais", supervised by António Costa Pinto. Thesis completed in 2008, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. José Manuel Tavares Castilho, "A Assembleia Nacional: 1934-1974", supervised by António Costa Pinto. Thesis completed in 2008, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. Christian Arnold, "Explaining Non Incorporation in Mercosur’s Member Countries", supervised by Andrés Malamud. Thesis completed in 2011, University of Mannheim (Alemanha). Nuno Estêvão Figueiredo Miranda Ferreira, "A Câmara Corporativa no Salazarismo (1953-1974): representação de interesses e competência técnica na decisão política", supervised by António Costa Pinto. Thesis completed in 2009, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Ricardo Marchi, "A Direita Radical nos Finais do Estado Novo", supervised by António Costa Pinto. Thesis completed in 2009, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. Raquel Varela, "A Influência da Transição Democrática Portuguesa na Transição espanhola", supervised by António Costa Pinto. Thesis completed in 2010, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. 60 Adrian Lukasz Chrobot, "Europeanization and its impact on the new democracies that joined the European Union. A comparative study of Portugal (1974-1990) and Poland (1990-2007)", supervised by Andrés Malamud. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Ana Mónica Fonseca, "República Federal Alemã e a transição para a democracia em Portugal", supervised by António Costa Pinto. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. David Mourão Ferreira Castaño, "Mário Soares e a Consolidação da Democracia Portuguesa", supervised by António Costa Pinto. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. 9.4.4 Books and book chapters of international circulation Pinto, A. C. & Morlino, L. (Eds) (2011). Dealing with the Legacy of Authoritarianism: the “Politics of the Past” in Southern European Democracies. London: Routledge. ISBN: 978-0-415-58708-2 Evans, A. M. (2011). The Adjustment of Portuguese Political Parties to the Challenges of Multilevel Governance: A Comparative Analysis of Political Affiliation in the European Parliament. In Sebastian Royo (Ed.), Portugal in the Twenty-First Century: Politics, Society and Economics (pp. 69-91). Plymouth: Lexington Books. ISBN: 978-0739137567 Pinto, A. C. & Teixeira, N. S. (Eds) (2010). The Europeanization of Portuguese Democracy. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN: 978-0-88033-946-9 Baert, P. & Silva, F. C. da (2010). Social Theory in the Twentieth Century and Beyond. Cambridge: Polity Press. ISBN: 978-0-7456-3981-9 Malamud, A. & Schmitter, P. C. (2011). The experience of European integration and the potential for integration in South America. In Warleigh-Lack, Alex; Robinson, Nick & Rosamond, Bem (Eds), New regionalism and the European Union: dialogues, comparisons and new research directions (pp. 135-157). London: Routledge. ISBN: 978-0-415-56372-7 Malamud, A. & De Luca, M. (Coord.) (2011). La política en tiempos de los Kirchner. Buenos Aires: Eudeba. ISBN: 978-950-23-1860-8 Marchi, R. (2012). The radical right in Portugal between authoritarism and democracy. In A. Mammone, B. Jenkins & E. Godin (Eds), Mapping the extreme right in contemporary Europe (pp. 95-108). London, New York: Routledge. ISBN: 978-0-415-50265-8 Pinto, A. C. (Ed.) (2011). Rethinking the nature of fascism: comparative perspectives. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN: 978-0-230-27296-5 Pinto, A. C. (2011). Contemporary Portugal: politics, society and culture (2nd edition, review). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN: 978-0-88033-947-6 Lindholm, C. & Zúquete, J. P. (2010). The Struggle for the World. Liberation Movements for the 21st Century. Stanford (California): Stanford University Press. ISBN: 9780804759380 9.4.8 Books, including single-authored works (including scholarly editions of oral or written texts and translations with introduction and commentary) Almeida, J. M. de & Ramos, R. (Orgs) (2008). Revoluções, Política Externa e Política de Defesa em Portugal, Séc. XIX e XX. Lisboa: Edições Cosmo e Instituto de Defesa Nacional Matos, L. S. (2008). Como evitar golpes militares. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 61 Matos, L. S. (2010). Tudo o que sempre quis saber sobre a Primeira República em 37 mil palavras: as instituições políticas portuguesas de 5 de Outubro de 1910 a 28 de Maio de 1926. Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Torres, E. C. & Zúquete, J. P. (Coord.) (2011). A vida como num filme: fama e celebridade no século XXI. Alfragide: Texto Editores. Gaspar, C., Patriarca, F. & Matos, L. S. de (Orgs), (2012). Estado, regimes e revoluções: estudos em homenagem a Manuel de Lucena. Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Cruz, M. B. & Ramos, R. (Orgs). (2012). Marcello Caetano, Tempos de transição: Depoimentos sobre Marcello Caetano e o seu governo, 1968-1974. Porto: Porto Editora. Marchi, R. (2009). Império Nação Revolução. As direitas radicais no fim do Estado Novo (1959-1974). Lisboa: Texto Editores Marchi, R. (2009). Folhas Ultras. As ideias da direita radical portuguesa (1939-1950). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais Pinto, A. C. & Freire, A. (2010). O Poder Presidencial em Portugal. Lisboa: D. Quixote. Lobo, M. C. & Neto, O. A. (Org.) (2009). O semipresidencialismo nos países de língua portuguesa. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais 9.4.9 Edited special issues of journals, with substantial research input on the part of the researcher De Sousa, L. & Malamud, A. (2012). Symposium: European Studies Abroad. European Political Science, 11(3). Pinto, A. C., Magalhães, P. C. & De Sousa, L. (2011). Symposium: Measuring The Quality of Democracy. European Political Science, 11(4). Frega, R. & Silva, F. C. da (2011). Editors’ Introduction to the Symposia. European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy, 3(2), V-X. Pinto, A. C. (Ed.) (2009). Ruling Elites and Decision-Making in Fascist-Era Dictatorships. New York: Columbia University Press. Marchi R., Caiani M. & Bulli G. (Orgs) (2011). As direitas na Europa do Sul. Análise Social, XLVI (201). VinK, M. (Ed.). (2010). Migration and Citizenship Attribution: Politics and Policies in Western Europe [Special Issue]. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 36(5). Silva, F. C. da (2011). G.H. Mead. A Reader. London: Routledge. Cabral, M. V., Silva, F. C. da & Saraiva, T. (Org.) (2008). Cidade & Cidadania. Governança Urbana e Participação Cidadã. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Pinto, A. C. (2010). The ‘Politics of the Past’ in South European Democracies. Comparative Perspectives [Special Issue]. South European Society and Politics, 15(3). Silva, F. C. da (2011). Introdução: S N. Eisenstadt - cultura, estrutura e acção social. In Silva, F. C. (Org.), S. N. Eisenstadt As grandes revoluções e as civilizações da modernidade (pp. 7-27). Lisboa: Edições 70. 62 9.4.10 Chapters in books, including contributions to conference proceedings, essays in collections Lobo, M. C., Pinto, A. C. & Magalhães, P. C. (2009). As instituições políticas da democracia portuguesa. In Cabral, Manuel Villaverde, Lobo, Marina Costa & Feijó, Rui Graça (Org.), Portugal Uma Democracia em Construção – Ensaios de Homenagem a David B. Goldey (pp.141-174). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais Silva, F. C. da, Aboim, S. & Saraiva, T. (2008). Participação Cívica e Vida Urbana em Portugal. In Cabral, Manuel Villaverde, Silva, Filipe Carreira da & Saraiva, Tiago (Org.). Cidade & Cidadania. Governança Urbana e Participação Cidadã (pp.243-269). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais Marchi, R. (2008). Jovem Portugal: a extrema-direita acorda. In AAVV. Os anos de Salazar (pp. 68-73), Vol.19, Lisboa: Planeta DeAgostini Ramos, R. (2008). A Revolução Republicana de 1910 e a Política Externa Portuguesa. In João Marques de Almeida & Rui Ramos (Orgs), Revoluções, Política Externa e Política de Defesa em Portugal, Séc. XIX e XX (pp. 55-94). Lisboa: Edições Cosmo e Instituto de Defesa Nacional Ramos, R. (2008). «O país mais liberal do mundo»: transformaciones y colapso del liberalismo en Portugal (1880-1910). In Marcela Sebastiani & Fernando Reguillo (Eds), Los desafíos de la libertad. Transformación y crisis del liberalismo en Europa y América Latina (pp. 97-119). Madrid: Biblioteca Nova Lobo, M. C. & Neto, O. A. (2009). Um modelo lusófono de semipresidencialismo?. In Lobo, M.C. & Neto, O. A. (Org.), O Semipresidencialismo nos Países de Lingua Portuguesa (pp. 261-279). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais Reis, B. C. (2011). Da Nova República Velha ao Estado Novo (1919-1930). In Amaral, Luciano (Org.), Outubro: a revolução republicana em Portugal (1910-1926) (pp. 299-337). Lisboa: Edições 70 Reis, B. C. (2011). A Primeira República e o Vaticano (1910-1926): a sombra inglesa e o peso do império. In Meneses, Filipe Ribeiro & Oliveira, Pedro Aires (Coord.), A Primeira República Portuguesa: diplomacia, guerra e império (pp. 141-178). Lisboa: Tinta da China Zúquete, J. P. (2011). Em busca do carisma perdido. In Torres, Eduardo Cintra & Zúquete, José Pedro (Coord.), A vida como num filme: fama e celebridade no século XXI (pp. 13-40). Alfragide: Texto Editores. Ferreira, N. E., Carvalho, R. A. de & Pinto, A. C. (2012). O império do professor: A elite ministerial de Salazar, 1932-1944. In A. C. Pinto (Org.), Governar em ditadura: elites e decisão política nas ditaduras da era do fascismo (pp. 129-143). Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 9.4.12 Encyclopedia entries (to the extent that they embody research) Ramos, R. (2009). República. In Javier Fernández Sebastián (Dir.). Diccionario político y social do mundo iberoamericano (pp. 1357-1368). Madrid: Fundación Carolina, Sociedad Estatal de Commemoraciones Culturales y Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales Cova, A. & Pinto, A. C. (2010). Le salazarisme. In Fauré, C. (Dir.), Nouvelle Encyclopédie politique et historique des femmes (pp. 852-872). Paris: Les Belles Lettres Pinto, A. C. (2012). Politics of the Past. In Lavinia Stan and Nadia Nadelsky (Eds), Encyclopedia of Transitional Justice, (vol. 1, pp.287). New York: Cambridge University Press. Pinto, A. C. (2012). Portugal. In Lavinia Stan and Nadia Nadelsky (Eds), Encyclopedia of Transitional Justice, (vol. 2, pp. 391-397). New York: Cambridge University Press. Malamud, A. (2011). Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay. In D.S. Lewis and Wendy Slater (Eds), The 2011 Annual Register. World Events (pp. 168-72). Proquest. 63 Silva, F. C. da (2011). Citizenship. In Dale Southerton (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Consumer Culture. London: Sage Publications. Silva, F. C. da (2011). G.H. Mead. In Dale Southerton (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Consumer Culture (disponível online em http://www.sage-ereference.com/abstract/consumerculture/n349.xml). London: Sage Publications. 9.4.16 Other research outputs Marchi, R. (2008). [Review of Ai confini del fascismo. Propaganda e consenso nel Portogallo salazarista (1923-1944), by Goffredo Adinolfi], Análise Social, n.º 187, pp. 445-449. Evans, A. M. (2009). Bringing Back a Larger Pie from Brussels: The Adjustment of National Party Strategy through Party Switching in the European Parliament. CIES e-Working Paper n. º 63/2009. Lobo, M. C. & Santos, J.R. (2009). The Selection of Candidates for the European Parliament by Portuguese Parties and the Impact of European Parties. In Wilhelm, H., (Org.). Analysis of MPs Selection Procedure in the EU, European Parliament Report to the Committee on Constitutional Affairs. De Sousa, L. & Marchi, R. (2010). Taking the Right Seriously. [Review of Illiberal Politics in Neoliberal times: Culture, Security and Populism in the New Europe, by Mabel Berezin], European Political Science, 9 (4), 446-453. Matos, L. S. (2010). [Review of Representação Política Textos Clássicos, by Diogo Pires Aurélio (Org.)], Análise Social. XLV (195), 400-401. Marchi, R. (2010). [Review of The struggle for the World. Liberation movements for the 21th Century, by Charles Lindhohm & José Pedro Zúquete], Análise Social. XLV(197), 794-797. De Sousa, L. & Marchi, R. (2011). [Review of Illiberal Politics in Neoliberal Times: Culture, Security and Populism in the New Europe, by Mabel Berezin], Análise Social, XLVI(199), 354-364. Lobo M. C. (2011). Equatorial Guinea fakes refomrs to enter CPLP. IPRIS Lusophone Countries Bulletin, Nº 22, pp. 2-3. Lisboa: IPRIS. Reis, B.C. (2012). [Review of Dança dos demónios: intolerância em Portugal, by A. Marujo & José E. Franco], Lusitania Sacra, t. XXV, 333-335. Marchi, R. & Zúquete, J. P. (2011). [Review of Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola, by Paul Furlong], Bulletin of Italian Politics, 3 (2), 403-406. 9.4.17 Organisation of scientific dissemination activities Workshop "Working Expert Seminar Southern Africa in the Cold War Era", 2009, organized by António Costa Pinto "Second Summer School on Latin American Politics (ECPR)”, 2012, organized by Andrés Malamud Workshop "Rethinking the "Politics of the Past" on New Democracies. Southern Europe in Comparative Perspective", 2010, organized by António Costa Pinto Seminar "História Virtual de Portugal (1908-2004). O que é que teria acontecido se…?", 2008, organized by Rui Ramos "ECPR 2009 - Joint Sessions of Workshops", 2009, organized by Andrés Malamud, Luís de Sousa and Marina Costa Lobo Conference Series "Portugal não é um país pequeno: O Fim do Império Colonial Português e a Cena Internacional", 2009, organized by António Costa Pinto and Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo 64 Workshop "Southern European Democracies: Legacies of the Past and International Constraints", 2008, organized by António Costa Pinto Workshop "Political Elites, Single Parties and Decision-Making in the Fascist Era: Portugal, Spain, Italy and Germany", 2008, organized by António Costa Pinto Conference "Findings on the New Political Culture", 2008, organized by Filipe Carreira da Silva Workshop "Party Politics in Federalized Presidential Systems", 2009, organized by Andrés Malamud 9.4.18 Research contracts with national or international entities "O Estado da República: a qualidade da Democracia Portuguesa", coord. by António Costa Pinto. FLAD. "O Estado da República em Portugal", coord. by António Costa Pinto. Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. 9.4.19 Projects funded in national and international competitive calls "Multi-level regionalism and Brazilen leadership in South America", coord. by Andrés Malamud. FCT. "Processos Politicos Locais e impacto na Arena Nacional: Análise Comparada Argentina-Portugal", coord. by Andrés Malamud. FCT/CAPES. "PRIMO-Power and Region in a Multipolar Order", coord. by Andrés Malamud. 7.ºFP - European Comission. ""Portugal is not a small countrie": the end of the Portuguese Colonial Empire in a comparative perspective", coord. by António Costa Pinto. FCT. "Political Elites, Single Parties and Decision-Making in the Fascist Era: Portugal, Spain, Italy and Germany", coord. by António Costa Pinto. FCT. "Iberian Democratic Transitions: Portugal and Spain in Compared Perspective", coord. by António Costa Pinto. FCT. "Acções Marie Curie", coord. by António Costa Pinto. European Comission. "Broken Promises. The Political Origins of Socioeconomic Inequality in Portugal, 1960-2010", coord. by Filipe Carreira da Silva. FCT. "Social Rights in Portugal: Their Constitutionalization and Sociopolitical Implications", coord. by Filipe Carreira da Silva. FCT. "City and Citizenship in Portugal", coord. by Filipe Carreira da Silva. FCT. 9.5. Organisational Structure and Objectives of the Research Group 2015/2020 9.5.1 Structure of the Research Group The Regime and Political Institutions research group will be coordinated by António Costa Pinto, seconded by Andrés Malamud and José Pedro Zúquete. While respecting the principles of freedom and autonomy in research, which are a hallmark of ICS since its creation, the coordinator is responsible for defining the priorities of the group’s research agenda and ensuring that it contributes to the Institute’s strategic 65 programme. Every year, the coordinator will submit a plan of activities encompassing general guidelines for applications to national and international competitive funding calls, development of projects/products to be submitted to potential clients, organization of seminars for specialized and general publics, and proposals for post-graduate courses and workshops (in addition to those that are already part of regular ICS graduate activities). The group’s coordinator is also responsible for: Submitting proposals for speakers to be invited to the year-long graduate seminars in Political Science and History. Co-organizing, together with the coordinators of both the Socio-Political Attitudes and Behaviours research group and the Power, Society and Globalization research group, the weekly discussion forum involving members of the three groups. Supporting the group’s researchers in applications to individual scholarship and research funding competitions, both international (ERC, Marie Curie) and national (Investigador FCT). Supporting project PIs and post-doc supervisors in their coordination of research assistants, research fellows and post-doc researchers. 9.5.2 Objectives of the Research Group This RG studies the institutions, located at different levels of government that regulate a political community, organize the political system and shape the interplay between elites and mass publics. It deals with both long-term legacies and contemporary challenges to national and international regimes, and focuses on two main subjects: the historical trajectories that framed the modern nation-state, and the dynamics and challenges of contemporary democracies. It is sensitive to the specificity of the Portuguese case, i.e. the late adoption of both a liberal-democratic state and a modern conception of citizenship rights. Institutional analysis and theory building are supported by quantitative and qualitative methods that draw on solid empirical evidence and on historical and international comparison. The research agenda is structured around the following issues: The transformation of representative democracy caused by the changing linkages between parties, civil society, and the state. The development of multi-level systems of governance and their impact on democratic accountability and representation. - The obstacles that low state capacities and undeveloped rule of law pose to effective governance. The constitutional diffusion of political regimes, and the way in which institutions influence political processes. The institutional and political conditions that contribute to sustainable social, economic and environmental development. The impact of Social Movements on Political Institutions: the demand for more comprehensive control over policies and political elites by citizens. Specific research questions addressed by this RG can be clustered into four areas: 1. The Foundations of Regime Stability. What are the factors that explain regime change and regime stability? How do impersonal forces interact with political agency? What is the impact of historical legacies on state capacity and citizen-state relations? What is the role of international diffusion and of regional and 66 transnational organizations? Attention is given to Third Wave democracies, transitional justice in Southern Europe and Latin America, the role of mass mobilization in democratization, and the role of the EU as a force for regime change. 2. Institutional Design and Governance in New Democracies. How do political institutions manage cooperation and conflict? What are the determinants of institutional design and institutional change? How are political parties organized and changed? How does the development of multi-level systems of governance affect democratic accountability and representation? 3. Elites, Power, and Representation. Who have been the elites in Portugal and other comparable cases? How have they and their main features changed (or not) across political regimes and electoral cycles? How are members of cabinets, parliaments, and parties recruited, and what are the consequences for representation, policies, and performance? Attention is given to the historical composition, thought and behaviour of Portuguese political elites, to the comparative study of local, national, and European office holders, and to patterns of cabinet recruitment and reshuffling in Europe and Latin America. 4. Public Decision and Collective Well-being. What are the historical legacies and determinants of social policies in Portugal and in comparative perspective? What influences state capacity to stimulate investment and growth while addressing inequality, poverty and environmental concerns? What are the factors fostering regulatory effectiveness and accountability in the context of multilevel governance? How does the political regulation of economic activity affect the organization and performance of firms and labour markets? See also http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf 67 (RG-50013-2067) Socio-Political Attitudes and Behaviors 9.1. Identification of the Research Group 9.1.1 Reference of the research group: RG-50013-2067 9.1.2 Name of the Research Group in portuguese: Atitudes e Comportamento Socio-políticos 9.1.3 Name of the Research Group in English: Socio-Political Attitudes and Behaviors 9.1.4Keyword(s): 1. Social attitudes 2. Political support 3. Political behavior 4. Social values 9.1.5 Existed in 2008/2012 - Yes 9.1.6 Participating Institution(s) to which the Research Group belongs: N/A 9.2. Researchers in the Group 9.2.1 List of Integrated Members / 3 nuclear CVs Name Principal Investigator Nuclear CV Pedro Miguel Dias Costa Coutinho Magalhães √ √ Jorge Manuel Vala Salvador √ Marina Castelo Branco da Costa Lobo Lains √ Alice Oliveira Ramos Amilcar Manuel Reis Moreira Ana Cristina Rodrigues Espírito Santo Cícero Roberto Pereira Denis Michel Sindic Filipa Alves Raimundo Henry Robert Outten Isabel Maria Rocha Pinto José Conceição Mendes Marques José António Afonso Santana Pereira Santucci Pedro Miguel de Jesus Alcântara da Silva Rui Alberto Morais Costa Silva Lopes 68 9.2.2 List of current PhD students Name Edalina Rodrigues Sanches Isabela Razzuoli Júlio Berto dos Santos Fazendeiro Luís Filipe Clara Salvador Manuel Alexandre Mateus Homem Cristo Patrícia Isabel Mira Batista Calca 9.2.3 List of other researchers of the Research Group 9.3. Research Group Description and Achievements for 2008/2012 9.3.1 Description of the Research Group In the period 2008-2012, the activities undertaken by the research group on Socio-political attitudes and behaviours were developed within the framework of the thematic lines DEMOLINE (Citizenship and democratic institutions) and PERMOB (Identity, migrations, and religion). This RG is dedicated to the empirical study and dissemination of knowledge of collective beliefs and values in societies, as expressed through measurable attitudes and behaviours, and graduate training therein. More specifically, the group has measured, described, and explained three fundamental sets of phenomena, answering the relevant research questions they raise: 1. The first set covers the determinants of political support and behaviour. What are the long- or short-term determinants of support for regimes, institutions, and office holders? What drives people’s political behaviours, including turnout, voting choices, and engagement in various forms of political participation? To what extent are elections used by citizens as mechanisms of representation and accountability, and how is that related to their understanding of what democracy means and how it works domestically and abroad? What are the manifestations of disaffection vis-à-vis the political realm and what are their implications for the quality of democracy? In recent years, the group has cemented its central role in the study of Portuguese voters. ICS’s participation in the top international projects involving research into political behaviour (Comparative Study of Electoral Systems, Comparative National Elections Project, European Election Study) has fostered research based on large cross-national datasets, allowing the use of high-quality comparative data and a focus on the interaction between variables located at different levels of analysis (individual, group, societal). 