Call for Blog Articles: Latin American Early Career Scholars
The ISPP Blog publishes short articles about research or issues of interest to the political psychology community. Each year the Early Career Committee (ECC) invites Early Career Scholars (graduate students or scholars who have received their PhD within the past 8 years) to contribute articles to the ISPP Blog. These articles are intended to promote the visibility of early career scholars and their research through our various online outlets and social media accounts (links to each can be found here: Medium, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn).
We recognize that the modern pressures and demands of academia pose unique challenges for those just beginning their academic careers. We also recognize that it might be even more difficult to cope with these challenges in regions that are underrepresented in global scientific production. Thus, looking forward to providing a platform that promotes and encourages the next generation of academics to pursue careers in, or related to, political psychology across the globe, we will make different call for articles for underrepresented regions. This first call for blog articles is focused on articles produced by Latin American political psychologists.
Requirements we are looking for
In this specific edition we are exclusively interested in empirical research conducted by scholars working in Latin American countries. If you have qualitative or quantitative data and you are an Early Career Scholar living in a Latin American country, you are eligible to submit your proposal. There is no restriction of subject, so the article can be about any theme related to political psychology. This represents a key opportunity to promote your research, as it will be read by people all over the world. The blog article should be written in English for an audience of intelligent non-specialists. Key things are:
- Be brief (i.e. between 800 and 1500 words).
- Use a journalistic, rather than an academic style (e.g. inverted pyramid-style with the opening paragraph(s) containing the key and attention-grabbing elements of the blog).
- Avoid jargon! To make it accessible to a larger number of readers, use simple, common English terms, where possible.
The content of the article should:
- Describe your data and the qualitative or quantitative methods that were used in the accepted proposal (e.g. survey, discourse analysis, experimental, interviews, etc.).
- Include the wider social implications, and if relevant, practical implications.
- Include a list of references (including DOIs where possible).
- Not include unfounded opinion or conjecture – it can’t solely be an opinion piece.
We welcome graphs, images and figures, but only include them if you are the author or have the copyright.
In addition to the article, we would be grateful for:
- A brief description (up to 50 words) of name, location, affiliation, and current position of the author(s).
- A photo of the author(s) in JPEG or PNG format, ideally in portrait rather than landscape. Large file sizes are encouraged as smaller files do not upload well.
The ECC reviews all submissions and provides feedback, where necessary, for publication.
Contributors may wish to read a couple of examples of previously published work. Here, we would direct you to an article on economic ideology in Indian context and another on authoritarianism in the Brazilian context.
Additional examples of published articles can be found on the ISPP Blog and on Medium.
Incentives
Getting your work published on the ISPP website is an excellent way to disseminate your research, increase your visibility, and invite future collaboration. Writing for the Blog is a great opportunity whether you are a PhD student, Postdoc, or early career researcher. Your work will be permanently stored on the ISPP website; enabling you to reference others to your writing. Finally, in addition to having your work reviewed and published online, your research will also be promoted using the ISPP’s various social media accounts and other forms of online communication.
To submit your article
Contributors must make their interest known by submitting a 250-word abstract before September 30th, 2020 to ecc@ispp.org. The title of the e-mail must be “Call for Latin American Blog Articles 2020”. Authors will receive feedback on their proposals and after making the suggested corrections, articles will be posted on the blog until December 31st, 2020.
If you have any questions, comments or concerns, these can be submitted to the emails provided below:
Felipe Vilanova felipevilanova2@gmail.com ; and Jessica Small Small.j@outlook.com.