Before I officially put out a CFP for the Philosophers' Cocoon Philosophy Conference (PCPC) I recently proposed for discussion, I would like to offer up the following draft for feedback and comments (please note: this is only a workng draft; nothing is set in stone by any means):
I am happy to announce this call-for-papers for the first annual Philosophers' Cocoon Philosophy Conference, which will be held at the University of Tampa from Friday August 2nd-Sunday August 4th. This conference will be unique in several respects:
- Although attendance at the conference and participating as session chairs or commentators will be open to all members of the profession, paper presenters must be early-career philosophers — basically, anyone who doesn't have tenure (e.g. graduate students, post-docs, VAP, TT Assistant Profs, independent scholars, etc.)
- Due to the kinds of travel-funding issues that early-career philosophers often face, several paper sessions (the exact number of which will be determined later) will be reserved for Skype presentations in which the author will be projected, and field audience questions, in real time over the internet.
- Although commentators and audience members are encouraged to present objections to papers, a guiding aim of the conference will be constructive criticism, i.e. helping authors to improve problems (e.g. by not only raising objections, but offering and discussing possible solutions).
- Because successfully navigating the publishing world is one of the most difficult capacities for early-career philosophers to develop, and typical conference-length papers are too short (3,000 words) to publish, we will welcome submissions the length of any typical journal article (20-30 pages double-spaced) — the aim being to help early-career philosophers develop full-length papers into publishable quality. As a rule of thumb, the longer the paper, the higher the standards for acceptance to the conference. Extremely long papers are discouraged.
- In order to defray costs of attendance (once again out of concern for the needs of early-career scholars), there will be no registration fee, and consequently no official banquet, snacks, etc. Tampa is awesome, and there are many affordable places to meet, eat, and congregate around the university.
To submit a paper to present at the PCPC, please email (1) an anonymized paper, (2) a paper abstract, and (3) a statement concerning whether you intend to attend the conference in person or only via Skype, to marvan@ut.edu by June 1st, 2013. Finally, please bear the following in mind:
- In order to ensure that the conference is well-attended, there will be relatively few Skype sessions — so the probability that your paper will be accepted is higher should you state that you can attend in person.
- Submission of a paper comprises a tacit agreement to serve as a commentator or session chair should your paper be accepted and you accept the invitation to present.
- Submission of a paper commits you to serve as a paper referee in your area of specialization (in determining which papers are accepted for the conference). Referees will be expected to simply give a "thumbs up/thumbs down" judgment with a very short statement justifying their decision.
**Note to everyone: I am very unsure about this last provision (papers submitters functioning as referrees) due to obvious conflict-of-interest issues, but I'm going to need someone to referee papers besides myself. Another option would be for me to solicit referees, but I suspect it will be very hard to find some. A third option would be for members of the Cocoon community to volunteer to referee. What does everyone think?
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