2. The second set covers identities and social differences. What are the processes underlying the formation of collective identities and beliefs and the ensuing forms of social exclusion? How do people react to social differences and ethnic diversity? What are the behavioural and broader political consequences of those reactions, in terms of discriminatory behaviours, coping with social exclusion, and support for rights and institutions? In this regard, the group has developed research within ICS that is based both on cross-national representative surveys (European Social Survey, European Values Study, International Social Survey Programme) and lab experiments, with a 69 particular focus on phenomena like racism and prejudice, the legitimation of social inequalities and hierarchies, and the study of regional, national, and European identities. 3. Finally, the research group has been engaged in studies addressing the nature and consequences of social values. What distinguishes societies in terms of the abstract goals that their members hold most important in their lives and endorse as societal ends? What makes these values resilient or changeable in particular societies? What aspects of individual and collective behaviour are explained by different individual and cultural value priorities? How is the organization and performance of political institutions affected by prevalent values in a society? And how do those institutions affect them in turn? ICS’s human and infrastructural resources, as well as its role as the Portuguese node in the most important international survey research networks in the world, has fostered research not only on the aforementioned substantive issues from a comparative perspective but also on the methodology of measuring value systems using survey instruments. This group brings together researchers trained in disciplines such as Political Science, Sociology, and Social Psychology, mostly using quantitative and experimental methods. It has a strong international orientation, in terms of its comparative research goals, membership of cross-national networks and projects, and publication record. 9.3.2 Main achievements The research group’s activity is consolidated in three domains: internationalization of scientific production; membership of international research networks; and funding for research projects. In two other areas – graduate training and dissemination of research– the first steps have been taken and will be consolidated in the period 2015-2020. The 11 scholars who worked in this group have produced 49 journal articles (29 of them in ISI indexed journals), 4 books, and 39 book chapters, as well as 3 special issues of journals (all ISI indexed) and 3 collective volumes. This includes just the publications of these scholars connected to this group’s research programme. It is a stellar publication record, which includes some of the top journals (American Journal of Political Science, Electoral Studies, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Journal of Social Issues) and top publishers in the disciplines (Oxford University Press, Routledge, Campus Verlag). The quality of these publications has been recognized through the ERICS awards for Promotion and Recognition of the Internationalization of the Social Sciences, financed by the Caixa Geral de Depósitos (19 awards between 2010 and 2012) and the Gulbenkian Award for the Internationalization of the Social Sciences. Group members have undertaken roles in several international research networks and projects. This includes membership of the planning committee of the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems (www.cses.org), the steering committees of PIREDEU (“Providing an Infrastructure for Research in Electoral Democracy in the European Union” - www.piredeu.eu) and ESF’s network Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences 2 (www.ccsr.ac.uk/qmss/), of the teams that put forward and designed the modules “Understandings and Evaluations of Democracy” (wave 6) and “Attitudes towards immigration and their antecedents” (wave 7) of the European Social Survey (http://www.europeansocialsurvey.org/), of the Methodological and Theory groups of the European Values Study (www.europeanvaluesstudy.eu), and of the team that put forward and designed the module on “National Identity” for the International Social Survey Programme (www.issp.org). 70 Furthermore, group researchers serve on the editorial boards of journals such as South European Society and Politics, Electoral Studies, and European Journal of Political Research. During this period, group members obtained funding for 21 research projects or initiatives, 12 of them through FCT competitive funding as principal investigators, and 4 with international funding. Total funding amounted to 2.1 million euros, with 1.7 million coming from competitive funding. Members of the group have been the driving force behind the ICS-UL Summer School in Advanced Methods of Data Analysis. Since its 1st edition in 2009, several courses have been organized, covering two main fields: methodology of cross-cultural studies and advanced methods of data analysis. After 5 editions, up to 200 participants (PhDs, post-docs and researchers) from diversified domains have attended, making this Summer School a well-established training activity in the Portuguese social sciences’ community. Group members have also been involved, with members of other groups at ICS, in the Barometer of the Quality of Democracy (BQD www.bqd.ics.ul.pt/), a project that audits the quality of democracy in Portugal by conducting surveys of political elites and citizens. Several conferences and publications (including a recent collective volume) have emanated from this project. Other dissemination activities included a Voter Advice platform (www.bussolaeleitoral.pt) for the 2009 election, a website allowing visualization and download of trends in public opinion in Portugal and the rest of Europe, covering seven themes and more than 100 indicators (www.pop.pt), and another on the consequences of the economic crisis (www.conheceracrise.com) 9.4. Research Group Output 2008/2012 9.4.1 Publications in peer reviewed journals and/or other publications Aguiar-Conraria, L., Magalhães, P. C. & Soares, M. J. (2012). Cycles in Politics: Wavelet analysis of political time series. American Journal of Political Science. 56(2), 500–518 (IF JCR 2012: 2.811, SJR 2012: 5,975, n.º of citations: 13). Aguiar-Conraria, L. & Magalhães, P. C. (2010). Referendum design, quorum rules and turnout. Public choice.144(1-2), 63-81 (IF JCR 2012: 0.878, SJR 2012: 1,015, n.º of citations: 17). Lobo, M. C. & Lewis-Beck, M. S. (2012). The integration hypothesis: How the European Union shapes economic voting. Electoral Studies. 31(3), 522-528. (IF JCR 2012: 0.887, SJR 2012: 1,482, n.º of citations: 4). Lobo, M. C. (2008). Parties and Leader Effects. Impact of Leaders in the Vote for Different Types of Parties. Party Politics, 14(3), 281-298. (IF JCR 2012: 1.141, SJR 2012: 1,910, n.º of citations: 18). Magalhães, P. C., Aguiar-Conraria, L. & Lewis-Beck, M. S. (2012). Forecasting spanish elections. International journal of forecasting. 28(4), 769-776 (IF JCR 2012: 1.424, SJR 2012: 1,149, n.º of citations: 2). Pereira, C. R., Vala, J. & Leyens, J. (2009). From infra-humanization to discrimination: The mediation of symbolic threat needs egalitarian norms. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. nº45, 336-344. (IF JCR 2012: 2.219, SJR 2012: 2,207, n.º of citations: 40). Pereira, C. R., Vala, J. & Lopes, R. C. (2010). From prejudice to discrimination: the legitimizing role of perceived threat in discrimination against immigrants. European Journal of Social Psychology. Vol. 40, 1231–1250. (IF JCR 2012: 1.667, SJR 2012: 1,298, n.º of citations: 28). 71 Pinto, I. R., Marques, J. M., Levine, J. M. & Abrams, D. (2010). Membership status and subjective group dynamics: Who triggers the black sheep effect? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 99, 1, 107– 119. (IF JCR 2012: 4.877, SJR 2012: 4,480, n.º of citations: 27). Schwartz, S. H., Cieciuch, J., Vecchione, M., Davidov, E., Fischer, R., Beierlein, C., Ramos, A., Verkasalo, M., Lönnqvist, J.-E., Demirutku, K., Dirilen-Gumus, O., & Konty, M. (2012). Refining the theory of basic individual values. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 103(4), 663-688 (IF JCR 2012: 4.877, SJR 2012: 4,480, n.º of citations: 37). Sindic, D. & Reicher, S.D. (2009). Our way of life is worth defending: testing a model of attitudes towards superordinate group membership through a study of Scots' attitudes towards Britain. European Journal of Social Psychology. 39(1), 114–129. (IF JCR 2012: 1.667, SJR 2012: 1,298, n.º of citations: 23). 9.4.2 Completed PhD theses Pedro Candeias, "(In)Tolerância Social na Europa: Minorias Étnicas, Grupos Estigmatizados e Toxicodependentes", supervised by Cícero R. Pereira. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. Pedro Miguel Pereira Neto, "Transformações no sistema político português suscitadas pela Internet: representação de interesses e agenda-setting das Organizações Não-Governamentais de Ambiente", supervised by Pedro C. Magalhães. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Rui Lopes, "Similarity and dissimilarity in immigration contexts: different dimensions, different processes. [Dimensões da diferença e construção do preconceito anti-imigrante]", supervised by Jorge Vala. Thesis completed in 2009,Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. Alice Oliveira Ramos, "[Human values and opposition towards immigration in Europe] Valores Sociais e Atitudes face à Imigração em Contexto Europeu", supervised by Jorge Vala. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. 9.4.4 Books and book chapters of international circulation Lobo, M. C., Vink, M. & Lisi, M. (2010). Mapping the Political Landscape: A Portuguese Vote Advice Application. In L. Cedroni & D. Garzia (Eds), Voting Advice Applications in Europe: The State of the Art (pp. 139-166). Napoli: Scriptaweb. ISBN: 978-88-6381- 127-8 Costa-Lopes, R. (2010). Similarity and dissimilarity in immigration contexts: different dimensions, different processes. Saarbrücken: VDM Verlag Dr. Müller. ISBN: 978-3-639-30291-2 Magalhães, P. C. (2012). Europe à la carte? Public support for policy integration in an enlarged european union. In D. Sanders, P. C. Magalhães & G. Toka (Eds), Citizens and the european polity: Mass attitudes towards the european and national polities (pp. 212-244). (Intune). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0-19-960233-9 Magalhães, P. C. (2012). The scope of government of the European Union: Explaining citizens’ support for a more powerful EU. In D. Sanders, P. Bellucci, G. Tóka & M. Torcal (Eds), The europeanization of national polities: Citizenship and support in a post-enlargement union (pp. 1-33). New York : Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780199602346 Paez, D., Ubillos, S., Zubieta, E. & Marques, J. M. (2012). AIDS’ social representations: beliefs, attitudes, memory and social sharing of rumors. In A. M. S. DeRosa (Ed.) Social Representations in the “Social Arena” (pp. 166-175). New York, NY: Routledge. ISBN: 9780415591195 72 Sanders, D., Magalhães, P. C. & Toka, G. (Eds). (2012). Citizens and the european polity: mass attitudes towards the european and national polities. (Intune). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0-19960233-9 Sindic, D. (2010). National identity, separatism, and supra-national integration: Attitudes towards Britain and Europe in Scotland. Saarbrücken: VDM Verlag Dr. Müller. ISBN: 9783639298024 Torcal, M., Bonet, E. & Lobo, M. C. (2012). Institutional Trust and Responsiveness in the EU. In D. Sanders, P. Bellucci, G. Tóka & M. Torcal (Eds), The Europeanization of National Polities: Citizenship and Support in a Post-Enlargement Union (pp. 1-26). New York : Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780199602346 Vala, J. & Lopes, R. C. (2012). National identity and attitudes towards immigrants in a comparative perspective. In F. Höllinger & M. Hadler (Eds), Crossing borders, shifting boundaries: national and transnational identities in Europe and beyond (pp. 71-100). Frankfurt, New York: Campus Verlag. ISBN: 9783593396125 Vala, J. & Pereira, C. R. (2012). Racism: an evolving virus. In F. Betthencourt & A. J. Pearce (Eds), Racism and ethnic relations in the portuguese-speaking world (pp. 49-70). (Proceedings of the British Academy, 179). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0-19-726524-6 9.4.8 Books, including single-authored works (including scholarly editions of oral or written texts and translations with introduction and commentary) Magalhães, P. C. (2011). Sondagens, eleições e opinião pública. Lisboa: Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos. Pereira, C. R. & Costa-Lopes, R. (Orgs). (2012). Normas, atitudes e comportamento social. Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Lobo, M. C. & Magalhães, P. C. (Orgs) (2009). As eleições legislativas e presidenciais 2005-2006. Campanhas e escolhas eleitorais num regime semipresidencial. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Silva, P. A. (2011). A Saúde nos Media: Representações do sistema de saúde e das políticas públicas na imprensa escrita portuguesa. Lisboa: Mundos Sociais. Tavares, J. A., Maduro, M. P., Garoupa, N. & Magalhães, P (Orgs) (2011). A Constituição Revista. Um e-book da Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos. Lisboa: Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos. Cabral, M. V., Lobo, M. C. & Feijó, R. G. (Org.) (2009). Portugal Uma Democracia em Construção – Ensaios de Homenagem a David B. Goldey. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 9.4.9 Edited special issues of journals, with substantial research input on the part of the researcher Vala, J. (2008). Social justice, categorization and intergroup relations (special issue). Social Justice Research, 21(1). Lewis-Beck, M. S., Lobo, M. C., & Bellucci, P. (Eds). (2012). Economic crisis and elections: the european periphery [Special symposium]. Electoral Studies, 31(3). 9.4.10 Chapters in books, including contributions to conference proceedings, essays in collections Lobo, M. C. (2011). Still second-order? European parliament elections in Portugal. In Pinto, António Costa (ed), Contemporary Portugal: politics, society and culture (pp. 249-273). New York: Columbia University Press. 73 Torcal, M. & Magalhães, P.C. (2010). Cultura política en el sur de Europa: un estudio comparado em busca de su excepcionalismo. In Torcal, M. (ed.), La ciudadania europea en el siglo XXI. Estudio comparativo de sus actitudes, opinión pública e comportamiento políticos (pp. 45-84). Madrid: Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas. Pereira, C. R. & Vala, J. (2011). A legitimação da discriminação em diferentes contextos normativos. In Techio, Elza Maria & Lima, Marcus Eugênio Oliveira (Orgs), Cultura e produção das diferenças: estereótipos e preconceito no Brasil, Espanha e Portugal (pp. 363-404). Brasília: TechnoPolitik. Ramos, A., Vala, J. & Pereira, C. R. (2008). Oposição a políticas anti-racistas na Europa: factores individuais e sócio-estruturais. In Manuel Villaverde Cabral, Karin Wall, Sofia Aboim & Filipe Carreira da Silva (Org.). Itinerários: A investigação nos 25 anos do ICS (pp.257-281). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Magalhães, P. C. (2009). O que são, afinal, as eleições (semi) presidenciais? Um estudo de caso das eleições portuguesas de 2006. In M C. Lobo & P. Magalhães (Eds), As eleições legislativas e presidenciais, 20052006: campanhas e escolhas eleitorais num regime semipresidencial (pp. 245-281). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Lobo, M.C. (2009). A escolha de um primeiro-ministro: os efeitos de lider nas legislativas portuguesas de 2005. In Lobo, Marina Costa & Magalhães, Pedro C., As eleições legislativas e presidenciais 2005-2006. Campanhas e escolhas eleitorais num regime semipresidencial (pp.225-244). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Pinto, I. R., Marques, J. M. & Cameira, M. (2012). Focalização normativa, reacções ao desvio e identidade social: a perspectiva da dinâmica de grupos subjectiva sobre os mecanismos de controlo social dos grupos. C. R. Pereira & R. Costa-Lopes (Orgs), Normas, atitudes e comportamento social (pp. 45-71). Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Costa-Lopes, R. & Pereira, C. R. (2012). A normatividade das atitudes e dos comportamentos sociais: Uma introdução. In C. R. Pereira & R. Costa-Lopes (Eds), Normas, atitudes e comportamentos sociais (pp. 15-24). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Torres, A. R. R.. Pereira, C. R., Estramiana, J. L. & Albernaz, M. de F. (2011). Partidos políticos brasileiros: conteúdos representacionais e suas respectivas ancoragens. In Fernandes, Sheyla C. S. et al (Eds), Psicologia social: perspectivas atuais e evidências empíricas (pp. 75-87). São Paulo: Casa do Psicólogo. Vala, J., Pereira, C. R., Costa-Lopes, R. & Deschamps, J. C. (2010). Atitudes face à imigração e identidade nacional. In J. Sobral & J. Vala (Orgs). Identidades Nacionais, Inclusão e exclusão sociais (pp. 191-210). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 9.4.12 Encyclopedia entries (to the extent that they embody research) Marques, J. M. (2010). Opinion deviance. In J. M. Levine & M. A. Hogg (Eds), Encyclopedia of Group Processes and Intergroup Relations (vol.2, pp. 616-620). Sage. 9.4.14 Other categories, including web-based resources; video and audio recordings (to the extent that they embody research) Bússola Eleitoral - http://www.bussolaeleitoral.pt/ (coord. by Marina Costa Lobo, Marten Wink, Marco Lisi, Pedro C. Magalhães) Portal de Opinião Pública - www.pop.pt (coord. by Pedro C. Magalhães, Cícero R. Pereira, Alice Ramos) Conhecer a Crise - www.conheceracrise.com (coord. by Alice Ramos) 74 9.4.16 Other research outputs Magalhães, P. C. (2009). A qualidade da democracia em Portugal: a perspectiva dos cidadãos. Lisboa: SEDES. Magalhaes, P. C. (2012). Economy, ideology, and the elephant in the room: A research note on the elections of the great recession in Europe. Social Science Research Network. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2122416 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2122416. 9.4.17 Organisation of scientific dissemination activities Workshop "Group-focused enmity in Europe", 2009, organized by Jorge Vala Seminar "Normas e Comportamento Social", 2009, organized by Cícero R. Pereira and Rui Costa-Lopes Conference "Diálogo Intercultural: Barreiras e Oportunidades", 2009, organized by Rui Costa-Lopes "I, II, III e IV Summer School in Advanced Methods of Data Analysis", 2009,2010,2011,2012, organized by Cícero R. Pereira and Alice Ramos Seminar "Power and Identity", 2010, organized by Cícero R. Pereira, Denis Sindic and Rui Costa-Lopes "Lisbon Meeting on Institutions and Public Policy", 2011, organized by Pedro C. Magalhães Conference "Comportamento Eleitoral e Atitudes Políticas em Portugal", 2010, organized by Marina Costa Lobo and Pedro C. Magalhães "INTUNE GENERAL ASSEMBLY Year IV - Integrated and United? A quest for citizenship in an ever closer Europe”, 2008, organized by Marina Costa Lobo, Pedro C. Magalhães and António Costa Pinto Conference "The Effect of District Magnitude", 2012, organized by Nina Wiesehomeier and Pedro C. Magalhães Conference “The Political Consequences of Economic Crisis: Crisis, Voting, and Protesting in Europe”, 2012, organized by Pedro C. Magalhães 9.4.18 Research contracts with national or international entities "Avaliação Legislativa do regime português do incumprimento de contratos", coord. by Cícero R. Pereira. Fac Direito - UNL. "Portal da Opinião Pública", coord. by Alice Ramos and Cícero R. Pereira. Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos. "The Changing Contexts of Political Behavior: Electoral Choices and Political Attitudes in Contemporary Portugal", coord. by Marina Costa Lobo and Pedro C. Magalhães. FLAD, CNE, FCG, STAPE. "Estudo Sobre a Saúde em Portugal Numa Perspectiva Comparada (2012) - ISSP", coord. by Jorge Vala. APIFARMA. "European Value Studies - Ambiente", coord. by Jorge Vala. Oceanário de Lisboa. "European Value Studies", coord. by Jorge Vala. FCG. "European Social survey -Data for a Changing Europe", coord. by Jorge Vala. City University. "European Social Survey Preparation - CE" coord. by Jorge Vala. City University. "Estudo Ambiente ISSP", coord. by Jorge Vala. EDP - Energias de Portugal SA. 75 9.4.19 Projects funded in national and international competitive calls "European Social Survey - 4, 5 e 6", coord. by Jorge Vala. FCT. "POPSTAR - Public Opinion and Sentiment Tracking, Analysis and Research", coord. by Pedro C. Magalhães. FCT. "INTUNE - Integrated and United: A Quest for Citizenship in an ‘ever closer Europe’", coord. by Pedro C. Magalhães. 6.ºFP - European Comission. "IASP - Portuguese Social and Political Attitudes: An Infrastruc", coord. by Jorge Vala. FCT. "Validation of everyday knowledge: Moderators and consequences of the heterogeneity norm", coord. by Jorge Vala. FCT. "Effects of Multicultural and Color-Blind ideologies: The moderating role of Identification and Group Threat", coord. by Jorge Vala. FCT. "From prejudice to discrimination: the legitimising role of threat perceptions, ingroup identification and scope of justice", coord. by Cícero R. Pereira. FCT. "The Personalisation of Politics in the 21st Century- A Research Project on Electoral Democracy", coord. by Marina Costa Lobo. FCT. "The Changing Contexts of Political Behavior: Electoral Choices and Political Attitudes in Contemporary Portugal", coord. by Marina Costa Lobo and Pedro C. Magalhães. FCT and Tinker Foundation. "The strategic use of stereotypes about immigrants", coord. by Denis Sindic. FCT. 9.5. Organisational Structure and Objectives of the Research Group 2015/2020 9.5.1 Structure of the Research Group The Socio-Political Attitudes and Behaviours group will be coordinated by Pedro Magalhães, seconded by Jorge Vala and Marina Costa Lobo. While respecting the principles of freedom and autonomy in research, which have been a hallmark of ICS since its creation, the coordinator is responsible for defining the main priorities of the group’s research agenda and ensuring that it contributes to the Institute’s strategic programme. Every year, the coordinator will submit a plan of activities, encompassing general guidelines on applications to national and international competitive funding calls, development of projects/products to be submitted to potential clients, organization of seminars for specialized and general publics, and proposals for post-graduate courses and workshops (in addition to those which are already part of regular ICS graduate activities). The group’s coordinator is also responsible for: - Submitting proposals for speakers to be invited to the year-long graduate seminars in Sociology, Political Science and Social Psychology. - Co-organizing, together with the coordinator of the Regimes and Political Institutions research group, the weekly discussion group involving all members of the two groups. - Supporting the group’s researchers in applications for individual scholarship and research funding, either international (ERC, Marie Curie) or national (Investigador FCT). - Supporting project PIs and post-doc supervisors in their coordination of research assistants, research fellows and post-doc researchers. 76 9.5.2 Objectives of the Research Group Post-industrial societies are facing significant challenges, which are relevant to the group on Socio-political attitudes and behaviours within the broader framework of ICS’s concerns with Citizenship and Inclusion. The first challenge is the way in which migration and expanding communication have fostered social, cultural and ethnic diversity. In the European context, this is compounded by the EU’s multilevel governance, questioning the extent to which the transfer of sovereignty from national states to other levels of government is (or is not) supported by citizens’ own definition of their relevant political community. In this regard, we aim to examine the causes and consequences of identity formation. How have ethnic and demographic changes in Europe (and people’s perception of them) affected national identification and support for citizenship rights? What is the nature of collective identities in Europe, and how do they affect the legitimacy of the EU’s multilevel governance? A second challenge has been the popular scepticism vis-à-vis conventional forms of political representation and engagement in political affairs. In Portugal (and elsewhere), low levels of political trust, satisfaction, and engagement require greater attention from researchers, particularly in a context where a protracted economic crisis is disturbing previous political and policy consensuses. Similar concerns emerge from the study of the electoral process: declining turnout, weakening linkages with representatives, and the pervasiveness of valence issues in elections are symptoms that democratic representation has changed in ways that need to be described and explained. How well do elections and party competition work to ensure the representation of citizens? How does that affect patterns of political disaffection and understandings of how democracy works (and should work)? What is the extent of popular support for both existing and alternative forms of democracy, including direct democracy? A third challenge is posed by the way in which long-term historical legacies and structural differences between and within societies, in terms of cultural values and social capital, affect the performance of systems of governance and their claims to legitimacy. After the optimism that followed the third wave of th democracy in the late 20 century, current developments point again to significant deficits in the quality of democracy and governance in the newer European democracies. An increasing body of research has pointed to the deep historical and cultural roots shaping the quality and performance of institutions. Our concern with the study of social values is directly implicated in this line of research. To what extent have economic development and democratization changed the prevalent societal values in Portugal and elsewhere? What are the relevant cleavages within and between societies in this respect, and what evidence can we amass about their causes and consequences? This RG intends to continue the investment in international networking and publications in high standard journals and publishers. Methodologically, we have so far resorted primarily to cross-national surveys and lab experiments. While preserving this unique legacy in the Portuguese context, we have also initiated work that will strengthen our handle on the questions of interest to us. New directions include the more systematic use of formal modelling and experimental testing, agent-based models and micro-simulation, smaller scale in-depth surveys, and the use of “big data” sources and analysis (of which the recent POPSTAR project – www.popstar.pt – is a first example). Moreover, this research group aims to contribute to the consolidation of the doctoral programme in Comparative Politics and of our Summer School in Methods, as well to disseminate the results of the survey networks in which it is involved. See also http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf 77 (RG-50013-2068) Identities, Cultures, Vulnerabilities 9.1. Identification of the Research Group 9.1.1 Reference of the research group: RG-50013-2068 9.1.2 Name of the Research Group in portuguese: Identidades, Culturas, Vulnerabilidades 9.1.3 Name of the Research Group in English: Identities, Cultures, Vulnerabilities 9.1.4Keyword(s): 1. Global Flows (people, things, practices, ideas) 2. Health 3. Food 4. Heritage 9.1.5 Existed in 2008/2012 - Yes 9.1.6 Participating Institution(s) to which the Research Group belongs: N/A 9.2. Researchers in the Group 9.2.1 List of Integrated Members / 3 nuclear CVs Name Principal Investigator Nuclear CV Cristiana Lage David Bastos √ √ José Manuel Rodrigues Ferreira Sobral √ Susana Dores de Matos Viegas √ Erin Brooke Taylor Francesco Vacchiano João Manuel Monteiro de Castro Vasconcelos Jorge Manuel Vala Salvador José António Machado Silva Pais José Manuel Taborda Barreto Maria Elsa Marques Peralta da Silva Marta Rodrigues Vilar Rosales Nina Clara Tiesler Nuno Miguel Rodrigues Domingos Patrícia Carla Valente Ferraz de Matos Ruy Jesús de Llera Blanes Simone Frangella Paulo Jorge Granjo Simoes 78 9.2.2 List of current PhD students Name Amanda Fernandes Guerreiro Ambra Formenti Ana Luísa Martins Micaelo Cármen Gonzalez Hacha Carolina Carret Höfs Catarina Maria Garção Serra Coelho Sampaio Elísio Manuel Fernando Jossias Elsa do Céu Dias de Almeida Frazão Mateus Francesca De Luca Gleiciani Maria de Oliveira Fernandes ISABEL ALEXANDRA BATISTA MARQUES Joana Abril Santos Nunes Areosa Feio Joana Raquel Alves dos Santos Jonas Alberto Mahumane Manuel André Simões Homem Cristo António Maria Concetta lo Bosco Maria Elisa Oliveira da Silva Lopes da Silva Marianela Barrios Aquino Max Ruben Tavares de Pina Ramos Murilo Rodrigues Guimarães Nelson Rodrigues Paulo Patrícia cruz Azevedo silva Rahul Mahendra Kumar Raquel Alves Neves Gil Carvalheira Ricardo Oliveira Santos Gomes Moreira Stella Lorenz Susana Margarida Silva Ferreira Lavado Susana Paula Neves Pinto da Silva Chalante Azevedo Fernandes Vânia Manuel Pedro Vasco Alberto Valadares Teixeira Vítor Manuel Klirnomos Popinsky Ivone le Grand 79 9.2.3 List of other researchers of the Research Group Name Chiara Gemma Pussetti Joana Margarida Gonçalo Ferreira de Oliveira João Paulo Santos Pina Cabral Pedro José dos Santos Ponte da Silva Susana Soares Branco Durão 9.3. Research Group Description and Achievements for 2008/2012 9.3.1 Description of the Research Group The research group Identities, Cultures, Vulnerabilities: Ethnographies of Social Change (hereafter RG Identities) brings together senior and junior researchers engaged in hands-on, ethnographic or ethnographic-inspired qualitative research on pressing issues of contemporary societies, inspired by recent theoretical developments in anthropology and neighbouring disciplines. With the general purpose of addressing the ways in which groups and populations use and reinvent their cultural legacies in the context of changing social landscapes, we address traditional and emerging subjects in the fields of anthropology, sociology, science studies, social history, social psychology, religion, diaspora, cultural, postcolonial and regional studies, medical anthropology, sociology of sports, food studies, and the novel areas of knowledge that result from interdisciplinary encounters and convergences. Much of our previous work was developed in the former Thematic Line Permob – identity, religion, migration, which supported some of our major themes - religion, personhood, territoriality, nationalism, migrations, colonialism, heritage. The further enhancement of our scope of inquiry and the new organization of RG led to our proposed format in four clusters, which re-arrange and expand our interests and our potential impact. They are Circulations - people, capitals, objects, ideas; Embodiments - health, labour, sports, food, science; Place – personhood, belonging, territorialities; and Collective Cognitions nationalism, religion, ideologies, conflicts, and inclusiveness. These clusters will host the development of research activities, while providing the foundation for special cross-group task forces on pressing subjects like food, health, racism, and science studies, among others. The RG Identities is also the home to the doctoral programme in anthropology at ICS, in the context of which a large number of innovative and impactful dissertations have been and are being undertaken. The current programme, together with the former MA in anthropology and the PhD in social sciences created a pool of young and qualified researchers who make a significant contribution to the dynamics of our RG. Consortia, joint programmes, international partnerships and other modalities of cross-institutional work have expanded this RG capacity for dialogue and influence of in national and international contexts; recruitment of our alumnae and former research assistants, supplemented by the academic circulation of our own colleagues, further expanded the scope of our influence and dialogue. As a consequence, the RG currently has formal and informal partnerships with prestigious universities and research centres throughout the world. Our researchers are active in international scientific societies and were influential in the creation and leadership of the Portuguese Anthropological Association, the European Association of Social 80 Anthropologists, the World Council of Anthropological Associations and the Association of Social Scientists of Lusophone countries. The high level of internationalization helps to increase the demand for temporary affiliations and visiting positions at ICS by international students and research scholars, thus creating a dynamic of permanent expansion and reconfiguration of the team and the networks to which it belongs. Although much of our empirical work is developed in communities located in Portugal, or in contexts that relate to the impact, legacies and post-colonial transformations of Portuguese-speaking or Portugueserelated historical experiences, including Brazil, Timor, Mozambique, Cape Verde, S. Tome, Goa, many other contexts are addressed, both as transnational communities, and as communities located in a diversity of nations. With empirical research both within and beyond the so-called Lusophone world, our theoretical goals address universal themes and aim for national and international impact. 9.3.2 Main achievements During the period 2008-2012, the researchers now included in the RG Identities worked predominantly in association with ICS’s Thematic Line Permob- identity, religion, migration; some researchers also worked with other ICS Lines, or were affiliated with other institutions (e.g. CRIA), or were completing their doctorates. In those contexts, researchers engaged in proposal writing, project management, fieldwork, analytical work, participation in conferences, workshop and conference organizing, international networking and collaborative projects, graduate teaching, doctoral supervision, international cosupervision, writing and publishing articles, books, collective volumes, website development, promotion of professional and scientific associations in the social sciences field, and further interventions in society such as identification of indigenous land rights, ethnographic-based art and history of science exhibits. Permob revolved around theoretical interests in personhood, human mobility - as expressed in migrations, diasporas, displacements and other modes of social mobility - territorialities, nationalisms, heritage, religion, sports, the production and uses of knowledge on the body, food, health, surveillance and governance, including colonial governance. Individual researchers maintained interests in one or more of those subjects and in the relationships between them, creating a dynamic of shared interests that will be further explored in the RG Identities. Some former Permob researchers will now explore their interests in colonialism along with historians in the RG Empires, which will retain a special connection with Identities; others will further explore their quantitative tools and theoretical models on social attitudes along with the RG Attitudes. Our accomplishments translate into documenting and analysing the identified subjects in a number of contexts: personhood, naming and territorialities in rural and urban Brazil; transnationalism, migrations and borders; prophetic movements in West Africa, Congo and Angola; religion and ideologies of risk in Mozambique; religion and diasporas, football and diasporas ; food, cuisine, tradition and migration; heritage and the uses of the past ; nationalism, ethnicity and racism; science, health and bodies; surveillance and governance. Over the period 2008-2012, RG Identities members presented over 500 papers and organized or coorganized a total of 106 seminars, workshops, colloquia and major conferences, in which preliminary results were presented and discussed by peers; supervised dozens of MA and doctoral dissertations at ICS and other institutions (30 PhDs completed), in which new ideas, fields and theoretical models were explored; published 149 articles in international peer-reviewed journals; 104 books and chapters in major international publishers; 32 books and 84 chapters in Portuguese books; 16 special issues in academic journals; 11 encyclopaedia entries; 15 websites and other media; 15 book reviews and similar 81 contributions; developed two research-based public exhibits and maintained a large number of international networks, with which they shared research and graduate supervision and developed stable connections for future joint ventures. The favourable funding period of 2008-2012 was of great benefit to the members of this RG, who supported their many activities through 23 projects approved in competitive calls (total funding 2,622,269.00 euros for the totality of the previous team) and with direct funding support from ICS. Altogether, the research dynamics of ICS became highly visible and influential, multiplying the number of partnerships and demands from universities, research centres, consortia and the civil society. However, the budget cuts and related difficulties beginning in 2011 led to a severe shortage in many of our activities contributing to a brain drain that we hope will soon be reversed. 9.4. Research Group Output 2008/2012 9.4.1 Publications in peer reviewed journals and/or other publications Bastos, C. (2008). Migrants, Settlers And Colonists:The Biopolitics of Displaced Bodies. International Migration. 46(5): 27- 54. (IF JCR 2012: 0.865, SJR 2012: 0,618, n.º of citations: 4). Bastos, C. (2009). Borrowing, Adapting, and Learning the Practices of Smallpox: Notes from Colonial Goa. Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 83 (1), 141-163. (IF JCR 2012: 0.594, SJR 2012: 0,180, n.º of citations: 2). Blanes, R. L. (2011). Unstable Biographies. The Ethnography of Memory and Historicity in an Angolan Prophetic Movement. History and Anthropology. 22(1), 93-119. (SJR 2012: 0,146, n.º of citations: 7). Domingos. N. (2010). Building a motor habitus: Physical education in the Portuguese Estado Novo. International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 45(1), 23-37. (IF JCR 2012: 1.125, SJR 2012: 1,475, nº de citações: 4). Sobral, J. M. et al. (2010). Perante a pneumônica - a epidemia e as respostas das autoridades de saúde pública e dos agentes políticos em Portugal (1918-1919). Varia Historia. 25(42), 377-402. (n.º of citations: 0). Taylor, E. B. (2009). Modern Dominicanidad: Nation-Building and Politics of Exclusion in Santo Domingo Since the 1880s. Dialectical Anthropology, 33 (2): 209-217 (SJR 2012: 0,109, n.º of citations: 7). Vala, J.; Lopes, D. & Lima, M. (2008). Black Immigrants in Portugal: LusoTropicalism and Prejudice. Journal of Social Issues, 64(2), 287-302. (IF JCR 2012: 1.857, SJR 2012: 1,532, n.º of citations: 18). Viegas, S. M. (2009). Can Anthropology Make Valid Generalizations? Feelings of Belonging in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Social Analysis. The International Journal of Cultural and Social Practice. 53 (2), 147–162. (n.º of citations: 3). Viegas, S. M. (2012). Pleasures that differentiate: Transformational bodies among the Tupinambá of Olivença (Atlantic coast, Brazil). Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 18(3), 536-553. (IF JCR 2012: 1.098, SJR 2012: 1,128, n.º of citations: 0). West, H. G. & Domingos, N. (2012). Gourmandizing poverty food: the Serpa Cheese Slow Food presidium. Journal of Agrarian Change. 12 (1), 120–143. (IF JCR 2012: 2.291, SJR 2012: 0,937, n.º of citations: 2). 82 9.4.2 Completed PhD theses Maria Manuel Correia de Lemos Quintela, "Águas que curam, águas que "energizam" - etnografia das prátias terapêuticas termais em Portugal (Cabeço de Vide) e Brasil (Caldas de Imperatriz)", supervised by Cristiana Bastos. Thesis completed in 2008, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Nuno Manuel Ferreira Dias, "Remigração e etnicidade: mobilidade hindu no trânsito colonial entre a África de Leste e a Europa", supervised by João Pina Cabral. Thesis completed in 2009, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. José Manuel Fraga Mapril Gonçalves, "A "modernidade" do sacrifício Qurban, lugares e circuitos transnacionais entre bangladeshis em Lisboa", co-supervised by Cristiana Bastos and Ramon Sarró. Thesis completed in 2008, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Luís Júnior Costa Saraiva, "O renascer de Vénus: prostituição, trabalho e saúde em tempos de sida", supervised by Cristiana Bastos. Thesis completed in 2009, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Daniel Joaquim Alves Seabra, "Claques portuenses: um estudo de grupos organizados de adeptos de futebol em contexto urbano", supervised by José Manuel Sobral. Thesis completed in 2009, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Virgínia dos Santos Henriques Calado, "À mesa com o universo: a proposta macrobiótica de experiência do mundo", supervised by Cristiana Bastos. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências Sociais Universidade de Lisboa. Mónica Alexandra de Almeida Monteiro Saavedra, "Uma questão nacional": enredos da malária em Portugal, séculos XIX e XX", supervised by Cristiana Bastos. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Irene de Assunção Raposo Rodrigues, "Flows of fortune: the economy of chinese migration to Portugal", supervised by Ramon Sarró. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Patrícia Carla Valente Ferraz de Matos, "Mendes Correia e a Escola de Antropologia do Porto: contribuição para o estudo das relações entre Antropologia, Nacionalismo e colonialismo em Portugal de finais do século XIX aos finais da década de 50", supervised by José Manuel Sobral. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Taniele Cristina Rui, "Corpos dóceis, indóceis: uso de "drogas", marcadores sociais e corporalidade", supervised by Simone Frangella. Thesis completed in 2012, Universidade Estadual de Campinas. 9.4.4 Books and book chapters of international circulation Bastos, C. (2012). Together and apart: catholic hospitals in plural Goa. In F. Speziale (Ed.), Hospitals in Iran and India, 1500-1950s (pp. 133-157). Leiden: Brill. ISBN: 9789004228290 Frangella, S. (2010). Corpos urbanos errantes: uma etnografia da corporalidade de moradores de rua em São Paulo. São Paulo: Annablume, Fapesp. ISBN: 978-85-391-0036-1 Frangella, S. (2011). "Brazilianness" in London: national goods and images in transnational mobility. In Simai, S. & Hook, D. (Eds), Brazilian subjectivity today: migration, identity and xenophobia (pp. 149-170). Villa Maria: Eduvim. ISBN: 978-987-1727-90-2 Granjo, P. (2011). Twins, albinos, and vanishing prisoners: a mozambican theory of political power. In Peek, P. M. (Ed.), Twins in African and diaspora cultures: double trouble, twice blessed (pp. 327-345). Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN: 978-0253223074 83 Peralta, E. & Anico, M. (Eds) (2009). Heritage and Identity: Engagement and Demission in Contemporary Society. London: Routledge. ISBN: 978-0-415-45336-3 Sobral, J. M. (2008). Race and Space in the Interpretations of Portugal: The North-South Division and Representations of Portuguese National Identity in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. In Sharon Roseman & Shawn Parkhurst (Eds), Recasting Culture and Space in Iberian Contexts (pp. 205-224). Albany: SUNY Press. ISBN: 978-0-7914-7311-5 Taylor, E. B. (2010) (Ed.). Fieldwork Identities in the Caribbean. Florida: Caribbean Studies Press. ISBN: 9781584326007 Vacchiano, F. (2010). «Bash n‘ataq l-walidin (“to save my parents”). Personal and social challenges of Moroccan unaccompanied children in Italy». In Kanics J., Senovilla Hernández D. & Touzenis K. (Eds), Migrating Alone. unaccompanied and separated children's migration to Europe (pp. 107-127). Paris: UNESCO Publishing. ISBN: 9789231040917 Vasconcelos, J. (2008). Homeless Spirits: Modern Spiritualism, Psychical Research and the Anthropology of Religion in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. In Pine, Frances & Cabral, João Pina (Orgs), On the margins of religion (pp. 13-38). London and New York: Berghahn. ISBN: 978-1-84545-409-8 Viegas, S. M. (2012). Territorialidad no topográfica en la reivindicación de una tierra indígena (Tupinambá de Olivença, Bahía-Brasil). In G. Orobitg, & G. Celigueta (Eds), Autoctonía, poder local y espacio global frente a la noción de ciudadanía (pp. 131-158). (Estudis d'Antropologia Social i Cultural, 17). Barcelona: Publicacions i Edicions y de la Universitat de Barcelona. ISBN: 978-84-475-3556-9 9.4.5 Conference proceedings Bastos, C. (2011). Ilhas, planaltos e travessias: os fluxos de madeirenses entre plantações e colónias. In As ilhas e a Europa, a Europa das ilhas (pp. 187-196). Funchal: Centro de Estudos de História do Atlântico. Cabral, J. P. (2010). Qué es relativismo hoy? Repensando el multiculturalismo frente a la globalización. In J. Marcos Arévalo, S. Rodriguez Becerra & E. Luque Baena (orgs), Nos-Otros: Miradas antropológicas sobre la diversidad (vol. 1, pp. 27-43). Mérida: Assemblea de Extremadura. Durão, S. & Fradique, T. (2010). Cultura como organização: resgate etnográfico. 3.º workshop de investigação Próximo Futuro - Gestão das organizações sociais e culturais (Available at http://www.proximofuturo.gulbenkian.pt/pdf/CRIA.pdf). Lisboa: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian Lisboa Durão, S. (2010). Proximidade policial: o que é? Proposta de leitura contextualizada em territórios urbanos. In I Jornadas de Segurança Interna (pp. 113-134). Lisboa: Ministério da Administração Interna. Durão, S. (2011). Policiamento e proximidade: experiências em Portugal. In António Pedro Dores (Coord.), “Prisões para quê?” (3), GIP, Grupo de Intervenção nas Prisões. Available at http://intervencaoprisoes.org/?p=449. Matos, P. F. de (2010). A história e os mitos: manifestações da ideologia colonial na construção do Portugal dos Pequenitos em Coimbra. 7º Congresso Ibérico de Estudos Africanos (pp. 1-28). Available at http://hdl. handle. net/10071/2194 Ribeiro, A. P. & Pais, J. M. (2010). "Muda o social, mudam os documentos?": mesa redonda 2. Cadernos documente-se!: reflexões sobre o social (pp. 45-61) (Cadernos Documente-se: 2). Porto: Faculdade de Letras. Sarró, R. (2008). Arrodíllate y creerás: reflexiones sobre la postura religiosa. In M. Cornejo Valle, M. Cantón Delgado y R. Blanes (Orgs). Teorías y Prácticas Emergentes en la Antropología de la Religión. Actas del Simposio, vol. 10, (pp. 273-292). San Sebastián: ANKULEGUI. 84 Valle, M. C., Delgado, M. C. y Blanes, R. L. (2008). Introducción: La Religión en Movimiento. In Mónica Cornejo Valle, Manuela Cantón Delgado y Ruy Llera Blanes (Eds). Teorías y Prácticas Emergentes en la Antropología de la Religión. Actas del Simposio. Donostia (San Sebastián): Ankulegi. Viegas, S. M. (2011). "Três etnografias nas décadas de 1960-1970: os Fataluku”. In Marques, Vítor Rosado, Roque, Ana C. & Roque, Ricardo (Ed.), Atas do Colóquio ‘Timor: Missões Científicas e Antropologia Colonial’ (edição digital/Electronic edition, published online at http://www.historyanthropologytimor.org). Lisboa: IICT/ICS-UL. 9.4.8 Books, including single-authored works (including scholarly editions of oral or written texts and translations with introduction and commentary) Bastos, C. & Barreto, R. (Orgs) (2011). A circulação do conhecimento: medicina, redes e impérios. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Bastos, C. (Org.) (2011). Clínica, arte e sociedade: a sífilis no Hospital do Desterro e na saúde pública. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Blanes, R. L. (2008). Aleluia! Música e identidade num movimento evangélico cigano na Peninsula Ibérica. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Domingos, N. & Tiesler, N. C. (Coord.). (2012). Futebol português: política, género & movimento. (História). Porto: Edições Afrontamento. Durão, S. & Darck, M. (Orgs). (2012). Polícia, segurança e ordem pública: perspectivas portuguesas e brasileiras. Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Pais, J. M. (2012). Sexualidade e afectos juvenis. Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais Sobral, J. M., Lima, M. L., Castro, P. & Sousa, P. S. e (Orgs) (2009). A Pandemia Esquecida. Olhares comparados sobre a Pneumónica 1918-1919. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Sobral, J. M. & Vala, J. (Org.) (2010). Identidade nacional, inclusão e exclusão social (Atitudes Sociais dos portugueses, 11). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Sobral, J. M. (2012). Portugal, portugueses: uma identidade nacional. Lisboa: Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos. Tiesler, N. C. (2011). A morada de Ser: muçulmanos na Europa e políticas de identidade. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 9.4.9 Edited special issues of journals, with substantial research input on the part of the researcher Bastos, C. (Ed.) (2010). Parts of Asia. Portuguese literary and cultural studies 17/18. Granjo, P. (2008). Moçambique Actual, continuidades e mudanças. Análise Social, n.º 187. Bastos, C. & Harish, N. (2011). Special Issue "Healing Holidays". Anthropology and Medicine 18(1) . Durão, S. & Lopes, D. S. (Eds). (2011). Special Issue: Rethinking Institutions. Social Anthropology, 19(4) Sarró, R. & Blanes, R. L. (2009). Religião e Mobilidade Humana no Século XXI. (Número Especial). Análise Social. XLIV (190). Tiesler, N. C. (Org.). (2012). Futebol e emigração portuguesa [dossiê]. Etnográfica, 16 (1). Toren, C. & Cabral, J. P. (2009). What’s happening to epistemology? (Special Number). Social Analysis. 53 (2) 85 Vala, J. (2009). Expressions of “new” racism (special issue). International Journal of Psychology. 44 (1). Vasconcelos, J. (Org.). (2012). Africanos e afrodescendentes em Portugal: Redefinindo práticas, projetos e identidades Lisboa. Cadernos de Estudos Africanos, 24. Viegas, S. M. & Mapril, J. (Org.). (2012). Imprevistos e mutualidade: A produção do conhecimento etnográfico em antropologia [miscelânia e dossiê]. Etnográfica, 16(3). 9.4.10 Chapters in books, including contributions to conference proceedings, essays in collections Barreto, J. (2012). Nacional-catolicismo: origens e carreira de um conceito. In C. Gaspar, F. Patriarca & L. S. de Matos (Orgs), Estado, regimes e revoluções: estudos em homenagem a Manuel de Lucena (pp. 405455). Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Bastos, C. (2008). Os estudos sociais da ciência, a antropologia e a grande fractura. In João Arriscado Nunes & Ricardo Roque (Orgs). Objectos Impuros: os estudos sociais da ciência em Portugal (pp.107-131). Porto: Afrontamento. Bastos, C. (2009). O medos dos imigrantes. In Elsa Lechner (Org.), Migração, Saúde e Diversidade Cultural (pp.127-136) Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Blanes, R. L. (2008). Um Cemitério chamado Europa: cristianismo, consciência global e identidades migratórias. In Carmo, Renato, Melo, Daniel & Blanes, Ruy (Orgs), A Globalização no Divã (pp.317-333). Lisboa: Tinta-da-China. Blanes, R. L. (2009). Circunscrição Moral: Mobilidade, diáspora e configurações doutrinais na Igreja Tokoista. In Renato do Carmo & José Alberto Simões (Orgs), A Produção das Mobilidades: Redes, espacialidades e trajectos num mundo em globalização (pp.247-261). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Sarró, R. & Blanes, R. L. (2010). Profetas e Missionários: Reflexões sobre as Igrejas Angolanas em Lisboa. In Vilaça, Helena & Enzo Pace (Eds), Religião em Movimento. Imigrantes e Diversidade Religiosa em Portugal e Itália (pp. 141-153). Porto: Estratégias Criativas. Sobral, J. M. (2008). Cozinha, Nacionalismo e Cosmopolitismo em Portugal (séculos XIX-XX). In Manuel Villaverde Cabral, Karin Wall, Sofia Aboim & Filipe Carreira da Silva (Orgs). Itinerários: a Investigação nos 25 anos do ICS (pp. 99-123). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Sobral, J. M. (2010). Povo, nação, raça:representações da identidade nacional portuguesa no século XX. In José Neves (Coord.) Como se faz um povo: ensaios em história contemporânea de Portugal (pp. 167-181). Lisboa: Tinta-da-China. Vasconcelos, J. (2008). Espíritos Clandestinos: Espiritismo, Pesquisa Psíquica e Antropologia da Religião entre 1850 e 1920. In João Arriscado Nunes & Ricardo Roque (Orgs), Objectos Impuros: Experiências em Estudos sobre a Ciência (pp.179-209). Porto: Edições Afrontamento. Viegas, S. M. (2008). Entusiasmo e Contra-revelação:Uma antropologia do quotidiano entre os Tupinambá no sul da Bahia. In Frias, Sónia (Org.), Etnografia e emoções (pp.223-260). Lisboa: Editora do ISCSP. 9.4.12 Encyclopedia entries (to the extent that they embody research) Blanes, R. L. (2011). Simão Gonçalves Toco (1918-1984), religious leader. In Akyeampong, Emmanuel and Gates, Henry L. (Eds), Dictionary of African Biography (pp. ). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Blanes, R. L. (2010). Música Cigana. In Enciclopédia da música em Portugal no século XX (L-P, pp. 834-836). Lisboa: Temas e Debates / Círculo de Leitores. 86 Dix, S. & Tiesler, N. C. (2011). Religion in Portugal. In Marcus Porsche-Ludwigs (Ed.) Handbuch der Religionen der Welt (online, disponivel em: http://www.bautz.de/bautzbautz/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=227:religion-inportogal&catid=70:handbuch-religion&Itemid=62 ). Domingos, N. (2010). Federação das Colectividades de Cultura e Recreio. In Enciclopédia da Música em Portugal no Século XX (Salwa Castelo-Branco (Ed.) Vol. 2, pp. 468-470). Lisboa: Círculo dos Leitores. Taylor, E. B. (2012). Creolization. In M. Juergensmeyer & H. K. Anheier (Eds), Encyclopedia of global studies (Vol. 1). Santa Barbara: Sage Publications. Taylor, E.B. (2012). South America. In C. A. Zimring & W. L. Rathje (Eds), Encyclopedia of Consumption and Waste: The social science of garbage (Vol. 2). Sage. Vasconcelos, J. (2010). Pedro Homem de Melo. In Castelo-Branco, Salwa (Dir.), Enciclopédia da Música em Portugal no Século XX (vol.3, L-P, p. 764). Lisboa: Círculo de Leitores / Temas e Debates. Viegas, S. M. (2010). Introdução - Tupinambá. In Enciclopédia Povos Indígenas no Brasil. São Paulo, Brasil: Instituto Socioambiental. Disponível em http://pib.socioambiental.org/pt/povo/tupinamba. Viegas, S. M. (2010). Noções de Corpo e Pessoa - Tupinambá. In Enciclopédia Povos Indígenas no Brasil. São Paulo, Brasil: Instituto Socioambiental. Disponível em http://pib.socioambiental.org/pt/povo/tupinamba/2210. Viegas, S. M. (2010). Histórico da Ocupação - Tupinambá. In Enciclopédia Povos Indígenas no Brasil. São Paulo, Brasil: Instituto Socioambiental. Disponível em http://pib.socioambiental.org/pt/povo/tupinamba/2202. 9.4.13 Audio/visual and electronic/digital materials Cabral, J. P. (2012). Canoas da Bahia (CD ROM). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Pais, J. M. (2010). O Fado é bom Demais. Edição do ICS-UL. Perestrelo, A., Delicado, A. & Bastos, C. (2011). As Ceras dermatológicos do desterro e capuchos – exposição no salão nobre do Hospital dos Capuchos. 9.4.14 Other categories, including web-based resources; video and audio recordings (to the extent that they embody research) Antropocoiso - http://antropocoiso.blogspot.pt/ (coord. by Paulo Granjo) POPANTH: popular anthropology for everyone - http://popanth.com/ (coord. by Erin B Taylor) Colecção de Dermatologia do Desterro - https://sites.google.com/site/cerasdesterro/ (coord. by Ana Delicado, Cristiana Bastos) Diasbola - http://www.diasbola.com/ (coord. by Nina Clara Tiesler) O Novo Aquilégio - http://www.aguas.ics.ul.pt/ (coord. by Cristiana Bastos) Blanes, R. L. (2011). Political and religious lines redrawn in post-war Angola. Africa at LSE. Available at http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/africaatlse/2011/07/01/political-and-religious-lines-redrawn-in-post-war-angola/. Cabral, J. P. (2008). The Tribes, the Leaders, the Millionaires: racialised africa. London Grip. Available at http://www.londongrip.com/LondonGrip/London_Grip_home_page.html. 87 Cabral, J. P. (2008). History of Anthropology and Personal Biography. Anthropology Today 24 (6), pp.26-27. Available at http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/121537488/PDFSTART. Durão, S. (2011). Policiamiento y proximidad : experiencias en Portugal. Serie Insyde en la Sociedad Civil, Nº 22. Available at http://www.insyde.org.mx/images/insyde_sociedad_civil_22.pdf. Granjo, P. (2011). Julgamentos de feitiçaria, hegemonias locais e relativismos. Buala - cultura contemporânea africana. Available at http://www.buala.org/pt/a-ler/julgamentos-de-feiticariahegemonias-locais-e-relativismos. 9.4.16 Other research outputs Bastos, C. (2008). [Review of Gendered social relationships, by Marissa Moorman & Kethleen Sheldon (Eds), Lusotopie XII (1-2)], Ellipsis – Journal of the American Portuguese Studies Association, vol 6, 159-161. Bastos, C. (2009). [Review of Refiguring unani tibb: plural healing in late colonial India, New Perspectives in South Asian History, N.º 17, by Guy Attwell], Medical History 53(4): 594–595. Bastos, C. (2011). [Review of The AIDS Pandemic in Latin America, by Shawn Smallman], The Americas 67(4): 583-584. Blanes, R. L. (2012). [Review of Dreams that Matter. Landscapes of the Egyptian Imagination, by Amira Mittermaier]. American Ethnologist, 39 (1), 225-226. Blanes, R. L. (2011). Review of Les conceptions du corps et de la personne dans un contexte amérindien: Indiens toba du Gran Chaco sud-américain, by Florencia Carmen Tola , Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 17 (2), 421-422. Blanes, R. L. (2011). [Review of El Archivo del Duelo, by Cristina Sánchez-Carretero (coord.)], Revista de Dialectología y Tradiciones Populares, LXVI(2), 570-572. Peralta, E. (2010). [Review of The Ashgate Research Companion to Heritage and Identity, by Brian Graham and Peter Howard (Eds)], Museum & Societ, 8 (1), 58-60. Taylor, E. B. (2011). [Review of Exile Cultures, Misplaced Identities, by Paul Allatson and Jo Mc Cormack (Eds)], Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research, 17(1), 121-127. Taylor, E. B. (2012). [Review of Life in debt: Times of care and violence in neoliberal Chile, by Clara Han], Social Anthropology, 20(4), 506-507. Viegas, S. M. (2011). Prefácio. In Rosy Oliveira. O Barulho da Terra: Nem Kalunga nem Camponeses (pp. 1318). Curitiba, Brasil: Editora Progressiva Ltda. 9.4.17 Organisation of scientific dissemination activities Conference "Comida, Bebida, Sociedade e Ciência: Perspectivas Antropológicas", 2010, organized by Cristiana Bastos Conference "Impérios, Centros e Províncias: A Circulação do Conhecimentos Médico I e II, 2010 e 2011, organized by Cristiana Bastos Conference "Religious pragmatics", 2009, organized by Ruy Llera Blanes "IV Congress da Associação Portuguesa de Antropologia", 2009, organized by João Pina Cabral and Susana Matos Viegas Seminar "Adivinhação e cura em Moçambique", 2010, organized by Paulo Granjo 88 "Summer School ‘Religion in the Public Domain’", 2011, organized by Ramon Sarró and Ruy Llera Blanes Seminar "Relações Interétnicas, Migrações e Preconceito", 2008, organized by José Manuel Sobral Seminar "Food, Between Anthropology and History", 2009, organized by José Manuel Sobral DIASBOLA WORKSHOP I - "Portuguese emigrants in five historical contexts: Debating concepts of collective subjectivity"// DIASBOLA WORKSHOP II - "The Role of Football and Popular Culture in diasporic settings: Portuguese emigrants and luso-communities", 2009, organized by Nina Clara Tiesler Workshop "Muslims in Europe and Islamophobia", 2010, organized by Nina Clara Tiesler 9.4.18 Research contracts with national or international entities "Clínica, Arte e Sociedade", coord. By Cristiana Bastos. APIFARMA. "Moving with the Ball: The Globalization of Women's Football", coord. By Nina Clara Tiesler. JoaoHavelange-Grant (FIFA). "Promoção da Leitura nas bilbiotecas públicas", coord. José Machado Pais. GEPE - Ministério da Educação. “Les mineurs migrants et le défi de leur protection au Maroc”, coord. by Francesco Vacchiano. Association Al Khaima – Tangier, on behalf of UNICEF Maroc. "Relatório Circunstanciado de identificação e delimitação da Terra Indígena Tupinambá de Olivença (Portaria FUNAI/DAF nº 544, de 26/05/2008, Processo FUNAI/BSB/1523/2008)", coord. by Susana Matos Viegas. Fundação Nacional do Índio (Ministério da Justiça, Brasil). "Relatório Final Circunstanciado de Identificação da Terra Indígena Tupinambá de Olivença (Processo FUNAI nº 2170/09)", coord. by Susana Matos Viegas. Fundação Nacional do Índio (FUNAI), Ministério da Justiça Brasília. 9.4.19 Projects funded in national and international competitive calls "The science, clinic, and art of syphilis at Desterro (1897-1955)", coord. by Cristiana Bastos. FCT. "Empires, Centers and Provinces: the circulation of medical knowledge", coord. by Cristiana Bastos. FCT. "Currents of Faith, Places of History: Connections, Moral Circumscriptions and World-Making in the Atlantic Space", coord. by Ruy Llera Banes. HERA - ERANET. "The territorial web: personal belonging, mobility and work in contemporary Brazil", coord. by João Pina Cabral. FCT. "Unveiling police(men) histories. Urban policing in Portugal, 1860-1960", coord. by Susana Durão. FCT. "Codfish and the nation: processes of reproduction of national identifications through the Academies of Codfish in Portugal and in the Portuguese Diaspora", coord. by José Manuel Sobral. FCT. "Imagining Modern Portugal? The role of football in the construction of communities and "Portugueseness" in six diasporic settings", coord. by Nina Clara Tiesler. FCT. "Perceived heterogeneity and validation of everyday knowledge: When group members evaluate the validity of their own production", coord. by Jorge Vala. FCT. "Recognizing Christianity´: how African immigrants redefine the European religious heritage", coord. by Ramon Sarró. NORFACE. "Co-habitations: dynamics of power in Lautém (Timor-Leste)", coord. by Susana Matos Viegas. FCT. 89 9.5. Organisational Structure and Objectives of the Research Group 2015/2020 9.5.1 Structure of the Research Group The group Identities, Cultures, Vulnerabilities is organized into four research clusters: circulations, embodiments, places, cognitions. The definition of each research cluster results from the interaction between a collective commitment to the strategic programme of ICS, the current and future interests of researchers, developments in contemporary theory in anthropology and neighbouring disciplines, and the challenges of responding to contemporary social change. The clusters will provide the setting for the implementation of research, project development, workshops and seminars; researchers are free to be involved in one or multiple clusters, contributing to ongoing projects or creating new ones, accomplishing the general agenda while pursuing their research interests and contributing to theory development. The group’s leaders (currently Cristiana Bastos, José Manuel Sobral and Susana de Matos Viegas) will coordinate the different activities within and across the research clusters: seminars and workshops, graduate teaching, support for junior scholars, conference organizing, grant applications, outreach activities, international partnerships, participation in external research activities, links with other research groups in ICS and other partners in the University of Lisbon and other institutions. Strategic coordination between the Identities, Cultures Vulnerabilities group and the Empires, colonialism and post-colonial societies research group will be maintained via a number of shared activities and combined analytical efforts. Further coordination with other research groups, within and outside ICS, will be developed for specific research topics – e.g. a task force on “food” will combine efforts with members from the Environment group and other partners in the University of Lisbon and elsewhere; a task force on “racism” will count on a partnership with the group Attitudes; a task force on “health care” will involve members from the Dynamics group and other research and action centres. The group’s co-ordinators will guarantee the yearly planning and the implementation of activities; the establishment of guidelines and support for grant applications; the definition of goals in the presentation of outputs and support for submission of articles and books; and maximum integration between research activities, graduate teaching and outreach. Monthly executive meetings will maintain the collegial nature of the full team and take stock of the work of the different clusters and their projects. Clusters and project teams, depending on their own dynamics, will meet daily, weekly, bi-weekly or monthly, and will report on their activities in the monthly executive meetings. 9.5.2 Objectives of the Research Group Our general aim is to document and analyse the ways in which groups and societies retain, reshape and reconfigure their cultural legacies in the context of changing social landscapes. Changing social landscapes account for new, short-span, multi-cycle migrations and economic-related displacements that redefine and 90 expand the flows of global circulation. Drawing on recent developments in anthropology, social history, sociology of culture and social psychology, and aiming to contribute to further conceptual developments across those disciplines, our group brings together senior and junior researchers, graduate students, visiting scholars and international partners engaged in the goal of documenting, with hands-on ethnographic or ethnographic-inspired methods, what is like to live in the contemporary world, beyond the cold depictions of statistics, policy reports and quantitative-based analytical models. Research will be organized into four clusters: Circulations: people, capitals, objects, ideas. Accounting for the flows and entanglements of people, capital, objects, and ideas, this cluster will host projects addressing (a) the experience of migration, displacement, border-crossing, and re-defined ethnicities; (b) the circulation of goods, objects of consumption, desires, practices and meanings; (c) memory, heritage and the uses of the past. Drawing on previous experience of multi-site fieldwork, researchers will be encouraged to develop new methodologies and give an account of the theoretical impact of their findings. Embodiments: health, science, labour, food The ‘embodiments’ cluster will host projects addressing (a) different practices and cognitions related to health and well being, plus the resulting tensions in access to care; (b) the practices of science and the uses of knowledge in society; (c) the reconfigurations of labour and resulting vulnerabilities; (d) access to food, cuisine legacies and practices of commensality. While working on different empirical objects, researchers will come together with a view to developing theories using shared conceptual tools and analytical models. Place: personhood, belonging, territorialities This cluster will include projects on (a) the experience of land as property and as territoriality in postcolonial contexts, accounting for colonial legacies, reparations and compensation; (b) the making of territorialities in shifting urban landscapes; (c) shared places and multiple belongings; d) religious belongings and the reconfiguration of territorialities. The synergy between different projects will promote conceptual development and methodological innovation. Collective cognitions: nationalism, religion, ideologies, conflicts, inclusiveness This broad cluster will encompass research projects on (a) religiousness and religions in the contemporary world -- new, old, reconfigured, transformed, transnational; (b) nationalism as a latent and driving force in contemporary transnational societies; (c) ideologies and practices of citizenship, inclusion and exclusion (racism, xenophobia, etc); (d) new ideologies and insurgencies in the 21st century. Addressing the reconfigurations of classical research subjects, this cluster will be at once a locus for theoretical development and an observatory for the contemporary world. While clusters will organize the routines of research and project management, the research group as a whole will regularly interact via monthly business meetings. PhD students and research assistants will be involved in research and analysis. Partnerships with non-academics will be promoted for research and extension activities. International networks will be cultivated and joint research projects will be promoted. Academic excellence will be pursued. See also http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf 91 (RG-50013-2069) Life course, Inequality and Solidarity: Practices and Policies 9.1. Identification of the Research Group 9.1.1 Reference of the research group: RG-50013-2069 9.1.2 Name of the Research Group in portuguese: Trajectórias de Vida, Desigualdade e Solidariedade: Práticas e Políticas 9.1.3 Name of the Research Group in English: Life course, Inequality and Solidarity: Practices and Policies 9.1.4Keyword(s): 1. Childhood, youth and schooling 2. Cultures, lifestyles and media 3. Families, gender and sexualities 4. Ageing, dependency and health practices 9.1.5 Existed in 2008/2012 - Yes 9.1.6 Participating Institution(s) to which the Research Group belongs: N/A 9.2. Researchers in the Group 9.2.1 List of Integrated Members / 3 nuclear CVs Name Principal Investigator Nuclear CV Karin Elizabeth Wall Gago √ √ José António Machado Silva Pais √ Ana Margarida de Seabra Nunes de Almeida √ Amilcar Manuel Reis Moreira Anne Cova Cláudia Maria Guerra Madeira José Luis de Oliveira Garcia Manuel Villaverde Cabral Maria Luísa da Rocha Vasconcelos Quaresma Maria Manuel Baptista Vieira da Fonseca Maria Teresa Duarte Martinho Marzia Grassi Pedro Maria da Cunha Moura Ferreira Pedro Miguel de Jesus Alcântara da Silva Sanda Dominique Samitca Sofia Isabel da Costa d´Aboim Inglez 92 Sofia Cristina Pappámikail da Costa Marinho Susana Isabel Atalaia Ferreira Vanessa Sofia Gomes da Cunha Vitor Sérgio Coelho Ferreira 9.2.2 List of current PhD students Name Ana Isabel Marques Freire Ana Maria Fachadas Gonçalves Ana Rita Domingues Teixeira António Geraldo Manso Calha Carla Cristina Storino Cláudia Luena De Sousa Marinho Daniel Fernando da Soledade Carolo Emanuel Chaves Pimenta Cabral Cameira Fábio David Gonçalves Cruz Filipa Cristina de Mira Ferreira Marques Cachapa Filomena Isabel de Sousa Borges Hélder António dos Santos Nunes Raposo Isadora de Ataíde Fonseca José Manuel Marques da Silva Marmeleira Mafalda Silveira Nunes Duarte Leitão Maria João Carvalho Pinto Faustino Mariana Marta Anita Bacci Tamburlini Marta Sofia da Luz Marcos Pinho Alves Ricardo Jorge Lopes Carvalho Rita Benito Garcia Cardim Vala Salvador Rita Isabel do Carmo Gouveia Rita Maria Gomes Correia Rodrigo Flávio Saturnino Sónia Isabel Teixeira Costa Tânia Dos Reis Alves Vasco Miguel dos Santos Ramos Victor Jose Godoi Millan 93 9.2.3 List of other researchers of the Research Group Name Alda Conceição Botelho de Azevedo Alexandra Maria de Oliveira Neves Gonçalves Dias Santos Alexandra Chaves Ribeiro Assis Raimundo Ana Paula da Costa Gil Jerónimo Cátia Raquel Antunes João Claudia Rocha Rodrigues de Oliveira Filipa Bernardes Coelho Filipa Mónica de Brito Gonçalves Subtil Flávio Osório Alves Martins Natividade Helena Mateus Jerónimo John Arthur David Spall José Nuno do Couto Furtado Moreira de Matos Jussara Maria de Abreu Rowland Lia Daniela Pappámikail Ribeiro d´Almeida Maria Isabel Rodrigues Baptista Maria Leonor de Lima Guerreiro de Bettencourt Rodrigues Patrícia Olinda Loureiro Dias da Silva Pedro Filipe Xavier Mendonça Tatiana Matos de Jesus Ferreira Vera Sandra dos Santos de Sousa Borges 9.3. Research Group Description and Achievements for 2008/2012 9.3.1 Description of the Research Group In the period 2008-2012, the activities directly related to this RG were developed within the framework of the thematic line SOLINC (Solidarities and Social Inclusion). This research group has aimed to contribute to the understanding of change in Portuguese society by examining individual agency and social processes and institutions in the context of global change and modernization. Fundamental processes, framed by space and time, such as the individualization and pluralization of life pathways, the construction of social capital and informal groupings, and the inequality-producing process have been studied both from the perspective of public regulation and from the micro-level perspective of social actors, their practices and subjective perceptions. Theoretical approaches have combined symbolic interactionism with social structural theories, making for examination of practices and lived experiences within a broader interpretative framework of historical paths and social constraints. The main scientific discipline covered by 94 this research line is sociology, but it also systematically encompasses other disciplines such as social policy, demography, anthropology, history, political science and social psychology. The following main topics and fields of research were covered over the last five years: childhood and youth; learning and schooling; culture, everyday life and life-styles; family and gender; life trajectories and transitions; social networks and intergenerational relations; ageing processes and societies; health perceptions and practices; body and sexualities; professional groups, associations and civil society; migration and transnational living; public policies and the Welfare State; social theory. Cross-fertilization and articulation between these topics of research also emerged as a strong trend (e.g. ageing and the lifecourse; family relationships in social networks; childhood, learning and Internet use; gender, sexuality and discrimination against sexual minorities). Our research agenda has thus been shaped to a large extent by new trends in the scientific modes of production which are moving research towards greater interdisciplinarity, multi-thematic queries linking different topics, embeddedness of research in policy and dissemination issues and the use of mixed methods. From the point of view of the strategic organization of research, explaining social change in Portuguese society has therefore required a strong focus on national empirically-based research, quantitative and qualitative or both together, as well as an orientation to comparative cross-national research allowing for the study of the specificities of national paths and context in the light of developments in European and other societies, in particular Portuguese-speaking former colonies. Activities have been structured around five main principles/objectives to take into account the multiple challenges raised by this research agenda: building up relevant research projects, both national and crossnational, involving increased and diversified funding; developing both a national and international orientation to research and collaboration; combining freedom of research based on individual work and authorship with consistent and dynamic clusters of team work, collective debate and intense collaboration both within and with other research groups (e.g. socio-political attitudes; ethnographic approaches); engaging PhD students and young research fellows in projects and networks and promoting close connections between research and the tutorial framework of postgraduate studies in sociology launched and run by senior fellows of the research line; responding to the need for comparative policy analysis and linkages between primary research, society and policy by promoting the activities of three Observatories and partnerships with local, governmental and private non-profit institutions. 9.3.2 Main achievements (4000/3942) The Research group’s main achievements are related to the five objectives set out for the 2008-2012 period: to increase and diversify funding; to promote scientific quality, networking and internationalization through collaborative exchange, different types of publications (authored/co-authored; national/international; articles/books/chapters/reports/working papers) and the organization of and participation in national and international meetings; to ensure the training of junior fellows through their inclusion in projects and senior researchers’ linkages to post-graduate programmes; to strengthen research on public policies and outreach activities. During this period funding was secured for 40 projects, involving approximately 3.3 million euros awarded by national (1300) and international (908) competitive funding, Governmental (615) and private non-profit commissioned funding (460). Projects included: national surveys on some key, cutting-edge issues (e.g. life trajectories and social networks; children and internet use; attitudes to health; sexual behaviour of the Portuguese population; ageing processes and the lifecourse); major cross-national comparative projects (e.g. Norface project on Transnational Childraising; Up2Youth, a cross-national study on Youth as Actor of Social Change (FP6); MOPACT, Mobilizing the potential of 95 active ageing in Europe (FP7); Family Platform - Research on families and family policies in Europe (FP7); Higher Education in Portugal and Brazil - FCT/CAPES); and in-depth qualitative projects (e.g. Sexuality and Emotions in Youth; Men on the margins; New generations of journalists). Research activities are reflected in the number, diversity and quality of publications: 37 books (19 authored, 18 collective volumes, 25 national, 12 international editors), 72 journal articles, 102 book chapters (34 international), reports and working papers. Prizes were awarded to an article in The Sociological Review on “Gender Cultures in Contemporary Europe” (Gulbenkian Award for the Internationalization of the Social Sciences), to a book on “Mead and Modernity.” by the ASA Research Committee on History of Sociology). An ERC consolidator’s grant was awarded to team member Sofia Aboim and researchers have steadily increased the number of their international publications During this period team members organized 69 meetings (7 international seminars and 9 national meetings 2012) and participated intensively in international conferences or seminars (442 papers presented at international meetings between 2008-2012). They also organized the Summer School on Network Analysis and promoted a planned strategy for the dissemination of the social sciences outside the academic world, namely within secondary schools and among students through the OPJ. Senior researchers have also been active in national (APS) and international scientific organizations (ESA, ISA; AISLF) and policy expertise networks at European level (EC; Council of Europe; Eurofound). Junior fellows have been trained hands-on within projects that have hired or offered grants to young researchers, both doctoral and postdoctoral, and through the supervision of Masters and PhD students. 27 PhD theses were completed during this period and the RG’s senior fellows are actively involved in ICS’s doctoral programmes. The activities of three Observatories (Permanent Observatory on Youth, Observatory on Cultural Activities, Observatory on Families and Family Policies) were reorganized and improved in order to monitor developments in public policies systematically, to reach out to stakeholders needing researchbased expertise, and to contribute to the public understanding of science; outputs included updated websites, annual reports, open seminars and increased dissemination through the media. Researchers also lead the Institute on Ageing and in the Data Archive for the Social Sciences (funded by FCT). 9.4. Research Group Output 2008/2012 9.4.1 Publications in peer reviewed journals and/or other publications Aboim, S. (2012). Risk-taking and HIV/Aids prevention: a biographical approach to sexual behavior in Portugal. Ciência e saúde coletiva. 17(1), 99-112. (IF JCR 2012: 0.425, SJR 2012: 0,557, n.º of citations: 4). Ferreira, V. S. (2011) Becoming a heavily tattoed young body: from a bodily experience to a body project. Youth and Society (online first, DOI: 10.1177/0044118X11427839). (IF JCR 2012: 0.897, SJR 2012: 0,670, n.º of citations: 0). Pais, J. M. (2011). Mothers, whores and spells: Tradition and change in Portuguese sexuality. Ethnography, 12(4), 445-465. (IF JCR 2012: 0.551, SJR 2012: 0,525, n.º of citations: 0). Almeida, A. N., Alves, N. A., Delicado, A. & Carvalho, T. (2011). Children and digital diversity: from ‘unguided rookies’ to ‘self-reliant cybernauts’. Childhood (online first, doi: 10.1177/0907568211410897). (IF JCR 2012: 1.046, SJR 2012: 0,772, n.º of citations: 4). 96 Aboim, S. (2010) Gender cultures and the division of labour in contemporary Europe: the attitudinal gender gap from a cross-national perspective. The Sociological Review. 58(2), 171-196. (IF JCR 2012: 0.806, SJR 2012: 0,495, n.º of citations: 17) Ferreira , V. S. (2009) Youth scenes, body marks and bio-sociabilities. Young. 17(3), 285-306 (IF JCR 2012: 0.550, SJR 2012: 0,245, n.º of citations: 6) Pais, J. M. (2009) A juventude como fase da vida: dos ritos de passagem aos ritos de impasse. Saúde e Sociedade. 18(3), 371-381. (IF JCR 2012: 0.231, SJR 2012: 0,388, n.º of citations: 5). Garcia, J. L. & Martins, H. (2009). O ethos da ciência e suas transformações contemporâneas, com especial atenção à biotecnologia. Scientiae Studia: Revista Latino-Americana de Filosofia e História da Ciência. 7 (1), 83-104. (n.º of citations: 18). Samitca, S. (2008) La maladie d’Alzmeimer vécue par les proches. Actualités Psychologiques. 21, 157-172 (n.º of citations: 7) Ferreira, P. M. (2008) A maternidade precoce: tendência e perfis. Revista Portuguesa de Saúde Pública. 26(1/2), 79-113 (n.º of citations: 7) 9.4.2 Completed PhD theses Cláudia Casimiro Ferreira da Costa, "Da violência conjugal às violências na conjugalidade. Representações e Práticas Masculinas e Femininas", supervised by Ana Nunes de Almeida. Thesis completed in 2008, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. José Manuel Sousa de São José, "Trabalhar e Cuidar de um idoso dependente: percursos, soluções e significados", supervised by Karin Wall. Thesis completed in 2009, Instituto de Ciências Sociais Universidade de Lisboa. Rodrigo Rosa, "Escolha do cônjuge e modos de construção da distância social no casal", supervised by Karin Wall. Thesis completed in 2009, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. Maria Alexandra Graça, "Entre Filhos e Pais. Famílias, modelos educativos e construção social do género", supervised by Ana Nunes de Almeida. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa. Verónica Mafalda Nunes de Melo Policarpo, "Indivíduo e sexualidade: a construção social da experiência sexual", supervised by Ana Nunes de Almeida. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências Sociais Universidade de Lisboa. Sofia Cristina da Costa Marinho, "Paternidades de hoje: significados, práticas e negociações da parentalidade na conjugalidade e na residência alternada", supervised by Karin Wall. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Maria de Fátima Coelho, "Processos identitários e delinquência dos jovens em contextos de exclusão: desvalorização pessoal, privação relativa e percepções de injustiça", supervised by Pedro Moura Ferreira. Thesis completed in 2011, Universidade Católica Portuguesa. Joana Lourenço Ramalho, "O papel da cultura na produção de cidade. A Casa da Música", supervised by José Luís Garcia. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. Patrícia Olinda Loureiro Dias da Silva, "The Politics of Youtube. Studying online video and political discussion", supervised by José Luís Garcia. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais Universidade de Lisboa. 97 João Sedas Nunes, "Culturas Adeptas do Futebol: O espaço plural da condição adepta: práticas e identidades", supervised by José Machado Pais. Thesis completed in 2008, Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas - Universidade Nova de Lisboa. 9.4.4 Books and book chapters of international circulation Almeida, A. N. & Vieira, M. M. (2012). From university to diversity: The making of Portuguese higher education. In G. Neave, A. Amaral (Eds), Higher education in Portugal 1974-2009: a nation, a generation, (pp. 137-159). London and New York: Springer. ISBN: 978-94-007-2135-7 Cova, A. (2011). Féminismes et néo-malthusianismes sous la IIIe République: "La liberté de la maternité". Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN: 978-2-296-54569-4 Ferreira, V. S. & Pohl, A. (2011). Ethnicized youth subcultures and "informal learning" in transitions to work. In Bekerman, Z. & Geisen, T. (Eds), International handbook of migration, minorities and education: understanding cultural and social differences in processes of learning (pp. 695-728). Dordecht: Springer. ISBN: 978-94-007-1466-3 Wall, K., Leitão, M. & Ramos, V. (2011). Critical Review of Research on Families and Family Policies in Europe. In Uhlendorff, Uwe, Rupp, Marina & Matthias Euteneuer (Eds) Well-being of Families in Future Europe: Challenges for Research and Policy. Family Platform: Families in Europe, Volume 1 (pp. 119-236). Family Platform, Creative Commons. ISBN: 978-1-4477-4149-7 Aboim, S. (2010). Plural masculinities: the remaking of the self in private life. Surrey: Ashgate. ISBN: 978-07546-7467-2 Grassi, M. (2010). Forms of familial, economic, and political association in Angola today. Lewiston: The Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN: 978-0-7734-3677-0 Borges, V. (2009). Les comédiens et les troupes de théâtre au Portugal: trajectoires professionnelles et marche du travail. Paris, l’Harmattan. ISBN : 978-2-296-08006-5 Wall, K. & Escobedo, A. (2009). Portugal and Spain: two pathways in Southern Europe. In S.B. Kamerman & P. Moss (Eds), (pp. 207-226). Bristol: Policy Press. ISBN: 978-1847420671 Resende, J. & Vieira, M.M. (Eds) (2009). The crisis of schooling? Learning, knowledge and competencies in modern societies. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN: 978-1-4438-0957-3 Pais, J. M. (2008). Young people, citizenship and leisure. In René Bendit & Marina Hahn-Bleibtreu (Eds), Youth Transitions. Processes of social inclusion and patterns of vulnerability in a globalised world (pp. 227243). Leverkusen: Barbara Budrich Publishers Opladen &Farmington Hills. ISBN: 978-3866491441 9.4.5 Conference proceedings Cunha, V. (2012). As decisões reprodutivas na sociedade portuguesa: elementos para uma reflexão sobre o alcance e os limites das políticas públicas na natalidade. In Casa Civil da Presidência da República (Coord.), Roteiros do Futuro - Conferência "Nascer em Portugal" (pp. 131-143). Lisboa: INCM. Martinho, T.D. (2012). O trabalho de mediação cultural em Portugal: alguns contextos e os seus figurinos organizacionais. Paper apresentado no VII Congresso Português de Sociologia "Sociedade, Crise e Reconfigurações", Lisboa: Associação Portuguesa de Sociologia. Available at http://www.aps.pt/vii_congresso/papers/finais/PAP0860_ed.pdf. 98 Madeira. C. (2012). To be or not to be an ‘emancipated spectator’ in the new artistic practices of social art?. 7th Conference of the European Research Network Sociology of the Arts. Viena: Vienna University of Music and Performing Arts. Wall, K. (2009). Dinâmicas familiares e políticas de família na União Europeia: que evolução?. In Actas do Colóquio Internacional «Família, Género e Sexualidade nas Sociedades Contemporâneas», 2002 (pp. 47-55 and CD-ROM Edition). Lisboa: Associação Portuguesa de Sociologia. Ferreira, P. M.; Jerónimo, P. & Cabral, M. V. (2011). Representações da Reforma e Envelhecimento Ativo. In Livro de Comunicações da Conferência Internacional sobre Envelhecimento (pp. 131-142). Lisboa: Edições Fundação D. Pedro IV. Ferreira, V. S. (2010). Defining and Segmenting Carnal Reflexivity. Conference Paper presented at the 104th annual meeting of the American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, Hilton San Francisco, San Francisco, CA. Available at http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p308902_index.html. Aboim, S. & Vasconcelos, P. (2010). Cumulative effects of lifecourse events in an intergenerational perspective: social trajectories of three-generation family lineages. In American Sociological Association Meeting Archives, San Francisco. Available at: http://www.allacademic.com//meta/p_mla_apa_research_citation/3/0/6/4/7/pages306474/p3064741.php. Cunha, V. (2009). O Filho Único na Sociedade Portuguesa Contemporânea: descendência ideal ou descendência possível?. In Actas do Colóquio Internacional «Família, Género e Sexualidade nas Sociedades Contemporâneas» (CD-ROM Edition). Lisboa: APS. Ferreira, P. M. (2009). A sociabilidade nocturna juvenil — entre a festa e a viagem. In Actas da VIII Reunión de Antropología del Mercosur. (Online Edition). Buenos Aires: Universidad Nacional de San Martín. Vieira, M. M. (2009). Incerteza e individuação: escolarização como processo de construção biográfica. In Actas do I Colóquio Luso-Brasileiro de Sociologia da Educação. Família, escola e juventude: olhares cruzados Brasil/Portugal: Belo Horizonte (CD-ROM Edition). 9.4.8 Books, including single-authored works (including scholarly editions of oral or written texts and translations with introduction and commentary) Borges, V. & Costa, P. (org.) (2012). Criatividade e instituições: novos desafios à vida dos artistas e dos profissionais da cultura. Lisboa, Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Almeida, A. N. de (Coord.) (2011). Os nossos dias. In Mattoso, José (Dir.). História da vida privada em Portugal, Volume 4. Lisboa: Círculo de Leitores / Temas e debates. Almeida, A. N. de (2009). Para uma sociologia da infância – jogos de olhares, pistas para a investigação. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais Pais, J. M. (2010). Lufa-lufa quotidiana: ensaios sobre cidade, cultura e vida urbana. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Ferreira, P. M. & Cabral, M. V. (org.) (2010). Sexualidades em Portugal: comportamentos e riscos. Lisboa: Bizâncio. Wall, K., Aboim, S. & Cunha, V. (2010) (Org.). A vida familiar no masculino: negociando velhas e novas masculinidades. Lisboa, Comissão para a Igualdade no Trabalho e no Emprego. 99 Cabral, M. V. & Alcântara, P. (2010). A adesão à terapêutica em Portugal: atitudes e comportamentos da população portuguesa perante as prescrições médicas, os hábitos de saúde e o consumo de medicamentos. Lisboa, Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Grassi, M. (2009). Capital Social e Jovens Originários dos PALOP em Portugal. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Garcia, J. L. (Ed.). (2009). Estudos sobre os Jornalistas Portugueses - Metamorfoses e Encruzilhadas no Limiar do Século XXI. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Ferreira, V. S. (2008). Marcas que Demarcam. Tatuagem, Body Piercing e Culturas JuveniS. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 9.4.9 Edited special issues of journals, with substantial research input on the part of the researcher Almeida, A. N. (Ed.). (2012). Infância, crianças, internet: desafios na era digital. (Textos da Conferência Internacional Espaços da Educação Tempos de formação, Novembro 2009). Lisboa: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. Pais, J. M., Bendit, R. & Ferreira, V. S. (Org.) (2011). Jovens e rumos. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Cabral, M. V. (Org.) (2008). Sucesso/insucesso: escola, economia, sociedade. Lisboa: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian Vieira, M. M. & Brandão, Z. (2010). Sociologia da Educação: Revista Luso-brasileira, nº1. Pais, J. M. & Santos, M. L. L. (Org.) (2010). Novos trilhos culturais: práticas e políticas. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Pais, J. M. & Ferreira, V. S. (Org.) (2010). Tempos e transições de vida: Portugal ao espelho da Europa. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Grassi, M. (Org.) (2010). PALOP: investigação em debate. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Cabral, M. V., Wall, K., Aboim, S. & Silva, F.C. (Org.) (2008). Itinerários: A Investigação nos 25 Anos do ICS. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Cova, A. (Dir.) (2008). História comparada das mulheres: novas abordagens. Lisboa: Livros Horizonte. Pais, J. M., Carvalho, C. & Gusmão, N. M. (Orgs) (2008). O visual e o quotidiano: imagens e revelações. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. 9.4.10 Chapters in books, including contributions to conference proceedings, essays in collections Ferreira, V. S. (2012). Resistência versus existência? A dimensão política das microculturas juvenis. In J. Dayrell, M. A. Nogueira, J. M. Resende & M. M. Vieira (Orgs), Família, escola e juventude: Olhares cruzados Brasil - Portugal (pp. 344-371). Belo Horizonte: Editora UFMG. Grassi, M. (2011). Transnational lives, labor, and gender in the Cape Verde Diaspora. In C. Silva & C. Fortes (Orgs), As mulheres em Cabo Verde: experiências e perspectivas (pp. 223-239). Praia: UniCV / CIGEF. Vieira, M. M. (2012). Incerteza e individuação: escolarização como processo de construção biográfica. In J. Dayrell, M. A. Nogueira, J. M. Resende & M. M. Vieira (Orgs), Família, escola e juventude: olhares cruzados Brasil - Portugal (pp. 276-297). Belo Horizonte: Editora UFMG. Subtil, F. & Garcia, J. L. (2012). Comunicación: Una Herencia de la Escola de Sociologia de Chicago. In M. McCombs y M. M. Algarra, Communication and Social Life. Pamplona: Ediciones Universidad Navarra. 100 Stecanela, N. & Ferreira, P. M. (2011). Las Múltiples Faces del Miedo: Trayectorias de Mujeres en Situación de Violencia. In Rodríguez-Shadow, María J. y Rodríguez Campos, Lilia. (Org.), Miradas diversas sobre las mujeres. Género y plurisciplinariedad (v. 1, pp. 43-61). México: Centro de Estudios de Antropología de las Mujeres. Wall, K. (2008). Managing work and care for young children in Cape Verdean Families in Portugal. In L. Batalha and J. Carling (Eds). Transnational Archipelago: Perspectives on Cape Verdean Migration and Diaspora (pp. 221-235). Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. Ferreira, V. S. (2011). Pesos, halteres e sentidos dos corpos (h) alterados: um século de musculação em Portugal. In Neves, J. & Domingos, N. (Coord.), Uma história do desporto em Portugal, Vol III - Classes, associativismo e Estado (pp. 231-257). Vila do Conde: Quidnovi. Pais, J. M. (2012). Decipherings of the social : "my home is a world" (the homeless). In L. Tomasi (Ed.), Sociology: the "new" language (pp. 77-119). Milano: Franco Angeli. Moreira, A. & Lodemel, I. (2012). Zarządzanie Aktywizacją: Polska na tle Europy (Governing Activation: Poland in the European Context). In T. Kaźmierczak & M. Rymsza (Eds), W stronę aktywnych służb społecznych (Towards active social services). Warsawa: Fundacja Instytut Spraw Publicznych. Wall, K, , Aboim, S. & Marinho, S. (2008). Family configurations from the male perspective: exploring diversity over the life course. In E. Widmer & R. Jallinoja (Eds). Beyond the Nuclear Family: Families in a Configurational Perspective (pp. 207-229). Bern: Peter Lang. 9.4.12 Encyclopedia entries (to the extent that they embody research) Cova, A. (2010). Louise Koppe. In Cova, Anne et Dumons, Bruno (Dir.), Destins de femmes: religion, culture et société (France, XIXe-XXe siècles) (pp.233-234). Paris: Letouzey et Ané. 9.4.14 Other categories, including web-based resources; video and audio recordings (to the extent that they embody research) Martinho, T.D. (2012). Arte, experiência e reflexão ou Entre/Between de Antoni Muntadas. Plataforma Barómetro Social, 3ª série. Available at http://barometro.com.pt/archives/681. Samitca S. (2012, 6 de Julho). A doença de Alzheimer e o envelhecimento em Portugal. Um desafio colectivo. Plataforma Barómetro Social. Available at http://barometro.com.pt/archives/709. Ferreira, T. & Grassi, M. (2012, Novembro). Para onde migram os Jovens? Dinâmicas emergentes em Portugal. Tema do Mês. Observatório Permanente da Juventude. Available at http://www.opj.ics.ul.pt/index.php/novembro-2012. Ferreira, V. S. (2011). Transições para a idade adulta na Europa: idades dos marcadores tradicionais. Observatório Permanente da Juventude. Available at http://www.opj.ics.ul.pt/index.php/julho-2011. Cunha, V. (2011). Um processo nem sempre “a dois”: a reprodução conjugal do ponto de vista dos homens. Plataforma Barómetro Social, 3ª série. Available at http://barometro.com.pt/archives/372. Vieira, M. M. (2011). Educação e Formação. Observatório Permanente da Juventude. Available at http://www.opj.ics.ul.pt/index.php/outubro-2011. Vieira, M. M. (2011). Rankings de escolas: discussão de novo sobre um velho debate. In Plataforma Barómetro Social, 5ª série. Available at http://barometro.com.pt/archives/500. Ferreira, V. S. (Coord.) (2008). Jovens em Portugal: análise longitudinal de fontes estatísticas. Base de Dados on-line. Observatório Permanente da Juventude. 101 Aboim, S. (2011). Jovens e Vida Familiar. Observatório Permanente da Juventude. Available at http://www.opj.ics.ul.pt/index.php/setembro-2011. As crianças e a internet - http://www.crinternet.ics.ul.pt/icscriancas/ (coord. by Ana Nunes de Almeida, Ana Delicado) 9.4.16 Other research outputs Aboim, S. & Vasconcelos, P. (2012). Study on the role of men in gender equality in Portugal. (Estudos e relatórios, 3). Lisboa: Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa. Cabral, M. V., Ferreira, P. M., Aboim, S., Vilar, D. & Lucas, R. (2012). Sexual behaviour and the HIV/AIDS infection in Portugal. (Estudos e relatórios ICS, 2). Lisboa. Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa. Wall, K., Aboim, S., Leitão, M., & Marinho, S. (2012). Famílias e Políticas de Família - Relatório 2011 OFAP. Lisboa, ICS. Cardoso, J. L., Escária, V, Ferreira, V. S., Madruga, P. Raimundo, A. & Varanda, M. (2012). Empregabilidade e ensino superior em Portugal (A3ES Readings Nº 3). Lisboa: A3ES. Cova, A (2011). [Review of Les familles nombreuses. Une question démographique, un enjeu politique, France (1880-1940), by Virginie De Luca Barrusse], Clio, nº34 URL : http://clio.revues.org/index10436.html. Wall, K., Aboim, S. & Leitão, M (2011). Famílias e Políticas de Família - Relatório 2010 OFAP Lisboa: ICS. Aboim, S. et al. (2009). Género e Gerações: continuidade e mudança nas narrativas familiares. Relatório de final pesquisa. Lisboa: ICS/FCT. Almeida, A. N. de (coord.), Delicado, A., Alves, N. de Almeida & Carvalho, T. (2011). As crianças e a internet: usos e representações - a família e a escola. Relatório da 2ª fase de trabalhos - entrevistas a crianças, pais e professores. Lisboa: [ICS / Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian]. Cabral, M. V., Ferreira, P. M., Aboim, S. & Vilar, D. (2008). Saúde e Sexualidade em Portugal: Resultados do Inquérito - Versão Preliminar. Lisboa: ICS. Cabral, M. V., Ferreira, P. M., Aboim, S., Vilar, D. & Lucas, R. (2008). Sexual behaviour and the HIV/AIDS infection in Portugal. Working-paper ICS. Lisboa: ICS. 9.4.17 Organisation of scientific dissemination activities Seminar "Jovens e Quotidianos",2008, organized by José Machado Pais Seminar "Migrations, Illegality and Gender. Evidence from Portugal and Italy", 2011, organized by Marzia Grassi Conference Series “Comunicação, Cultura e Novos Media”, 2010 e 2011, organized by José Luís Garcia Seminar Series (monthly) “Mundos Juvenis”, 2011 e 2012, organized by Maria Manuel Vieira and Vítor Ferreira Conference "Jovens e Rumos", 2009, organized by José Machado Pais and Vítor Ferreira Conference ”Research on Families and Family Policies – Critical Review”, 2010, organized by Karin Wall Seminar "Arte e Social em Portugal: contextos, fronteiras, intervenções", 2010, organized by Cláudia Madeira and Filipa L. Vicente 102 Conference "Jovens, Subjectividades e Horizontes Profissionais", 2010, organized by José Machado Pais and Vítor Ferreira Seminar "Low Fertility, Families and Public Policies, international Seminar OFAP", 2011, organized by Karin Wall and Vanessa Cunha Conference Series "A produção dos bens comuns: alguns dilemas do século XXI em debate/ La production des biens communs: quelques enjeux du XXième siècle en débat", 2009, organized by José Luís Garcia 9.4.18 Research contracts with national or international entities "Crianças e Internet: uso e representações, a família e a escola", coord. by Ana Nunes de Almeida. Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. "Social Policy for Families and Children", coord. by Karin Wall. European Council. "Processos de Envelhecimento em Portugal: usos do tempo, redes sociais e condições de vida", coord. by Manuel Villaverde Cabral and Pedro Moura Ferreira. Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos. "Os Jovens e a noite - lazeres nocturnos de Portimão", coord. by Pedro Moura Ferreira. Câmara Municipal de Portimão. "Radicalidades juvenis: performactividades corporais nas culturas juvenis", coord. by Vítor Ferreira. SEJ. "Sexualidade e afectos juvenis", coord. by José Machado Pais. SEJ. "Access, Assessment and Attitudes towards Health and the Portuguese NH", coord. by Manuel Villaverde Cabral. Ministério da Saúde. "Sexual patterns of behaviour and the HIV/AIDS infection in Portugal", coord. by Manuel Villaverde Cabral. Comissão Nacional da SIDA. "Dinâmicas demográficas e envelhecimento da população portuguesa: evolução e perspectivas", coord. by Manuel Villaverde Cabral. Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos. 9.4.19 Projects funded in national and international competitive calls "The new genarations of journalists in Portugal", coord. by José Luís Garcia. FCT. "Family trajectories and social networks: the lifecourse in an intergenerational perspective", coord. by Karin Wall. FCT. "Family Plataform - Social Plataform on research for families and families policies", coord. by Karin Wall. 7.ºFP - European Comission. "Open future: uncertainty and risk in school choices", coord. by Maria Manuel Vieira. FCT. "TCRaf - Eu - Transnational child-raising arrangements between Africa and Europe", coord. by Marzia Grassi. NORFACE ERA-net. "The double postponement: men and women coping with childbearing intentions in their late 30s and early 40s", coord. by Vanessa Cunha. FCT. "Making dream jobs come true: transitions to new attractive professional worlds for young people", coord. by Vítor Ferreira. FCT. "MOPACT - Mobilising the potencial of active ageing people in Europe", coord. by Amílcar Moreira. 7.ºFP European Comission. 103 "Jovens actores da mudança social - UP2YOUTH", coord. by José Machado Pais. 6.ºFP - European Comission. "Men at the margins: age, ethnicity, sexual orientation and work trajectories in the construction of nonhegemonic masculinities", coord. by Sofia Aboim. FCT. 9.5. Organisational Structure and Objectives of the Research Group 2015/2020 9.5.1 Structure of the Research Group The structure of the LIFE research group aims to ensure efficient coordination as well as a dynamic and flexible organization which promotes communication, participation and collaboration both vertically and horizontally. The core bottom-level elements of the organizational structure are the research teams which cluster around specific topics, interrelated projects, and the Observatories. Recognition of autonomy and flexibility, in terms of membership and research interests, is essential at this level. Although the LIFE research group divides broadly into three core research fields (the transformation of the life course; cultures and life-styles; families, networks and personal relationships), new and sometimes challenging topics and projects frequently emerge, making over time for transformation and diversity within the research group and its major fields and sublines. The research group will be coordinated by Karin Wall, seconded by Ana Nunes de Almeida and José Machado Pais (coordination team). Coordination and management involves four main tasks: defining the overall objectives of the research group, in the context of ICS’s overall priorities and programmes; ensuring the implementation and sustainability of work plans and projects through adequate funding, access to information, and recruitment and training of research fellows; promoting exchange, convergence of objectives and collaboration in a variety of ways (organization of and participation of all members in events such as seminars, conferences, and events linked to the doctoral programme; communicating with or organizing meetings with project PIs and Observatory coordinators; informal and formal exchange of methodologies, bibliography, hands-on knowledge, research findings, networks at national and international level); taking action to solve problems and collecting and taking information to ICS’s top management structure and administrative departments when necessary (and vice-versa) and in order to provide for assessment and accountability of LIFE’s activities and outcomes; Every year, the coordinator will submit a plan of activities which will include general guidelines and information on research objectives, applications to national and international competitive funding calls, research projects and other products to be submitted to and negotiated with private or public entities, organization of seminars for specialized and general publics, and proposals for dissemination events, postgraduate courses and workshops (besides those that are already part of ICS’s regular graduate activities). The coordination team is also responsible for: - Submitting proposals for speakers to be invited to the year-long graduate seminars in Sociology. - Co-organizing, together with the Coordinator of the Observatories, the regular meetings of the coordinators of the observatories; 104 - Supporting researchers in entries to individual scholarships and research funding competitions, either international (e.g. ERC, Marie Curie) or national (e.g. Investigador FCT). - Supporting project PIs and post-doc supervisors in their coordination of research assistants, research fellows and post-doc researchers. 9.5.2 Objectives of the Research Group This RG aims to contribute to the understanding of social change by critically examining the processes which produce, shape and transform the complex linkages between individuals and society, against the backdrop of inequality, solidarity and exclusion/inclusion mechanisms which generate plural repertoires of life trajectories, everyday lives and lifestyles. Research is rooted in theoretical perspectives emphasizing both agency and structure, historical and sociological time frames, and draws on the longstanding expertise of the SOLINC research line. Three key processes have been identified as major challenges for research: life course and individualization processes; inequality-producing processes; social inclusion/exclusion processes. Inquiry focuses on the public regulation of these dynamics as well as the informal and agency-driven sets of relationships and collectives - such as social networks, families, organizational cultures, associations, schools, life-styles, professional groups – which impact on individuals’ life trajectories, experiences and social positioning. Particular attention will be given to socially vulnerable or discriminated groups such as children, young people, elderly persons, women, migrants, unemployed persons, and ethnic and sexual minorities. Recent trends related to demographic change, Welfare State retrenchment and the impact of the economic crisis represent an additional challenge for research. These challenges respond to a core set of queries: How are recent developments in public policies impacting on gender, social, generational and cultural inequalities, on the inclusion of different social groups, and on the trend towards more plural, fragmented and individualized life course biographies? Moving beyond a narrow view of the concept of social inclusion focusing on material poverty and deprivation, how are social, cultural, educational and digital divides evolving in Portuguese society across a wide range of categories of individuals and families, and how do they impact on the consistency vs. disruption of the social fabric? At the micro level, how are personal relationships, identities, social networks and communities being constructed and restructured in light of other societal variables and dynamics, such as the rise in class inequalities, globalization and mobility? The research group covers three core fields of research (divided into sub-topics) relevant for responding to these queries and which reflect the distinctive expertise of its members: the transformation of the life course: changing life course regimes and the process of destandardization; transitions to youth, to adulthood and to later life; the emergence of plural socializing repertoires; generational orders and gendered life courses; demographic ageing and the welfare state; health, illness and dependency over the life course; cultures and life-styles: policies to promote access to culture and their impact on the symbolic and material aspects of culture; social conditions and inequalities in cultural practices; gender cultures and inequalities; sexual minorities and behaviour; the role of (new) media in the social construction of values and identities; 105 families, networks and personal relationships: pluralization in family forms and meanings; workfamily balance; new motherhood and fatherhood models; families, poverty and the reproduction of inequality; trends in fertility, childbearing transitions and childlessness; mobility and transnational families; social networks and intergenerational solidarities; The RG members are deeply involved in the forthcoming Inter-university PhD Programme in Sociology, recently submitted to accreditation at the A3ES, involving 6 faculties from 4 different Portuguese Universities, and led by ICS. It fruitfully continues and enlarges the scope of the existing programme, in place since 2008. See also http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf 106 (RG-50013-2070) Environment, Territory and Society 9.1. Identification of the Research Group 9.1.1 Reference of the research group: RG-50013-20670 9.1.2 Name of the Research Group in portuguese: Ambiente, Território e Sociedade 9.1.3 Name of the Research Group in English: Environment, Territory and Society 9.1.4Keyword(s): 1. Sustainability 2. Cities 3. Consumption 4. Technoscience 9.1.5 Existed in 2008/2012 - Yes 9.1.6 Participating Institution(s) to which the Research Group belongs: N/A 9.2. Researchers in the Group 9.2.1 List of Integrated Members / 3 nuclear CVs Name Principal Investigator Nuclear CV João Ferrão √ √ Maria Luísa de Carvalho de Albuquerque Schmidt √ Olivia Claudia Bina √ Ana Isabel Oliveira Delicado Ana Maria Nabais dos Santos Evans de Carvalho Ana Maria do Rosário Rei Silva Horta João Francisco Charrua Guerra João Morais Mourato Maria Dulce Alves Freire Mariana Coimbra Ferreira de Almeida Marta Pedro Varanda Mónica Truninger de Albuquerque de Medeiros Sousa Paulo Jorge Granjo Simões Simone Tulumello Sónia Cristina Nunes Alves 107 9.2.2 List of current PhD students Name Alfredo José Barreto Leal Franco Ana Raquel Almeida dos Reis Nunes António José Pedrosa de Souza Sobrinho Carla Maria Gomes Guilherme Debeus Costa e Souza Inês Almeida Dias Sobral de Campos José Pedro Figueira de Sousa Aguiar Teixeira José Pedro Ribeiro da Silva Liliana Marisa Domingues Teixeira Luís Orlando Lopes Junqueira Maria Estela de Moura Dantas Gonçalves Maria Joana Marques Guedes Borges Coutinho Rosa Maria Antunes de Sousa Rute Gabriel Monteiro Saraiva Manishanker Fernandes Bhatt Susana Maria Lopes dos Santos Boletas 9.2.3 List of other researchers of the Research Group Name Aida Maria Valadas de Lima Pinto Guizo Alexandra Duarte Baixinho David Manuel dos Santos Silva Travassos Filipa Ferreira Soares João Carlos Ferreira de Seixas José Gomes Ferreira Luis Manuel Dias Balula Maria João Mota Chaves Nunes Pedro Miguel Pinto Prista Monteiro Rui António Fidalgo de Carvalho Sérgio Renato da Rocha Romão Pereira Susana Maria Gonçalves da Rosa Valente Tiago Figueiredo Saraiva Tim O'Riordan Oriana Cátia Rainho Brás 108 9.3. Research Group Description and Achievements for 2008/2012 9.3.1 Description of the Research Group In the period 2008-2012, the activities directly related to this RG were developed within the framework of the thematic line ´SUSTAIN – Sustainability, Environment, Risk and Spaces`. SUSTAIN hosted researchers with a background in Sociology, Anthropology, Geography, History, Urban Planning and Development Studies. SUSTAIN members are proficient in quantitative and qualitative methods, as well as stakeholder engagement methodologies, and have a strong multi- and interdisciplinary orientation, resulting in collaborations with researchers from other fields in research projects, post-graduate and outreach activities. SUSTAIN has mainly explored the many ways in which social change and environmental change interact with one another. It studied the representations and practices of Portuguese society concerning pressing environmental issues and examined the relationship between contemporary risk society and scientific and technological culture, especially in relation to environmental problems, consumption and public health issues. SUSTAIN also investigated the spatial configurations arising from development processes, focusing our attention on urban and metropolization dynamics, mainly in Portugal, Brazil and China. SUSTAIN´s main research topics were: - To produce knowledge and international comparative analysis on the representations and practices of Portuguese society concerning pressing environmental issues (climate change, energy, water, waste), which are crucial for sound public policies; - To explore the relationships between modern risk society, with its multiple environmental issues, and technoscientific culture, devoting special attention to tensions between experts, public and the media; - To investigate the spatial configurations arising from development processes, considering changing land uses, mainly in urban and city-region spaces; - To examine environmental and urban polices: their design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation. These topics were developed through multiple research projects competitively funded or commissioned by public bodies or private profit and non-profit organizations. SUSTAIN´s funding sources were both national, (i.e. Foundation for Science and Technology), and international (i.e. European Framework Programme). SUSTAIN also took part in cross-national representative surveys (European Social Survey, European Values Study, International Social Survey Programme). With regard to graduate training, SUSTAIN was deeply involved in the PhD Programme on ‘Climate Change and Sustainable Development Policies’ (in cooperation with other Portuguese universities and the University of East Anglia, in the UK), which has been attracting an increasing number of students from Brazil and the Portuguese-speaking African countries. SUSTAIN also collaborated in the PhD Programme in Sociology and other programmes in other institutions. The training of young researchers through PhD programmes and their participation in research projects was a key objective. The urgency of sustainability issues also demands close consideration of the relationship between our scientific production and public requirements. SUSTAIN´s fundamental research activities were frequently combined with an important role in public policy advice, particularly in environmental and urban planning issues. SUSTAIN sought to provide an adequate response to demanding empirical and theoretical challenges as well as growing social concerns and demands for expertise. Together with more traditional 109 actions to promote the public understanding of science, SUSTAIN researchers were strongly encouraged to foster active forms of scientific citizenship. 9.3.2 Main achievements Between 2008 and 2012, this RG consolidated its status as a major producer of environmental social research in Portugal: increased its scientific output (1); improved its international presence (2); guaranteed financial sustainability (3); reinforced research – teaching linkages (4); produced relevant knowledge for public policies (5); and pursued engagement with civil society activities (6): (1) Scientific production: 7 books, 46 book chapters (14 of which with international publishers), 38 articles in international peer-reviewed journals (17 ISI; 6 ESF), 26 articles in national peer-reviewed journals. 46 scientific meetings were organized. (2) Internationalization: a greater degree of internationalization was achieved through an increase in the number of publications in international journals, participation in international conferences (267) and participation in research projects and international networks: European Environmental Advisory Councils, UNESCO’s World Heritage Cities for Climate Change, Iberian and Latin American Network for Research in Environment and Society. Members of the team had editorial responsibilities in 10 international journals. SUSTAIN organised the international conferences Media and Environment (a joint initiative with the Gulbenkian Foundation and the European Environmental Agency, 2009) and Energy and Society (under ESA’s Environment and Society Network, 2012). (3) Funding: 23 research projects with external funding (mainly as PIs), 12 of which through competitive calls (FCT, European Programmes), 6 through government contracts, 5 through private contracts (business companies and non-profit organizations), 2 projects funded by the 7th FP and 1 project through CIRCLE ERANET. During this period, this RG has accumulated 2M€ of research funding. (4) Research – Teaching relationship: under the supervision of the researchers of this RG, 5 PhD theses were completed and 18 were under way in 2012. The international interdisciplinary PhD Programme on Climate Change and Sustainable Development, launched in 2009, had 87 students in the first four years. (5) Supporting public policies: SUSTAIN expertise was sought by national and local authorities, for which policy advisory reports were produced, e.g. expert advice on the National Ecological Reserve, and the National Energy Efficiency Action Plan (2008); Management Plan of the Northern Hydrographical Regions (2009); the report Research Agenda in Social Sciences and Public Policies. A Road Map for Priority Thematic Areas (2010); and the White Paper on the Local Business Sector (2011). SUSTAIN team members held relevant positions on advisory boards of public and private non-profit bodies: Social Sciences and Humanities Scientific Council of the Foundation for Science and Technology; Academy of Sciences of Lisbon; National Council on Environment and Sustainable Development; Advisory Council of the Institute for Nature Conservation and Biodiversity; Gulbenkian Environment Programme; Scientific Council of OBSERVALICIA - Observatory of Food, Technology and Ecology; General Council of APREN Portuguese Association of Renewable Energies; Scientific Council of the National Defence Institute. (6) Engagement with society: the group was involved in numerous activities aimed at scientific dissemination, mainly though OBSERVA - Observatory of the Environment and Society. SUSTAIN has (co)organized conferences with public authorities and NGOs, the Summer Institute of Global Environmental Issues (FLAD), the project Acting for a Sustainable University (ULisbon), and training actions for civil servants. SUSTAIN researchers have coordinated and participated in both regular activities (for instance, Summer Internships in Scientific Laboratories, the Science and Technology Week), and one-off events, such 110 as EUROSKILS (2010) or MIT Portugal Energy Night (2012), for promoting public engagement with the social sciences among young people and the general public. 9.4. Research Group Output 2008/2012 9.4.1 Publications in peer reviewed journals and/or other publications Bina, O. & La Camera, F. (2011). Promise and shortcomings of a green turn in recent policy responses to the “double crisis”. Ecological Economics 70, 2308–2316. (IF JCR 2012: 2.855, SJR 2012: 1,931, n.º of citations: 8). Bina, O & Vaz, S G (2011). Humans, environment and economies: from vicious relationships to virtuous responsibility. Ecological Economics, 72, 170-178. (IF JCR 2012: 2.855, SJR 2012: 1,931, n.º of citations: 4). Truninger, M. (2011). Cooking with Bimby in a moment of recruitment : exploring conventions and practice perspectives. Journal of Consumer Culture. 11(1), 37–59. (IF JCR 2012: 2.793, SJR 2012: 1,791, n.º of citations: 13). Faysse, N., Rinaudo, J.-D., Bento, S., Richard-Ferroudji, A., Errahj, M., Varanda, M., ... Montginoul, M. (2012). Participatory analysis for adaptation to climate change in Mediterranean agricultural systems: Possible choices in process design. Regional Environmental Change. doi: 10.1007/s10113-012-0362-x (IF JCR 2012: 2.082, SJR 2012: 0,787, n.º of citations: 1). Bina, O., Wu Jing, Brown, A. L. & Partidario, M. (2011). An inquiry into the concept of SEA effectiveness: towards criteria for Chinese practice. Environmental Impact Assessment Review. 31(6), 572-581. (IF JCR 2012: 1.851, SJR 2012: 1,168, n.º of citations: 8). Delicado, A. (2009). Scientific controversies in museums: Notes from a semi-peripheral country. Public Understanding of Science. 18 (6), 759-767. (IF JCR 2012: 1.724, SJR 2012: 1,053, n.º of citations: 4). Schmidt, L., Nave, J. G., O'Riordan, T. & Guerra, J. (2011). Trends and Dilemmas Facing Environmental Education in Portugal: From Environmental Problem Assessment to Citizenship Involvement. Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning. 13(2), 159-177. (IF JCR 2012: 1.421, SJR 2012: 0,651, n.º of citations: 2). Saraiva, T. (2010). Fascist labscapes: geneticists, wheat, and the landscapes of fascism in Italy and Portugal. Historical studies in the natural sciences. 40(4), 457-498. (IF JCR 2012: 0.902, SJR 2012: 0,593, nº de ciatções: 4). Delicado, A. (2012). Environmental education technologies in a social void: the case of ‘Greendrive’. Environmental Education Research. 18(6), 831-843. (IF JCR 2012: 0.833, SJR 2012: 0,419, n.º of citations: 0). Seixas, J. (2008). Dinámicas de gobernanza urbana y estructuras del capital socio-cultural en Lisboa. Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles, nº 46, 121-142. (IF JCR 2012: 0.179, SJR 2012: 0,194, n.º of citations: 7). 9.4.2 Completed PhD theses João Howell Pato, "O valor da água como bem público", supervised by Luísa Schmidt. Thesis completed in 2008, Instituto de Ciências Sociais - Universidade de Lisboa. 111 João Francisco Charrua Guerra, "Municípios, participação e sustentabilidade: dinâmicas locais de imperativos globais", supervised by Luísa Schmidt. Thesis completed in 2011, Instituto de Ciências Sociais Universidade de Lisboa. José Gomes Ferreira, "Saneamento básico. Factores sociais no insucesso de uma política adiada - os casos do Ave e do Lis", supervised by Luísa Schmidt. Thesis completed in 2012, Instituto de Ciências Sociais Universidade de Lisboa. Rita Raminhos Coelho Fuentes Henriques, "A study of business networks and corporate value creation", supervised by Marta Varanda. Thesis completed in 2012, ISEG. Marta Macedo, "Projectar e construir a Nação: engenheiros e território em Portugal, 1873-1893", supervised by Tiago Saraiva. Thesis completed in 2010, Universidade de Coimbra. 9.4.4 Books and book chapters of international circulation Delicado, A. (2010). Young portuguese researchers abroad: preliminary results of a survey. In David Cairns (Ed.), Youth on the move: european youth and geographical mobility (pp.83-93). Morlenbach: VS Verlag. ISBN: 978-3-531-92331-4 Delicado, A. (2010). Between environment and science: na exhibition about butterflies. In Filippoupoliti, Anastasia (Ed.), Science Exhibitions: communication and evaluation (pp. 464-485). Edinburgh: MuseumsEtc. ISBN: 978-0-9561943-8-1 Delicado, A. (2011). The consequences of mobility: careers and work practices of Portuguese researchers with a foreign PhD degree. In F. Dervin (Ed.), Analysing the Consequences of Academic Mobility and Migration (pp. 163-180). Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN: 978-1-4438-2978-6 Schmidt, L., Saraiva, T. & Pato, J. (2011) In Search Of The (Hidden) Portuguese Urban Water Conflicts: The Lisbon Water Story (1856 – 2006). In Barraqué, B. (Ed.), Urban Water Conflicts - UNESCO-IHP (pp. 70-91). Londres: Taylor & Francis. ISBN: 978-92-3-104121-1 Bina, O., Wallington, T. & Thissen, E. (2011). SEA theory and research: an analysis of the early discourse. In Sadler, Barry et al (Ed.), Handbook of strategic environmental assessment (pp. 445-471). London / Washington DC: Earthscan. 978-1-84407-365-8 Bina, O. (2011). Responsability for emissions and aspirations for development. In Harris, Paul G. (Ed.), China's responsability for climate change: ethics, fairness and environmental policy (pp. 47-69). Bristol: Policy Press. ISBN: 9781847428127 Ferrão, J. & Mourato, J. (2012). Evaluation and spatial planning in Portugal: from legal requirement to source of policy-learning and institutional innovation. In J. F. Dasí (Ed.), De la evaluación ambiental estratégica a la evaluación de impacto territorial: reflexiones acerca de la tarea de evaluación (pp. 141166). València: Universitat de València. ISBN: 978-84-370-8767-2 Mourato, J. & Tewdwr-Jones, T. (2012). Europeanisation of domestic spatial planning: exposing apparent differences or unspoken convergence? In W. Zonneveld, J. de Vries & L. Janssen-Jansen (Eds), European territorial governance (pp. 157-173). Amsterdam: IOS Press. ISBN: 978-1-61499-140-3 Saraiva, T. (2011). Costruire il fascismo: autarchia e produzione di organismi standardizzati. In Cassata, F. & Pogliano, C., Scienze e cultura dell'Italia unita (Storia d'Italia - Annali 26) (pp. 203 -239). Torino: Einaudi. ISBN: 9788806195380 Seixas, J. & Albet, A. (Eds) (2012). Urban governance in Southern Europe. (Urban and regional planning and development series). Farnham: Ashgate. ISBN: 978-1-4094-4434-3 112 9.4.5 Conference proceedings Horta, A. (2008). The production of news about energy as an environmental issue. Communication Policies and Culture in Europe. ECREA Barcelona 2008. Programme, abstracts, posters and papers. Barcelona: ECREA. Delicado, A. (2009). International mobility of researchers and the circulation of knowledge. In 9th ESA Conference (CD-ROM Edition). Lisboa: ISCTE. Schmidt, L. & Valente, S. (2009). Ecofreguesias Experience: Some Contributions for Local Sustainable Waste Management. In Proceedings of the World Congress on "Turning waste into ideas" (Online Edition). Lisboa: ISWA e APESB. Schmidt, L., Truninger, M. & Valente, S. (2009). Environmental public policies and public awareness in Portugal: a scenario of contradictions. In Proceedings of the 9th Conference of European Sociological Association - ESA 2009 (CD-ROM Edition). Lisboa: ISCTE. Alexandre, S. & Horta, A. (2010). Green advertising: comparative analysis of Portuguese, French and Italian magazine ads. CRRC 2010 Marseille, Corporate Responsibility Research Conference Papers (Available at http://www.crrconference.org/downloads/crrc2010alexandrehorta.pdf.). Schmidt, L., Horta, A., Correia, A. & Fonseca, S. (2012). Interdisciplinarity as an important vehicle for understanding energy efficiency practices: youngsters, households and technology. Paper presented at MILEN International Conference 2012: Advancing the research and policy agendas on sustainable energy and the environment. Oslo. Horta, A., Alexandre, S., Truninger, M., Teixeira, J. & Silva, V. (2012). Competing food messages and its appropriation by children at schools and its surroundings. In M. Bustreo & V. Russo (Eds), Proceedings of the Child and Teen Consumption 2012: Food consumption, communication, life styles and fashion (pp. 769783). 5th International Conference on Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Child and Teen Consumption. Palermo: Qanat. Varanda, M. & Bento, S. (2012). Alterações climáticas e circulação do saber entre ciência e prática: uma via de um sentido, dois sentidos ou um beco sem saída. Paper apresentado na 2ª Jornada Ciêntifica da Rede MUSSI: “ Redes e processos info-comunicaionais : mediações, memórias, apropriações”. Rio de Janeiro. Seixas, J. (2009). Different politics in a different city? New perspectives of interpretation and critical analysis on the governation structures of the city of Lisbon. In City Futures 2009 Conference Proceedings (Online Edition). Madrid: Universidade Rey Juan Carlos. Bina, O. (2009) The right to equal aspirations and the obligation to be different, as a basis for a common future. In China and Global Climate Change: Proceedings of the conference held at Lingnan University, Hong Kong, 18-19 June 2009, (Ed. Harris, P. G.) Centre for Asian Pacific Studies and the Environmental Studies Programme (pp. 114-127). Lingnan University. 9.4.8 Books, including single-authored works (including scholarly editions of oral or written texts and translations with introduction and commentary) Schmidt, L. & Cabral, J. P. (Orgs) (2008). Ciência e Cidadania – Homenagem a Bento de Jesus Caraça. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Delicado, A. (2009). A musealização da ciência Gulbenkian/Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia. em Portugal. Lisboa: Fundação Calouste 113 Delicado, A., Borges, V. & Dix, S. (Org.) (2010). Profissão e vocação: ensaios sobre grupos profissionais. Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Schmidt, L., Nave, G. & Guerra, J. (2010). A educação ambiental : balanço e perspectivas para uma agenda mais sustentável. Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Truninger, M. (2010). O campo vem à cidade: agricultura biológica, mercado e consumo sustentável. Lisboa: ICS. Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Ferrão, J. (2011). O ordenamento do território como política pública. Lisboa: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. Pato, J. H. (2011). História das políticas públicas de abastecimento e saneamento de águas em Portugal. Lisboa: ERSAR / ICS. Granjo, P. (2009). Um Amor Colonial - Álvaro e Rosita, Lisboa/Angola/Moçambique. Chamusca: Cosmos. 9.4.9 Edited special issues of journals, with substantial research input on the part of the researcher Bina, O., Xu, H., Brown, A. L. & Partidario, M. A. (eds) (2011) Review of Practice and Prospects for SEA in China. Environmental Impact Assessment Review 31(6). Varanda, M., Marques, E. & Martes, A. C. (Coord.) (2012). Análise de redes sociais na lusofonia. Congressoluso Afro-brasileiro, Grupo de trabalho de Análise [número especial]. Redes: Revista hispana para el análisis de redes sociales, 22. Saraiva, T. (2008). HoST, Journal of History of Science and Technology, Vol. 2, Fall 2008. Saraiva, T. (2009). Science, Technology and Fascism. HoST, journal of history of science and technology, Vol. 3. Seixas, J.; Mas, A. A. i (Eds) (2010). Urban governance in southern Europe [Número Temático]. Análise Social, 45 (197). Saraiva, T. & Wise, M. N. (2010). Historical studies in the natural sciences, 40(4). 9.4.10 Chapters in books, including contributions to conference proceedings, essays in collections Schmidt, L. (2008). Comunicar a Ciência: o papel dos media e os problemas científico-ambientais.In Schmidt, Luísa & Cabral, João Pina (Orgs). Ciência e Cidadania – Homenagem a Bento de Jesus Caraça (pp. 85-112). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Schmidt, L. (2008). Ambiente e Política Ambiental: escalas e desajustes. In Manuel Villaverde, Wall, Karin, Aboim, Sofia & Silva, Filipe Carreira da (Org.). Itinerários: A Investigação nos 25 Anos do ICS (pp. 285-314). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Delicado, A. (2009). Lá fora com um pé cá dentro: ligações dos cientistas expatriados ao sistema científico português. In Renato Miguel do Carmo & José Alberto Simões (Org.), A produção das mobilidades: redes, espacialidades e trajectos num mundo em globalização (pp.177-202). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Alexandre, S. & Horta, A. (2011). Argumentos publicitários de defesa do ambiente. In Costa, M. A. & Santos, M. J. (Orgs), Responsabilidade Social: uma Visão Ibero-Americana (pp. 493-511). Coimbra: Almedina. Truninger, M. (2011). Consumos ‘bio’ na cidade: significados, justificações e convenções. In Hernâni Veloso Neto & Sandra Lima Coelho (Org.) Novas dimensões do consumo na sociedade contemporânea (pp. 113129). Porto: IS-FLUP. 114 Ferrão, J. (2012). Ordenamento do território e segurança. In A. F. Lopes, N. S. Teixeira & V. R. Viana (Coord.), Contributos para um conceito de defesa nacional (pp. 77-87). Lisboa: Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda / Insituto de Defesa Nacional. Saraiva, T., Delicado, A. & Bastos, C. (2008). Configurações da Investigação Científica em Portugal: 3 Estudos de Caso. In Cabral, Manuel Villaverde, Wall, Karin, Aboim, Sofia & Silva, Filipe Carreira da (Org.). Itinerários: A Investigação nos 25 Anos do ICS (pp. 429-450). Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Truninger, M. & Freire, D. (2011). Globalização e reconfiguração da agricultura local: processos de construção do Solar da Pêra Rocha no Oeste (Portugal). In Figueiredo, E. (Coord.), O rural plural - olhar o presente, imaginar o futuro (pp. 73-90). Castro Verde: 100 Luz. Seixas, J. (2008). Estruturas e dinâmicas do capital sócio-cultural em Lisboa. In Manuel Villaverde Cabral, Filipe Carreira da Silva & Tiago Saraiva (Orgs). Cidade & Cidadania - Governança Urbana e Participação Cidadã (pp. 177-210), Lisboa: Imprensa de Ciências Sociais. Tulumello, S. (2012). Term to Exclude: Rom Populations as Immigrants/Nomads in (Southern) Italy. Proceedings of the IX Biennial of European Towns and Town Planners (DVD Edition). Roma: INU Edizioni. 9.4.12 Encyclopedia entries (to the extent that they embody research) Rego, R. & Varanda, M. (2009). Professional Associations. In Helmut K. Anheier and Stefan Toepler (Eds). International Encyclopaedia of Civil Society. New York: Springer Publications. Truninger, M. (2011). Organic Food. In Encyclopedia of Consumer Culture. United States of America: SAGE Publications. 9.4.13 Audio/visual and electronic/digital materials OBSERVA (2008). DVD "A História do Lixo". Schmidt, L. (2010). DVD "Portugal, País de Contrastes". OBSERVA, Produções Fictícias. Schmidt, L. (2010). DVD "Das Catástrofes às Fontes de Energia". OBSERVA, Produções Fictícias. Schmidt, L. (2010). DVD "As Águas". OBSERVA, Produções Fictícias. Schmidt, L. (2010). DVD "Paisagens e Ordenamento do Território". OBSERVA, Produções Fictícias. Evans, A. M. & Vink, M. (2012). Original dataset coding the evolution and changes of political group affiliation of all 4163 individuals who sat in the European Parliament between 1979 and 2009. In Análise Social, 202 (XLVII). Available at http://www.fdcw.unimaas.nl/staff/files/users/215/Analise_Social_202_92112_evans-vink.pdf 9.4.14 Other categories, including web-based resources; video and audio recordings (to the extent that they embody research) Delicado, A. (2011). EL DEBATE: ¿Para qué sirven las sociedades científicas?. El Foro CTS - Revista Iberoamericana de Ciencia, Tecnología y Sociedad. Available at http://www.revistacts.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=414:el-debate-ipara-quesirven-las-sociedades-. Mourato, J. (2011). A dimensão cultural da avaliação da política pública do Ordenamento do Território. Available at http://barometro.com.pt/archives/472. 115 Mourato, J. (2012, 4 de Outubro). Sísifo e o mito do Contrato-Parceria. Plataforma Barómetro Social. Available at http://barometro.com.pt/archives/734. Seixas, J. (2009). Documento de Partida para a futura Carta Estratégica de Lisboa - Como criar um modelo de Governação eficiente, participado e financeiramente sustentado. Lisboa: Câmara Municipal de Lisboa. Seixas, J. & Costa, P. (2010). Das cidades criativas à criatividade urbana. Projecto Proximo Futuro. Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. Available at http://www.proximofuturo.gulbenkian.pt/pdf/Artigo_JS_PC_FCG_Versao_Mini_18_Mar-rev.pdf. Schmidt, L. & Guerra, J. (2009). CARTA DE CASCAIS - Sustentabilidade na Linha, Sustentabilidade em Rede. Documento síntese da Conferência Nacional Sobre Agenda 21 Local e Sustentabilidde - GLOCAL 2009, Setembro de 2009. Available at www.agendacascais21.net. Truninger, M. (2011). Endividamento do consumidor e responsabilidade. Plataforma Barómetro Social. Available at http://barometro.com.pt/archives/352. Horta, A. (2008). Regulação, media e jornalismo: análise da cobertura noticiosa em 2007. OberComBrief nº 5. Lisboa: OberCom. Truninger, M. & Ferreira, J. G. (2012, 5 de Dezembro). A evolução dos consumos domésticos em Portugal (1967-2012). Plataforma Barómetro Social. Available at http://barometro.com.pt/archives/796. Bina, O. (2011). Green economy: fix our 'ends' not just our 'means'. openDemocracy. Available at http://www.opendemocracy.net/olivia-bina/green-economy-fix-our-ends-not-just-our-means. 9.4.16 Other research outputs Schmidt, L. (2008). Sustaining Europe for a Long Way Ahead: making long-term sustainable development policies work. Statement by EEAC Working Group on Sustainable Development. EEAC. (Online Edition). Schmidt, L. (2008). Separar2 - Sensibilização e Mudança Comportamental Relativamente à Recolha Selectiva de Resíduos Sólidos Urbanos. Relatório Final. Lisboa: ICS-UL/CEEETA. Varanda, M. & Carvalho, F. (2009). Leadership and diffusion of information for policy implementation: a new methodological approach, nº1/ 09. Lisboa: SOCIUS/ ISEG-UTL. Cabral, M. V., Schmidt, L., Seixas, J. & Baixinho, A. (2010). Qualidade de Vida e Governo da Cidade: estudo sobre as bases para um novo modelo de governação da cidade de Lisboa. Relatório sobre utentes de Lisboa residentes na AML. Lisboa: ICS. de Semir, Vladimir et al (2011). The PLACES Toolkit for the Impact Assessment of Science Communication Initiatives and Policies. Barcelona: UPF. Rebelo, M., Menezes, M., Almeida, S., Schmidt, L., Horta, A., Fonseca, S. & Correia, A. (2011). Net Zero energy schools: resultados gerais de um inquérito em contexto escolar sobre atitudes, representações e práticas de uso de energia, Relatório 64/2011. Lisboa: NESO-LNEC. Ferrão, J. (Coord). Mourato, J., Balula, L. & Bina, O. (2012, Julho). Regiões funcionais, relações urbano-rurais e política de coesão pós-2013. Lisboa: POAT / FEDER / ICS. Schmidt, L. & Fonseca, S. (2008). Social Behaviour and Energy Efficiency. In Energy Efficiency – Key Pillar for a Competitive, Secure and Sustainable Europe. Ed. European Environmental and Sustainable Development Advisory Councils (EEAC). (CD-ROM Edition). Ferrão, J. (Coord.). Ramos, A., Mourato, J., Pato, J., Bina, O. & Carvalho, R. (2012, Dezembro). MUVE: Valores e atitudes face à mudança a favor de um desenvolvimento económico mais sustentável. 1º Relatório de Progresso. Lisboa: ICS. Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa. 116 Bina, O., Jurkeviciute, A. & Zhang, H. (2009). Transition from Plan Environmental Impact Assessment to Strategic Environmental Assessment: Recommendations of the Project ”Policy Instruments for a Chinese Sustainable Future”. CHINA-EPI-SEA Paper No. 27_EN, Stockholm Environment Institute, Stockholm, available at: http://www.epi-in-china.com/publications.html. 9.4.17 Organisation of scientific dissemination activities Summer School "Tenth Summer Institute on Global environmental Issues", 2009, organized by Luísa Schmidt Conference "The Media and the Environment – between complexity and urgency", 2009, organized by Luísa Schmidt and Ana Horta Summer School "Social Network Analysis I, II, III e IV", 2009, 2010, 2011 e 2012, organized by Marta Varanda "Consumption Seminar Series", 2009, organized by Monica Truninger Seminar "Interacções entre Leigos, Peritos e Decisores Políticos", 2010, organized by Ana Delicado and Monica Truninger "Energy & Society Conference" – 1st international conference e ESA Research Network 12 Midterm Conference, 2012, organized by Ana Horta and Luísa Schmidt Discussion Series "Políticas Públicas e Território em 2014-2020: Opções para um novo ciclo", 2012, organized by João Ferrão and João Seixas Workshop "Realizing the Rio + 20 Agenda. The role of Portugal in preparing for an age of austerity and localism", 2012, organized by Luísa Schmidt and João Guerra "Annual Meeting of the Society for the History of Technology", 2008, organized by Tiago Saraiva Seminar "Urban Governance in the South of Europe", 2011, organized by João Seixas 9.4.18 Research contracts with national or international entities "Separar 2 - Sensibilização e mudança comportamental relativamente à recolha selectiva de resíduos sólidos", coord. by Luísa Schmidt. CEEETA. "Qualidade de Vida e Governo da Cidade - Bases para um novo modelo de Governação de Lisboa", coord. by Luísa Schmidt and Manuel Villaverde Cabral. ISEG/CML. "Educação Ambiental - balanço, oportunidades e perspectivas", coord. by Luísa Schmidt. Instituto do Ambiente. "Valores e atitudes face à mudança a favor de um desenvolvimento económico mais sustentável", coord. by João Ferrão. Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos. "Ecoline - Conhecer mais para mudar melhor - IA", coord. by Luísa Schmidt. Instituto do Ambiente. "Regiões funcionais, relações urbano-rurais e política de coesão pós-2013", coord. by João Ferrão. CES Conselho Económico e Social. "História das Políticas de Saneamento Básico e Serviços de Água em Portugal: 1884-2007", coord. by João Pato. IRAR. "Estudo qualitativo sobre perfis de consumidores domésticos face à eficiência energética nas regiões metropolitanas de Lisboa e Porto", coord. by Luísa Schmidt. ADENE. 117 "RISKAR LX: avaliação do risco associado à poluição atmosférica em Lisboa", coord. by Luísa Schmidt. FCG. "Comportamentos Socias do Plano Nacional de Acção para a Eficiência Energética", coord. by Luísa Schmidt. ADENE. 9.4.19 Projects funded in national and international competitive calls "Sustainable Urbanisation in China: Historical and Comparative Perspectives, mega-Trends towards 2050 (URBACHINA)", coord. by Olivia Bina. 7.ºFP - European Comission. "FLAGSHIP - Forward Looking Analysis of Grand Societal cHallenges and Innovative Policies", coord. by Olivia Bina. 7.ºFP - European Comission. "SOCSCI - Scientific societies and contemporary science", coord. by Ana Delicado. FCT. "Socio-technical consensus and controversies about renewable energies", coord. by Ana Delicado. FCT. "CHANGE - Changing climate, changing coasts, changing communities - glocal erosions, risk, conceptions and sustainable solutions in Portugal", coord. by Luísa Schmidt. FCT. "Between the school and the family: children's food knowledge and eating processes", coord. by Monica Truninger. FCT. "The Spaces of Portuguese Technoscience (1837-1947)", coord. by Tiago Saraiva. FCT. "Nuclear Portugal: Physics, Technology, Medicine and Environment (1910-2010)" , coord. by Tiago Saraiva. FCT. "Net Zero Energy School - Reaching the Community", coord. by Luísa Schmidt. FCT-MIT. "Healers and Hospitals - healing concepts and practices in Mozambique", coord. by Paulo Granjo. FCT. 9.5. Organisational Structure and Objectives of the Research Group 2015/2020 9.5.1 Structure of the Research Group The Environment, Territory and Society research group will be coordinated by João Ferrão (geography), seconded by Mónica Truninger (sociology) and Olivia Bina (development studies). For dissemination purposes, the coordination board of the RG teams up with the activities of OBSERVA Observatory of Environment and Society (coordinated by Luísa Schmidt, seconded by Ana Delicado). Both João Ferrão and Luísa Schmidt are members of the Scientific Council of ICS. This organization promotes cohesion between the general strategic goals of ICS and those of the RG. While respecting the principles of freedom and autonomy in research, the coordinator of the RG is responsible for defining the main priorities of the group’s research agenda and ensuring that it contributes to the Institute’s strategic programme. Every year, the coordinator will submit a plan of activities, prepared in collaboration with team members, that will outline annual strategic objectives and targets concerning, at least, the following issues: a) Joint applications to national and international project calls; b) Funding from non-competitive sources, by actively submitting projects/products to potential clients; 118 c) Individual and joint publication by team members in high-ranking journals and with top publishers; d) New post-graduate courses and workshops. Communication-wise, the following activities will be developed: a) Internal communication: monthly seminars, in order to stimulate internal debate and mutual knowledge; b) External communication: annual/biannual seminars, under a specific theme crucial for improving the RG’s academic visibility and recognition at both national and international level. Finally, the coordination of the RG will have a proactive stance in support of: a) Applications to individual scholarship and research funding competitions, either international (ERC, Marie Curie) or national (Investigador FCT); b) Project PIs and post-doc supervisors in their coordination of research assistants, research fellows and post-doc researchers; c) Participation in international research and post-graduation networks in relevant fields for the development of the RG. 9.5.2 Objectives of the Research Group This RG is set to further understand the socio-economic practices, territorial dynamics and governance structures underlying the socio-ecological challenges of contemporary societies, and to reveal possible transition pathways to a more equitable and ecologically sustainable society. Supporting structural change is crucial in the current context of deep economic crisis. The group’s research agenda seeks to bridge the gap between research, society and policy-makers, thus paving the way for the success of ICS strategic programme. This RG has three main interrelated goals and areas of inquiry: (1) Environmental Representations, Practices and Policies: to analyse how values, practices, governance and policies are shaping the relationship between humans and nature, bringing it closer to - or taking it further away from - sustainability goals. Core themes include: climate change, energy, water and marine management, food security and consumption practices; (2) Territorial Configurations of Sustainability: to investigate territorial development trends, challenges and policies, considering the impacts, values, interests, conflicts and sustainability demands associated with the changing uses of territories, with special attention to urban dynamics. Core themes: mobility, urban development, urban-rural interdependencies, and urban and rural futures; (3) Technoscience, Risk and Uncertainty: to explore the relationship between contemporary risk society and our scientific and technological culture and media communication. Core themes: socio-environmental problems, sustainable place-making and public health issues. These areas of inquiry are in line with global scientific research agendas and, in particular, with the societal challenges considered in Horizon 2020 and the policy priorities of Europe 2020s strategy, including climate action, food security, clean and efficient energy, and inclusive, innovative and secure societies. Research in these three areas also contributes towards five specific objectives: - To understand, based on a multi- and inter-disciplinary approach, the social, institutional and political values, trends and perspectives that influence the transition to more sustainable societies; 119 - To compare international, national and local practices concerning participation, governance and public policies that can engender social empowerment and innovation, environmental and territorial justice and resilience; - To apply participatory and forward-looking methods, in support of citizen and multi-actor engagement, social awareness, conflict mediation, collaborative policy making, and environmental education; - To develop comprehensive observation and information systems on environment, territory and society, in cooperation with the EU and other countries (mainly Portuguese-speaking countries) with a view to undertaking comparative studies; - To inform decision-making processes promoting more effective interaction between science and society, as between research and media agendas, thus coupling research to learning and social, institutional and technological innovation. This RG also builds on the activities developed in OBSERVA Observatory of Environment and Society (active since 1996) and in the PhD Programme Climate Change and Sustainable Development Policies (started in 2009). Inputs from this RG are fundamental to the Sustainability thematic axis. However, the cross-cutting nature of environmental, territorial and technoscientific issues and the comprehensive approach undertaken in this RG also implies a strong connection with the axes “Inclusion” and “Citizenship”. The transition to more sustainable societies, from a socio-ecological standpoint, requires a better understanding and further development of today’s learning, empowerment, knowledge combination, codecision and policy-making processes, which are deficient in terms of social inclusion and citizenship. See also http://www.ics.ul.pt/rgresearch/rgresearch.pdf 120 10. Proposed Thematic Lines N/A 121 11. Budget for the Strategic Programme 2015/2020 11.1 The unit is a candidate for evaluation and intend to apply for funding? YES 11.2 Host institution’s budget Instituto de Ciências Sociais (ICS/UL) Overall budget Descrição 2015 2016 2018 2019 2020 Human Resources 569.500 626.000 682.800 739.400 739.400 739.400 4.096.500 Missions 15.500 15.000 16.000 20.000 40.600 45.000 152.100 Consultants 30.000 25.000 33.200 63.000 90.000 105.600 346.800 Service Procurement and Acquisitions 35.000 26.000 40.000 74.600 110.000 110.000 395.600 Patent Registration 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Adaptation of Buildings and Facilities 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Overheads 130.000 140.000 158.000 183.000 200.000 200.000 1.011.000 Equipment 20.000 20.000 0 98.000 Total (€) 800.000 850.000 950.000 1.100.000 1.200.000 1.200.000 6.100.000 18.000 2017 20.000 20.000 Total (∑) Instituto de Ciências Sociais (ICS/UL) 122 12. Strategic Programme and Budget Rationale 2015/2020 12.1 Overall budget rationale The overall budget corresponds, by and large, to the structure of expenditures undertaken by ICS throughout the period 2008-2012, as a Laboratório Associado (LA) in the context of PEST funding by FCT. The target for 2020 is to reach an amount of funding (€ 1,200,000), which represents the institutional objective of converging with the average of the period 2008-2012. This value is premised on a realistic stance regarding the possibilities of budget increasing in a period of serious financial constraints. Therefore, the amount considered for the first year (€ 800,000) is deliberately set below the current 2013 contracted PEST funding, demonstrating ICS’ intention to design a research strategy that does not require a substantial modification of the existing structure and total amount of funding. The budget increase from the initial year (€ 800,000) to the final year (€ 1,200,000) is justified by the need to provide a steady development of research activities, in line with the Strategic Objectives outlined in this proposal. These activities require qualified human resources and accompanying materials and basic equipment for social sciences research. ICS is fully prepared to operate with the recent rule whereby such increase will be made effective on the basis of annual assessment of outcomes. As a leading social sciences institute, the weight of Human Resources within ICS’ overall budget (67.2%) is simply a critical factor for the Institute’s continued pursuit of excellence. Thus, a detailed explanation and justification of this item is provided in the next section. The item Acquisition of Assets and Services (6.5%) covers a diversity of expenses indispensable to the efficient running of any research unit, namely: 1) purchase of digital and printed books, and journals subscriptions; 2) sub-contracting related to project management, short-period research assistance and field work tasks (polls and surveys); 3) support provided to publishing and editing activities (English translation and revision); 4) logistical support to the organization of academic meetings; and 5) diffusion and publicity of scientific and outreach activities. The item Missions (2.4%) is exclusively allocated to support the members of the research team in external activities related to the development of international networks and collaborative research. This also includes the participation to international conferences to present research findings. Funds assigned to this item will be conditional to the demonstration of the relevance to enhance internationalization of research and graduate teaching, in line with the Strategic Objectives of this proposal. The budget for the item Consultants (5.8%) serves to support the visit and short permanence of international scholars and experts, particularly with a focus on the development of research projects and doctoral teaching. The strengthening of ICS as a centre for advanced studies and as a graduate school in social sciences, and ICS’ commitment to interdisciplinary inquiry, calls for a regular presence of international experts that will serve as advisors and who may also apply for research support from ICS. The item General Costs corresponds to an overhead of 20% to cover current expenses arising from operational activities indispensable to the running and administration of research projects and graduate 123 teaching activities. Their eligibility and justification follow the general rules and norms in use by public administration. The strategic programme presented by ICS involves diversifying its financial resources through other national and international funding, namely by increasing the applications to competitive European projects within Horizon 2020. We aim at an increase of project funding from 12m€ to 15m€, especially through European funding. The 2013 awards of 2 HERA and ERC grants is a clear sign of ICS commitment and allows for a positive expectation on this regard. The social relevance and impact of research today is a clear priority, both at national and EU level. Thus, in a context of growing motivation towards the establishment of a close relationship with industry and business sectors ICS seeks to substantially increase the proportion of funding sourced through applications to such stakeholders interested in contributing to research in the social sciences. Funding obtained above and beyond the FCT budget will be essential to reinforce the capacity of ICS to develop the digital Library, data-research infrastructures and other IT equipment. Finally, it should be noted that the budget presented here does NOT include the core funding to be assigned in the light of the final grading reached by ICS in the evaluation process. 12.2 Human Resources rationale The successful implementation of the Strategy and Objectives of this proposal depends entirely upon the capacity to maintain and further strengthen the quality of ICS’ human resources. This budget has two components: researchers and technical staff. The requested sum for the 6-year period corresponds to 67.2 % of the overall budget and is intended to pay the salaries and social security costs arising from the recruitment of 10 researchers and 7 technical staff by the end of the contract period. With regards to the number of researchers, the point of arrival corresponds to a number slightly below the st nd commitment of ICS during the previous LA contracts with FCT (1 contract: 13; 2 contract: 10). This is based on the rationale, mentioned above, that it is necessary to work on the basis of a conservative policy given the financial constraints of the current period. Starting with 7 contracts in 2015 will allow ICS to keep and replace the existing team of LA researchers. This number is considered essential in order to achieve the research objectives of the strategic programme and of the agenda of the research groups. The slight annual increase, up to a contingent of 10 researchers by 2020, is consistent with the objectives and expected outputs of ICS’ research groups, and is meant to compensate for the likelihood of a considerable decrease of FCT support to individual applications (post-doc and FCT Researchers). The technical staff to be recruited also represents the replacement or continuation of existing staff in key areas to support strategic development of ICS: Library and bibliometric support (1), information systems (1), graduate studies (1), financial management (1), project management (2) and international applications and fund raising (1). 12.3 Equipment rationale The sum assigned to this item is residual within the overall proposed budget (1.6%) and refers only to a five years period. As mentioned above, ICS intends to reinforce this budget category through applications to alternative funding sources. 124 It is expected that IT equipment (computers and printers) will be purchased in order to maintain and upgrade equipment forming part of the IT infrastructure of ICS. A small part of this amount will be allocated to purchase audiovisual equipment serving to support fieldwork (video cameras and digital recorders). 125 13. Reviewers proposed by the R&D Unit Reviewer 1 Name: Craig Calhoun E-mail: [email protected] Institution: London School of Economics ( Director) Scientific Areas: Anthropology, History, Political Science, Sociology Reviewer 2 Name: Peter A. Hall E-mail: [email protected] Institution: Department of Government, Harvard University, USA Scientific Areas: History, Political Science, Sociology Reviewer 3 Name: Laurence Whitehead E-mail: [email protected] Institution: Nuffield College, Univerisity of Oxford, UK Scientific Areas: Geography, Political Science, Sociology 126 CANDIDATURA AVALIAÇÃO E FINANCIAMENTO DE UNIDADES DE I&D ANNEXES 1 Contribution of Research Groups to the Strategic Programme “Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges” 2 SCIMAGO articles in peer review journals 2008-2012 - ICS Research Team 1. Contribution of Research Groups to the Strategic Programme “Changing Societies: Legacies and Challenges” ICS THEMATIC AXES* Power, Society and Globalization Regimes and Political Institutions Historical agency of indigenous societies Assessment of imperialism and colonialism’s contribution to inequality and exclusion Government and power: critique of and resistance to colonial power; Knowledge, science, and belief: cultural encounters and epistemic exchanges; religious conversion; appropriations of Christianity Identity, difference and inclusion: dynamics of identity and difference; gender; racism and inequality in colonial and post-colonial contexts; Labour and exchanges: labour and slavery; diasporas and returnees; movements of capital and labour. Elites, Power and Representation Socio-Political Attitudes and Behaviours Political disaffection and its social correlates Relationship between formation of collective identities and social exclusion, discrimination, racism, prejudice. Identities, Cultures, Vulnerabilities Empires, Colonialism, and Post-Colonial Societies Challenge to Social Actors: transnational institutions and global economic integration CITIZENSHIP Experience and Response to social and economic changes Shifting social landscapes and cultural legacies: Meanings/Vulnerabilities/Identities Circulations: people, capitals, objects, ideas New, economic-related Displacements/Migrations SUSTAINABILITY Globalization: dynamics of change, multiple crises Changes in the making, representation and distribution of Power Changes in Institutional Organisation and national/local Societies: social movements, civil rights Imperial genealogies of citizenship Government and power: forms of political and economic rule and the transfer/creation of government institutions; elites; urban governance; land rights; violence and conflict; Knowledge, science, and belief: production, institutionalization, circulation of forms of knowledge (colonial, indigenous, scientific); archives, exhibitions and museums; Identity, difference and inclusion: law, justice and citizenship; Memory and legacies: expressions of remembering and forgetting colonial experiences and imperial phenomena; indigenous forms of historicity. Intensification of relations and exchanges Colonial exploitation of natural resources; Knowledge, science, and belief: production, institutionalization, circulation of forms of knowledge (colonial, indigenous, scientific); Labor and exchanges: markets and exchange; nature, wealth and exploitation of environmental resources. Regimes and Political Institutions: historic trajectories and challenges facing contemporary democracies Institutional Design and Governance in New democracies Identity, ethnic diversity, and support for citizenship rights. Exercise of political rights, participation, and engagement The legitimacy of national and multilevel political systems. Political representation and accountability Public decision and Collective Well-being Foundations of Regime Stability Values, governance and development Collective cognitions: nationalism, religion, ideologies, conflicts, and inclusiveness Science studies Embodiments: health, labour, food Place: the experience of space and territory LEGACIES >>> INCLUSION CHALLENGES >>> ICS RGs Life Course, Inequality and Solidarity: Practices and Policies Environment, Territory and Society Understanding social change by studying: Dynamics of the social processes of Inclusion/Inequality/Individualization in different domains (e.g. gender; youth and senior lifestages; health and dependency; sexuality and bodies; family life; migration; culture); Multidimensional approach to linkages between individuals and society which build up social inclusion/exclusion and inequalities: individual integration, informal social groupings, structural forms of inequality; Socially vulnerable/discriminated groups; impact of crisis. How values, practices, governance and policies are shaping the relationship between humans and nature, and how this affects issues of justice, equality, and wellbeing. Themes include: (a) Representations, practices, power and interests (b) Environmental and territorial conflicts (c) Environmental and spatial justice (d) Energy poverty, food poverty (e) Quality of life. Identity: Understanding attitudes and values in the societal domains relevant to the expertise of the research group (e.g.: attitudes to gender roles; youth; ageing; welfare state; public policies in the above-mentioned domains); Public regulation of social processes and institutions: (a) understanding the specific pathway and characteristics of the Portuguese Welfare State (b) monitoring developments in national and European public policies; (c) assessing the impact of policies on individuals and social groupings, at the level of practices, perceptions and lived experiences. The relationship between contemporary risk society and our scientific and technological culture and media communication. Themes include: (a) Social awareness: media and communication on environmental, territorial, technological and public health issues; (b) Citizen empowerment and social innovation: participatory engagement and inclusive governance; (c) Collaborative policies and institutional innovation; (d) Governance of technoscience, risk and uncertainty; (e) Environmental education. * - Capitalised terms represent key words/concepts; in light blue the link with the main strategic axis Social and demographic dimensions of sustainability: (a) to what extent are the rising inequalities and cleavages in Portuguese society questioning or disrupting social cohesion and the well-being of individuals, families and different social groups; (b) demographic change (the lowest fertility levels ever, ageing society, rising trends in emigration) and its implications for intergenerational solidarity and a demographically sustainable society. Territorial development trends, challenges and policies, considering the impacts, values, interests, conflicts and sustainability demands associated with the changing uses of territories, with special attention to urban dynamics. Themes include: (a) Socio-ecological challenges and resource scarcity; (b) Impact of socio-economic practices on sustainability; (c) Environmental and territorial resilience; (d) Sustainable production and consumption; (e) Sustainable place-making; (f) Science for sustainability. 2. SCIMAGO articles in peer review journals 2008-2012 ICS Research Team Aboim, S. (2008). Masculinidades na encruzilhada: Hegemonia, dominação e hibridismo em Maputo. Análise Social, n.º 187, pp. 273-295 Aboim, S. (2009). Da pluralidade dos afetos: trajetos e orientações amorosas nas conjugalidades contemporâneas. Revista Brasileira de Ciências Sociais. 24 (70), 107-122. Aboim, S. (2009). Men between worlds: changing masculinities in urban Maputo. Men and Masculinities. 12 (2), 201-224. Aboim, S. (2010). Gender cultures and the division of labour in contemporary Europe: a cross-national perspective. The Sociological Review. 58 (2), 171-196. Aboim, S. (2012). Do público e do privado: uma perspectiva de género sobre uma dicotomia moderna. Revista de Estudos Feministas. 20(1), 95-117. Aboim, S. (2012). Risk-taking and HIV/Aids prevention: a biographical approach to sexual behavior in Portugal. Ciência e saúde coletiva. 17(1), 99-112. Aguiar, P., Vala, J., Correia, I. & Pereira, C. (2008). Justice in our world and in others’ world: Belief in a just world and reactions to victims. Social Justice Research, nº 21, pp. 50-68. Aguiar, S., Aguiar-Conraria, L., Gulamhussen, M. & Magalhães, P. C. (2012). Foreign direct investment and home-country political risk: The case of Brazil. Latin American Research Review. 47(2), 144-165. Aguiar-Conraria, L. & Magalhães, P. C. (2010). How quorum rules distort referendum outcomes: Evidence from a pivotal voter model. European Journal of Political Economy. 26 (4), 541–557 Aguiar-Conraria, L. & Magalhães, P. C. (2010). Referendum design, quorum rules and turnout. Public choice.144(1-2), 63-81 Aguiar-Conraria, L., Magalhães, P. C. & Soares, M. J. (2012). Cycles in Politics: Wavelet analysis of political time series. American Journal of Political Science. 56(2), 500–518. Almeida, A. N., Alves, N. A., Delicado, A. & Carvalho, T. (2011). Children and digital diversity: from ‘unguided rookies’ to ‘self-reliant cybernauts’. Childhood (online first, doi: 10.1177/0907568211410897) Almeida, A. N., Alves, N. de A. & Delicado, A. (2011). As crianças e a internet em Portugal: perfis de uso. Sociologia - Problemas e Práticas, n.º65, 9-30. Badia-Miró, M. Guilera, J. & Lains, P. (2012). Regional incomes in Portugal: Industrialisation, integration and inequality, 18901980. Revista de Historia Económica, 30(2), 225-244. Barreto, J. (2008). Salazar and the New State in the Writings of Fernando Pessoa. Portuguese Studies, vol. 24, nº 2, pp. 168-214 Barreto, J. (2009). Fernando Pessoa e a invasão da Abissínia pela Itália Fascista. Análise Social. 193 (XLV, 4), 693-718. Bastos, C. (2008). Migrants, Settlers And Colonists:The Biopolitics of Displaced Bodies. International Migration, 46(5): 27- 54 Bastos, C. (2009). Borrowing, Adapting, and Learning the Practices of Smallpox: Notes from Colonial Goa. Bulletin of the History of Medicine.83 (1), 141-163 Bastos, C. (2009). Maria Índia, ou a fronteira da colonização: trabalho, migração e política no planalto sul de Angola. Horizontes Antropológicos. n.º31, 51-74 Bastos, C. (2011). From sulphur to perfume: spa and SPA at Monchique, Algarve. Anthropology and Medicine, 18(1), 37-53 Baum, M. & Espírito-Santo, A. (2012). Portugal's quota-parity law: An analysis of its adoption. West European Politics, 35(2), 319342. Bellucci, P., Lobo, M. C. & Lewis-Beck, M. S. (2012). Economic crisis and elections: The European periphery. Electoral Studies. 31(3), 469-471. Benavente, A. & Panchaud, C. (2009). A Roadmap for action. Prospects - Quarterly Review of comparative Education. 38 (2), 189197 Benavente, A. & Panchaud, C. (2009). Conclusions. Prospects - Quarterly Review of comparative Education. 38 (2), 263-271 Benavente, A. & Panchaud, C. (2009). Good practices for transforming education. Prospects - Quarterly Review of comparative Education. 38 (2), 161-170 Benavente, A., Ralambomanana, S. & Mbanze, J.(2009). Training teachers as key players in poverty alleviation. Prospects Quarterly Review of comparative Education. 38 (2), 171-187 Bendick Jr., M. & Nunes, A. P. (2012). Developing the research basis for controlling bias in hiring. Journal of Social Issues, 68 (2), 238-262. Bina, O. & Vaz, S. G. (2011). Humans, environment and economies: from vicious relationships to virtuous responsibility. Ecological Economics, 72, 170-178 Bina, O. & La Camera, F. (2011). Promise and shortcomings of a green turn in recent policy responses to the “double crisis”. Ecological Economics 70, 2308–2316 Bina, O. (2010). Environmental governance in China: weakness and potential from an environmental policy integration perspective. China Review. 10(1), 207-240. Bina, O. et al (2011). Review of practice and prospects for SEA in China. Environmental Impact Assessement Review, 31(6), 515520 Bina, O., Wu, J., Brown, A. L. & Partidario, M. (2011). An inquiry into the concept of SEA effectiveness: towards criteria for Chinese practice. Environmental Impact Assessment Review, 31(6), 572-581. Blanes, R. L. & Sarró, R. (2008). European Christianities at the turn of the millennium: an introduction. EtnográfIca, 12 (2): 371-376 Blanes, R. L. (2009). Remembering and Suffering: Memory and Shifting Allegiances in the Angolan Tokoist Church. Exchange. 38 (2), 161-181. Blanes, R. L. (2011), Double presence: proselytism and belonging in na Angolan prophetic church's diaspora in Europe. Journal of Religion in Europe, Vol. 4, pp. 409-428 Blanes, R. L. (2011). Unstable Biographies. The Ethnography of Memory and Historicity in an Angolan Prophetic Movement. History and Anthropology, 22(1), 93-119. Blanes, R. L. (2012). Moral circumscriptions: involuntary mobility, diaspora and ideological configurations in the Angolan Tokoist church. Canadian Journal of African Studies/La Revue Canadienne des Études Africaines. 46 (3), 367-380. Blanes, R. L. (2012). O tempo dos inimigos: reflexões sobre uma antropologia da repressão no século XXI. Horizontes Antropológicos. 37, 261-284. Cabral, J. P. & Thomaz, O. R. (2011). Radcliffe-Brown v António Candido: um debate inacabado. Mana 17 (1), 187-204. Cabral, J. P. (2008). Larger truths and deeper understandings. Social Anthropology16 (3), pp. 346-348 Cabral, J. P. (2008). Outros nomes, histórias cruzadas: apresentando o debate. Etnográfica 12 (1), pp. 5-16 Cabral, J. P. (2008). Recorrências antroponímicas lusófonas. Etnográfica 12 (1), pp. 237-262 Cabral, J. P. (2008). Sem palavras: Etnografia, hegemonia e quantificação. Mana 14 (1), pp. 61-85 Cabral, J. P. (2008). Terrorismo, suicídio e utopia: um olhar sobre o debate actual. Etnográfica 12 (2), pp. 489-500 Cabral, J. P. (2009). O Diabo e o Dilema Brasileiro: uma perspectiva anti-cesurista, II. In Revista de Antropologia, USP. 50(2), 477525. Cabral, J. P. (2009). The all-or-nothing syndrome and the human condition. Social Analysis. The International Journal of Cultural and Social Practice. 53 (2), 163-176. Cabral, J. P. (2010). Lusotopia como Ecumene. Revista Brasileira de Ciências Sociais, 25 (74), 5-20. Cabral, J. P. (2010). The truth of personal names. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. Vol. 16 (2), 297-312. Cabral, J. P. (2010). Xará: namesakes in Southern Mozambique and Bahia (Brazil). Ethnos. 75 (3), 323-345. Cabral, J. P. (2010).The dynamism of plurals : an essay on equivocal compatibility. Social Anthropology. Vol. 18 (2), 176-190 Cabral, J. P. (2011). Afterword: What is an institution? Social Anthropology, 19(4), 477–494 Cabral, J. P. (2012). The functional fallacy: on the supposed dangers of name repetition. History and Anthropology, 23(1), 17-36. Canto, J. M., Álvaro, J. L., Pereira, M. E., Torres, A. R. & Pereira, C. R. (2012). Jealousy and infidelity: the role of gender identity and culture of honour. Estudios de Psicología. 33 (3), 337-346. Cardoso, J. L. & Cunha, A. M. (2012). Enlightened reforms and economic discourse in the Portuguese-Brazilian Empire (1750– 1808). History of Political Economy. 44 (4), 619-641. Cardoso, J. L. & Bastien, C. (2009). Uses and abuses of political economy in Portuguese parliamentary debates (1850-1910). History of Economic Ideas. 17 (3), 53-69. Cardoso, J. L. & Cunha, A. M. (2012). Discurso econômico e política colonial no império luso-brasileiro (1750-1808). Tempo, 17, (31), 65-88. Cardoso, J. L. & Rocha, M. M. (2009). O seguro social obrigatório em Portugal (1919-1928): acção e limites de um Estado previdente. Análise Social. XLIV (192), 439-470 Cardoso, J. L. (2009). F. Solano Constâncio on political economy: A 'science of proportion's. History of European Ideas. 35 (2), 227235. Cardoso, J. L. (2009). Learning with Bob Coats’s Legacy. Journal of the History of Economic Thought. 31 (3), 375-9 Cardoso, J. L. (2009). Reflexões periféricas sobre a difusão internacional do pensamento económico. Nova Economia 19 (2), 25165. Cardoso, J. L. (2009). The transfer of the court to Brazil, 200 years afterwards. e-journal of Portuguese History.7 (1), 1-10. Cardoso, J. L. (2010). Novos elementos para a história do Banco do Brasil (1808-1829): crónica de um fracasso anunciado. Revista Brasileira de História, 30 (59), 167-192. Cardoso, J. L. (2011). Vitorino Magalhães Godinho and the annales school: history as a way of thinking. 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